That’s what she said.
R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
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- Three Valves
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
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- Alebeard (Sat Feb 04, 2023 11:33 am)
Thought Criminal
Mack Brass Artiste
TU422L with TU25
1964 Conn 36k with CB Arnold Jacobs
Accent (By B&S) 952R with Bach12
The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column
Mack Brass Artiste
TU422L with TU25
1964 Conn 36k with CB Arnold Jacobs
Accent (By B&S) 952R with Bach12
The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
I have to say, she cleaned up very well!! Polished, all slide grease cleaned off and replaced, valves and joints all lubed. Now I need to get myself to play as decent as she looks!
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- gnimoyw (Sat Feb 04, 2023 7:14 pm) • prairieboy1 (Sun Feb 05, 2023 5:45 pm) • bone-a-phone (Thu Apr 06, 2023 7:27 pm)
- Three Valves
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
That wide throated bell….
Thought Criminal
Mack Brass Artiste
TU422L with TU25
1964 Conn 36k with CB Arnold Jacobs
Accent (By B&S) 952R with Bach12
The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column
Mack Brass Artiste
TU422L with TU25
1964 Conn 36k with CB Arnold Jacobs
Accent (By B&S) 952R with Bach12
The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Not sure on bore but height is 43.3in and bell is 16.5in.cjk wrote:I’m curious about height, bell diameter, and bore size.
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Amazing what soap and water and elbow grease can do. That thing is beautiful!
Sent from my SM-J327VPP using Tapatalk
Sent from my SM-J327VPP using Tapatalk
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- Alebeard (Sun Feb 05, 2023 4:58 pm)
Meinl Weston 2145 CC
King Symphonic BBb circa 1936ish
Pre H.N.White, Cleveland Eb 1924ish (project)
Conn Sousaphone, fiberglass 1960s? (Project)
Olds Baritone 1960s?
Hoping to find a dirt cheap Flugabone
King Symphonic BBb circa 1936ish
Pre H.N.White, Cleveland Eb 1924ish (project)
Conn Sousaphone, fiberglass 1960s? (Project)
Olds Baritone 1960s?
Hoping to find a dirt cheap Flugabone
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
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- Alebeard (Sun Feb 05, 2023 4:58 pm)
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Got a good couple hours of practice in today. First impressions; it seems forgiving when it comes to tone but it does take a lot of air to make solid notes. I very much enjoyed practice today and how well it plays! I am still working out what mouthpiece are going to work well for me. Between the Olka CB1 and the Megatone 22, the CB1 seemed a bit easier to hit consistent tone with. Not sure what other mouthpieces to try.
I do feel like my tone and playability improved considerably today with getting in a couple hours of practice. I am finding that I am relearning how to read key signatures and the associated fingerings. Hopefully a good couple of weeks of practice will get me most of the way back to where I was when I stopped playing.
Cheers,
Jared
I do feel like my tone and playability improved considerably today with getting in a couple hours of practice. I am finding that I am relearning how to read key signatures and the associated fingerings. Hopefully a good couple of weeks of practice will get me most of the way back to where I was when I stopped playing.
Cheers,
Jared
- matt g
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
A lot of the “it takes a lot of air” feeling is your chops being inefficient. That should come around.
Dillon/Walters CC (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
I think so. I plan on practicing every day. I have orchestra practice every Thursday evening as well. Looking forward to seeing what they are playing.matt g wrote:A lot of the “it takes a lot of air” feeling is your chops being inefficient. That should come around.
Cheers,
Jared
- arpthark
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Keep us updated!Alebeard wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 5:58 pmI think so. I plan on practicing every day. I have orchestra practice every Thursday evening as well. Looking forward to seeing what they are playing.matt g wrote:A lot of the “it takes a lot of air” feeling is your chops being inefficient. That should come around.
Cheers,
Jared
Blake
Bean Hill Brass
Bean Hill Brass
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
yep...' interesting how "the more constructive practice, the less air required"...and I don't believe it has much of anything to do with "developing one's lungs".
Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
That bell means BUSINESS!
- Rick Denney
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
This tuba begs me to do some digging. The only other Reichel I've seen that has a good picture is on the Brass and Pipes blog.
