King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

For posting interesting and remarkable deals found on the internet.
Post Reply
ParLawGod
Site Admin
Posts: 920
Joined: Sun Jan 12, 2014 9:18 pm
Location: Wisconsin
Has thanked: 33 times
Been thanked: 44 times

King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by ParLawGod »

https://trombonechat.com/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=16828

I've known a number of tubists who use these for jazz horns. Saw this for sale and figured I'd share.


tclements
Posts: 213
Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 5:03 pm
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 64 times
Contact:

Re: King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by tclements »

That's a great price. I'm trying to sell one, but I need to get $3,000 for mine (that's what I paid for it). PLUS I had mine made into an independant system, Bb/F/Gb/D.
User avatar
bort2.0
Posts: 5254
Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:13 am
Location: Minneapolis
Has thanked: 336 times
Been thanked: 999 times

Re: King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by bort2.0 »

What does "Gravis" mean, anyway?

Every time I see one of these I think to myself "yep... it's got two Gravisses" :facepalm2:
bone-a-phone
Posts: 343
Joined: Fri Aug 14, 2020 7:03 am
Has thanked: 116 times
Been thanked: 93 times

Re: King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by bone-a-phone »

bort2.0 wrote: Thu Sep 17, 2020 11:10 am What does "Gravis" mean, anyway?
I think it charitably means "weight" or "heavy" or something to that effect. https://latin-dictionary.net/definition ... ve-gravior There was a story behind how that model got the name, although I can't remember it.

These are relegated to doublers now, as true bass trombonists consider them small for some reason. I owned one for a while and probably should have kept it. Nice horns if they are maintained. The valve tubing is the same size as the slide (562 instead of more common 578 or larger) which I think is where the reputation for being small comes from. Plus, stock, they came with an E valve (instead of D), a badly un-ergonomic double-thumb trigger set up, and they are dependent (instead of independent). So it has a lot going against it in the eyes of some.

$1400 is a good price for a DG with split triggers. $3000 is a bit off the scale. Must be a nice silversonic or something.
User avatar
DandyZ629
Posts: 149
Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:06 am
Has thanked: 31 times
Been thanked: 23 times

Re: King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by DandyZ629 »

These are great instruments. I certainly wish more bass trombonists would dump the "euphonium with a slide" sound concept. Thankfully some of the very best out there are starting to reject that sound concept, or have never lost it. It's supposed to sound like a trombone. It's supposed to have some bark and bite.
Kalison DS CC
User avatar
bloke
Mid South Music
Posts: 19324
Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
Has thanked: 3852 times
Been thanked: 4102 times

Re: King Duo Gravis Bass Trombone

Post by bloke »

gravis (Latin) I believe...??...means "heavy/weighty".
Post Reply