bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
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- bloke
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bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
Here's yet another that I may only offer in one-piece silver-plated brass.
I kept messing around with my Symphony, Orchestra Grand, and Imperial cup mouthpieces with my 32-inch tall Holton (identical bell and bows to vintage 4/4 York) BB-flat tuba.
This instrument is a little bit smaller than a King 2341 the Eastman knockoff, and the Eastman C versions, but it's really quite similar.
I came up with a roughly "Helleberg-deep" yet BOWL cup mouthpiece prototype (and heck no, it's NOT a "Bach 7" and it's also NOT a "PT-88") that works better than ANY of those mouthpieces listed above ON THAT PARTICULAR INSTRUMENT and FOR ME.
I'll probably do a "run" of these as well for selling.
The only other bowl cups in the "Sellmansberger" stuff are shallow bowls:
- Solo (stainless steel modular)
- Shallowberger (one-piece silver plated brass...EXTRA shallow, with a very small throat opening).
So this new bowl cup mouthpiece will be a REGULAR DEEP (not extra deep) cup mouthpiece and with - pretty much - a regular - throat that opens up to a large exit bore.
again: I LIKE it with my 19-inch bell .687" bore contrabass tuba.
I'm not "getting into" this until 2025, but - if there's interest, lemme know (not collecting money now, only soliciting interest).
It rocks-and-rolls with THIS tuba, in particular: PHAT POWERRRRR !!!
BIG sound, BROAD sound, a good bit of "fist" in the sound (when the player "gets on it"...and - again) with a medium large bore tuba.
I DON'T dislike how it sounds with my huge tuba...but - with that tuba - it's not my favorite mouthpiece...at least, not right now.
I kept messing around with my Symphony, Orchestra Grand, and Imperial cup mouthpieces with my 32-inch tall Holton (identical bell and bows to vintage 4/4 York) BB-flat tuba.
This instrument is a little bit smaller than a King 2341 the Eastman knockoff, and the Eastman C versions, but it's really quite similar.
I came up with a roughly "Helleberg-deep" yet BOWL cup mouthpiece prototype (and heck no, it's NOT a "Bach 7" and it's also NOT a "PT-88") that works better than ANY of those mouthpieces listed above ON THAT PARTICULAR INSTRUMENT and FOR ME.
I'll probably do a "run" of these as well for selling.
The only other bowl cups in the "Sellmansberger" stuff are shallow bowls:
- Solo (stainless steel modular)
- Shallowberger (one-piece silver plated brass...EXTRA shallow, with a very small throat opening).
So this new bowl cup mouthpiece will be a REGULAR DEEP (not extra deep) cup mouthpiece and with - pretty much - a regular - throat that opens up to a large exit bore.
again: I LIKE it with my 19-inch bell .687" bore contrabass tuba.
I'm not "getting into" this until 2025, but - if there's interest, lemme know (not collecting money now, only soliciting interest).
It rocks-and-rolls with THIS tuba, in particular: PHAT POWERRRRR !!!
BIG sound, BROAD sound, a good bit of "fist" in the sound (when the player "gets on it"...and - again) with a medium large bore tuba.
I DON'T dislike how it sounds with my huge tuba...but - with that tuba - it's not my favorite mouthpiece...at least, not right now.
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
yeah I’d be interested - although I’d prefer stainless steel and a removable rim a la the old SS 2 piece - but I get the why for a 1 piece. Can I assume it will have a #2 rim which is what I use?
- bloke
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
I used that tuba and that mouthpiece on some things I mentioned that I've played recently including American in Paris, the heavy bass line that comes in towards the end of Bolero, I used it on that Sonic video game concert (with a whole bunch of low, quite a bit of VERY loud, and some fast and some percussive stuff whereby everything happens precisely where it happens, and every "sound-event" requires a very strong "front"), and I just like what it does with that particular tuba (which - again - is in the appropriate overall size and bore of King/Eastman 4/4).
It's just fine with the really huge rotary tuba, but - again - not quite my favorite with it. Other people would probably pick it for other things, because we're all so different, and our instruments are all so different.
It's just fine with the really huge rotary tuba, but - again - not quite my favorite with it. Other people would probably pick it for other things, because we're all so different, and our instruments are all so different.
- iiipopes
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
I am reminded of the junior partner of K&G mouthpieces: Gilbert Spiteri B.Eng (Hons) (Melit.), M.Sc (Loughborough), a degree in mechanical engineering, with the emphasis of applied studies in how mouthpieces work. He computer models the mouthpieces not only for feel, which is what the senior partner, Dennis Kurun Camilleri LLCM, FLCM, FTCL, LRSM, does, but for the two basic physics concepts that make mouthpieces work: 1) Bernoulli's principal, which is why an embouchure actually works, and 2) the transition through the throat and backbore to static wave theory, compressions and rarefactions, which is why a player and mouthpiece can induce the proper resonances we call pitch and tone in a tuba.
Have you considered hiring as a consultant or partner a person who has these same or similar qualifications and understandings to further develop your mouthpieces to take them to the next level of playability, tone, and presence?
Have you considered hiring as a consultant or partner a person who has these same or similar qualifications and understandings to further develop your mouthpieces to take them to the next level of playability, tone, and presence?
Jupiter JTU1110 - K&G 3F
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
- bloke
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- iiipopes
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
You should. I gave up your mouthpiece in favor of a K&G because it plays so much better in all aspects.
Jupiter JTU1110 - K&G 3F
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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- bloke
- Mid South Music
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- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
(Maybe someday, someone will tell me where all that jazz came from.)
- arpthark
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
I'd be interested. Looking for a good fit for the Piggy.
Waffling around a bit between Symphony, Orch Grand (with and without cup extenders), PT-50/88, and some other stuff. The 88 has about the kind of sound I like but it's too hard to steer and I don't like the rim as much as the blokepiece #2. I'd be interested in trying "large cup" with a smaller backbore, smaller ID (maybe something around 33mm instead of 33.5) and the #2 rim profile. Is that kinda what this one is?
Waffling around a bit between Symphony, Orch Grand (with and without cup extenders), PT-50/88, and some other stuff. The 88 has about the kind of sound I like but it's too hard to steer and I don't like the rim as much as the blokepiece #2. I'd be interested in trying "large cup" with a smaller backbore, smaller ID (maybe something around 33mm instead of 33.5) and the #2 rim profile. Is that kinda what this one is?
Blake
Bean Hill Brass
Bean Hill Brass
- bloke
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Re: bloke keeps messing around with more mouthpiece cup shapes
You're just about right there.arpthark wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 5:47 am I'd be interested. Looking for a good fit for the Piggy.
Waffling around a bit between Symphony, Orch Grand (with and without cup extenders), PT-50/88, and some other stuff. The 88 has about the kind of sound I like but it's too hard to steer and I don't like the rim as much as the blokepiece #2. I'd be interested in trying "large cup" with a smaller backbore, smaller ID (maybe something around 33mm instead of 33.5) and the #2 rim profile. Is that kinda what this one is?