This kaiser is different in just about every way (I mean, beyond being a kaiser contrabass instead of a dainty little 4-valve F tuba). The solder-ons are diamond-shaped on the F, and round on this one. The bows are squared off on the F and circular on this kaiser. The 45-degree entry and exit from the valves were pretty common up until the 60's, I guess, but they are vertical on the F.
Hornucopia shows a couple of Reichel's but without detailed photos.
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/show.php?s ... eichel+%22
Notice the lovely wire-type S-links on the F. Of course, the linkages have been replaced on the kaiser. But both have wide finger buttons that I don't usually see on East German instruments older than the 70's or so.
Most interestingly to me, the F has classic B&S braces from the 60's and maybe early 70's--wire bases filed to a point and machined spindles with a double-ended taper and a groove in the middle where the fat ends meet. This F tuba was overhauled in the 90's, so maybe that stuff was replaced then, but I rather suspect (read: guess, because I certainly didn't don't have a source) that by the 50's, Reichel had been absorbed into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, the general Saxony-area state-owned conglomerate.
Apparently, the last Reichel passed away in 1962, and B&P reports (citing the museum in Markneukirchen as a source) that he was "the last owner". But what did ownership mean in East Germany in the 50's? Certainly, by the early 50's, most of the old Markneukirchen and Klingenthal companies had been rolled up into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, which was later known simply as VEB. "VEB" is just East German for "the people's enterprise" in Communist lingo, and means roughly the same thing as "corporation" in the West except that it is state-owned (given that the "people" weren't really allowed to own much of anything in the "means of production" category). So, I'm supposing that instruments made in the early 50's and labeled "VEB" were simply left without a brand while the notion of branding was in hiding. The old Hess factory portion of that conglomerate became B&S with its many labels, but those labels didn't appear until the 60's.
Hess was a retailer who started making instruments in the late 30's (which is when they hired away leading instrument makers from other companies, e.g. Andreas Crönlein, previously from Alexander and the reason why instruments such as the B&Setc. 101 and 104 are so Alexander-like). But Reichel had always made brass instruments in Markneukirchen since the late 1800's, and they also traded staff with lots of big-name makers of that era.
But it may also be that by the 50's, the Reichel factory, though part of the VEB conglomerate, was still doing its own thing, but traded parts or worked with other makers in the conglomerate to obtain parts for some instruments. Maybe this kaiser was a standard product in their catalog and didn't need outside parts, but the F pictured above was a special and used a lot of parts acquired from sister factories.
Rick "wondering what the tuba landscape would be like if Germany had never been divided" Denney
This kaiser is different in just about every way (I mean, beyond being a kaiser contrabass instead of a dainty little 4-valve F tuba). The solder-ons are diamond-shaped on the F, and round on this one. The bows are squared off on the F and circular on this kaiser. The 45-degree entry and exit from the valves were pretty common up until the 60's, I guess, but they are vertical on the F.
Hornucopia shows a couple of Reichel's but without detailed photos.
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/show.php?s ... eichel+%22
Notice the lovely wire-type S-links on the F. Of course, the linkages have been replaced on the kaiser. But both have wide finger buttons that I don't usually see on East German instruments older than the 70's or so.
Most interestingly to me, the F has classic B&S braces from the 60's and maybe early 70's--wire bases filed to a point and machined spindles with a double-ended taper and a groove in the middle where the fat ends meet. This F tuba was overhauled in the 90's, so maybe that stuff was replaced then, but I rather suspect (read: guess, because I certainly didn't don't have a source) that by the 50's, Reichel had been absorbed into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, the general Saxony-area state-owned conglomerate.
Apparently, the last Reichel passed away in 1962, and B&P reports (citing the museum in Markneukirchen as a source) that he was "the last owner". But what did ownership mean in East Germany in the 50's? Certainly, by the early 50's, most of the old Markneukirchen and Klingenthal companies had been rolled up into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, which was later known simply as VEB. "VEB" is just East German for "the people's enterprise" in Communist lingo, and means roughly the same thing as "corporation" in the West except that it is state-owned (given that the "people" weren't really allowed to own much of anything in the "means of production" category). So, I'm supposing that instruments made in the early 50's and labeled "VEB" were simply left without a brand while the notion of branding was in hiding. The old Hess factory portion of that conglomerate became B&S with its many labels, but those labels didn't appear until the 60's.
