izzeme wrote:
when getting a sax (or any instrument for that matter), i recommend going to an approved store, and ask for a rent-buy system.
these systems will let you rent an instrument for some time (usually limited to 5 years), with the option of buying the instrument at any point during the rent, the purchace price lowering the longer you have rented it already.
aside from this, you will be able to try out several for a few weeks each, then trading it in for another one, to make sure you end up paying for an instrument that 'fits' you.
this is, you should know, becouse instruments are like shoes, even the same brand and type, from the same series, will differ from the one that is made a minute before or after it, and the one that "everybody uses becouse it's great" might be bad for you
I agree with izzeme. A rent-to-buy is the best option all the way around. I used to play the sax (alto, tenor, and baritone) and work for a musical instrument repair shop. A good quality saxophone will have a good weight to it and it should sound full without being too tinny. In general student saxophones are cheaper, easier to play, but sound cheaper too. I'd recommend an intermediate or professional saxophone if you're serious about getting back into it. I believe Yanagisawa, Selmer, SML, Vito, Cannonball, Jupiter, and Yamaha are all popular brands if you're not familiar with the market.
If you're planning on buying used ask to play it first right in the store. If he refuses walk away and go somewhere else. You should know what you're getting before you buy and it's often hard to tell without playing it (hence why I recommend rent-to-buy). I've been burned once when buying a flute.
As a side note...when having the keys re-padded, if it sounds "airy" and the repair man tells you that "it will fix itself as you play and it will become better seated" then he doesn't know what he's doing. It should sound correct right away. The repair man I worked for fixed many botched repairs for this kind of thing. It's a common problem.