Along with other "scary" music (the obligatory last two mvt's of Symphonie Fantastique, Night on Bald Mountain, some movie stuff, blah, blah-blah, and blah-blah-blah), "Mars" from Holst's The Planets is slated...
...so - looking through my "impressive array of 'tenor tubas' " , I pulled up the Melton kaiser bariton...
man...THAT's a lotta work !!!
Then, I pulled out my Swiss euphonium (which only plays in tune nicely with frickin' large mouthpieces - via design)...
well...LESS work, but still a LOT.
so I got to thinkin', climbed up into the bloke-attic, found a brown, beat-up, buttugly 1970's (YET, back before Yamaha cheap-assed 'em up) Yamaha YEP-321 (with it's old funky black case, but with a NICE older/wood empty Jupiter case sitting right next to it), pulled it down cleaned up up, had Balinda (Yamaha pts./California) send me the right buttons, put the right felts on it, straightened it out (good enough) aligned the slides, soldered the joints, found a SMALL shank Schilke 51 mouthpiece layin' around (with a couple of chips in it) and AWAY we go !!!
The entire thing is middle-range to VERY high, and the .571" (14.5mm) bore + the SMALL shank receiver proved to be the "secret weapons".
I can play the part - WITHOUT running out of gas, WITHOUT riding sharp, and WITH some sparkle in the sound (which will be needed, as top-actions' bells point the wrong damned direction).
bass clef part...?? nah: I am perfectly accustomed to looking at a "C" and not mashing any buttons.
highest pitch...?? "concert" C-natural..."on up there" (bar #132).
If you don't know the part, the whole thing's basically a "solo".
It should be fun.
I'm doing Brahms II (a week earlier) somewhere else, so two instruments which have been collecting dust - my F tuba, AND a (collecting dust for probably fifteen years) euphonium will be given chances to make some noise.
' pretty sure this is public domain, by now...
hee-hee...I peeled the Yamaha insignia off of a trashed trumpet case, and touched it up with silver paint and a Q-tip
Halloween pops concert - Mars slated - instrument safari then required
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- bloke
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Re: Halloween pops concert - Mars slated - instrument safari then required
Circa 20 years ago, the YEP-321 was ~the~ euphonium of choice for many orchestral players needing a handy point and shoot double.
Dillon/Walters CC (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
Re: Halloween pops concert - Mars slated - instrument safari then required
The great Los Angeles area low brass studio player, Bill Reichenbach (sp?), used a Yamaha 321 euphonium when needed in recording.
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- bloke
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Re: Halloween pops concert - Mars slated - instrument safari then required
I don’t need the fourth valve to play Mars, but the only YEP-201 that had been in the attic got fixed up and sold to a friend.
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Re: Halloween pops concert - Mars slated - instrument safari then required
Prove me wrong if I am, but I think THAT recording of the planets has an American baritone. I always wanted to get one and get a fifth valve put on; I believe JC Sherman did one. Lots of European polka bands use American baritones; I think I've seen 6 valve horns in some videos.
I dislike playing euphonium parts but I like euphoniums. Fun to play in the mid to low range and I think they're a great 'fill-in' instrument. 'I don't own a bass tuba/bass trombone/cimbasso but I need to play this part and not sound like a big tuba' stuff. I wish trumpet/trumpet/trombone/euphonium brass quartets were more popular.
I dislike playing euphonium parts but I like euphoniums. Fun to play in the mid to low range and I think they're a great 'fill-in' instrument. 'I don't own a bass tuba/bass trombone/cimbasso but I need to play this part and not sound like a big tuba' stuff. I wish trumpet/trumpet/trombone/euphonium brass quartets were more popular.
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