Hess was a retailer who started making instruments in the late 30's (which is when they hired away leading instrument makers from other companies, e.g. Andreas Crönlein, previously from Alexander and the reason why instruments such as the B&Setc. 101 and 104 are so Alexander-like). But Reichel had always made brass instruments in Markneukirchen since the late 1800's, and they also traded staff with lots of big-name makers of that era.
But it may also be that by the 50's, the Reichel factory, though part of the VEB conglomerate, was still doing its own thing, but traded parts or worked with other makers in the conglomerate to obtain parts for some instruments. Maybe this kaiser was a standard product in their catalog and didn't need outside parts, but the F pictured above was a special and used a lot of parts acquired from sister factories.
Rick "wondering what the tuba landscape would be like if Germany had never been divided" Denney
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- Alebeard (Fri Feb 10, 2023 6:16 pm)
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Wow, thank you for all this info! I have been wondering the same thing, the origins and history on this survivor of a beautiful horn.Rick Denney wrote:This tuba begs me to do some digging. The only other Reichel I've seen that has a good picture is on the Brass and Pipes blog.
This kaiser is different in just about every way (I mean, beyond being a kaiser contrabass instead of a dainty little 4-valve F tuba). The solder-ons are diamond-shaped on the F, and round on this one. The bows are squared off on the F and circular on this kaiser. The 45-degree entry and exit from the valves were pretty common up until the 60's, I guess, but they are vertical on the F.
Hornucopia shows a couple of Reichel's but without detailed photos.
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/show.php?s ... eichel+%22
Notice the lovely wire-type S-links on the F. Of course, the linkages have been replaced on the kaiser. But both have wide finger buttons that I don't usually see on East German instruments older than the 70's or so.
Most interestingly to me, the F has classic B&S braces from the 60's and maybe early 70's--wire bases filed to a point and machined spindles with a double-ended taper and a groove in the middle where the fat ends meet. This F tuba was overhauled in the 90's, so maybe that stuff was replaced then, but I rather suspect (read: guess, because I certainly didn't don't have a source) that by the 50's, Reichel had been absorbed into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, the general Saxony-area state-owned conglomerate.
Apparently, the last Reichel passed away in 1962, and B&P reports (citing the museum in Markneukirchen as a source) that he was "the last owner". But what did ownership mean in East Germany in the 50's? Certainly, by the early 50's, most of the old Markneukirchen and Klingenthal companies had been rolled up into VEB Sachsiche Musikinstrumentenfabrik, which was later known simply as VEB. "VEB" is just East German for "the people's enterprise" in Communist lingo, and means roughly the same thing as "corporation" in the West except that it is state-owned (given that the "people" weren't really allowed to own much of anything in the "means of production" category). So, I'm supposing that instruments made in the early 50's and labeled "VEB" were simply left without a brand while the notion of branding was in hiding. The old Hess factory portion of that conglomerate became B&S with its many labels, but those labels didn't appear until the 60's.
Hess was a retailer who started making instruments in the late 30's (which is when they hired away leading instrument makers from other companies, e.g. Andreas Crönlein, previously from Alexander and the reason why instruments such as the B&Setc. 101 and 104 are so Alexander-like). But Reichel had always made brass instruments in Markneukirchen since the late 1800's, and they also traded staff with lots of big-name makers of that era.
But it may also be that by the 50's, the Reichel factory, though part of the VEB conglomerate, was still doing its own thing, but traded parts or worked with other makers in the conglomerate to obtain parts for some instruments. Maybe this kaiser was a standard product in their catalog and didn't need outside parts, but the F pictured above was a special and used a lot of parts acquired from sister factories.
Rick "wondering what the tuba landscape would be like if Germany had never been divided" Denney
Cheers,
Jared
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Oddly, putting Germany back together defined that eastern German standard tuba models were no longer handmade, and that more automated production versions were made "strong like bull".
- Alebeard
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Re: R&M Kaisertuba is Finally Home!
Had my first practice with the orchestra. It went very well, I played better with the group than any of my previous practices so far. I am pretty rusty still with sight reading so I got some work to do with that. Overall, I am extremely happy and excited to be back playing with a group again!
Cheers,
Jared
Cheers,
Jared
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- York-aholic (Thu Feb 09, 2023 11:52 pm) • matt g (Fri Feb 10, 2023 7:19 am) • bloke (Fri Feb 10, 2023 11:59 pm)