At the Met, they have that King double tuba that was made for Bill Bell. I’m 99% sure it’s a turd to play, but it looks cool.
A lot of the stuff in the V&E collection is probably not great in terms of playing, even when new. The tuba is a relatively new instrument and there has been lots of iteration on design.
That being said, there are exceptions.
Tuba Tuesday: Martin, Handcraft, BB flat tuba, 4 piston, c.1956
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Re: Tuba Tuesday: Martin, Handcraft, BB flat tuba, 4 piston, c.1956
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Re: Tuba Tuesday: Martin, Handcraft, BB flat tuba, 4 piston, c.1956
100% on the money, @matt g.matt g wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 7:35 pm At the Met, they have that King double tuba that was made for Bill Bell. I’m 99% sure it’s a turd to play, but it looks cool.
A lot of the stuff in the V&E collection is probably not great in terms of playing, even when new. The tuba is a relatively new instrument and there has been lots of iteration on design.
That being said, there are exceptions.
Things such as double tubas are the stuff which should stuff musea.
I'm building a 6-valve B-flat (bass trombone size/bore) cimbasso.
If it ends up sucking, at least it's weird. thus: perhaps (ie. weird/useless) eventually serving as museum fodder.
"In his twilight years, an obnoxious bastard - who went by the pseudonym, "bloke" - stuck together several successful frankentubas (which are still in use, today). This whatchamacallit, however, is one of his two (widely considered to be) failures, and - as he sucked as a person - it seems fitting that one of his suck creations should be on display here in this dark, unnoticed corner of the Sousfonian Institute."
A regular really good King B-flat tuba and/or a regular really good B-flat bass trombone and/or a really good Miraphone 186...
Those belong in the hands of working musicians, busy/joyful amateurs, or promising/careful/mature-behaving students (who worked enough hours at some job or saved up enough money to buy them)...and - likely - sold to the highest bigger (unless someone really needs a tax deduction).
OK...a worn-out-valves version of any of those could be displayed (though not really interesting/rare), but could likely better serve as parts to keep other same-model instruments going.
Here (as an example) appears to be an Alexander C tuba in pretty good (could be better, but whatever...) shape, which I could imagine being sold to an Alex-loving professional or enthusiastic student - EITHER who would offer it a great deal of playing time, and would make a great deal of music with it...and look at all that space to load it up with additional (hopefully: genuine Alex) rotors.