Here's the Yama lacquer online pic.
(Silver pictures are too hard for me to interpret.)
IF ANYONE KNOWS:
Is the second main slide located in a convenient "tune any note" position?
![Image](https://usa.yamaha.com/files/YCB-623_f_0001_716c0442f8302fc9783924ba3d69ff96.jpg?impolicy=resize&imwid=2000&imhei=2000)
A lot of young players would be better off not touching any slides on a horn for about the first two weeks of practice with it. Then get out the tuner and some drone tones and figure things out.
Totally agree. I'm not a slide puller either, and I think a four valve C tuba is about the only time I've let it be acceptable, for exactly the reasons that Matt describes.matt g wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 7:28 pmA lot of young players would be better off not touching any slides on a horn for about the first two weeks of practice with it. Then get out the tuner and some drone tones and figure things out.
The only time I’ve needed to yank a slide more than probably 3/4” or so is the low stuff where the tuba simply doesn’t offer a straight solution for the lack of plumbing.
I’ll admit I’ve not kept up with any social media posts on this horn after if first arrived.
I'm on my third F tuba in the past year. With each change, my playing got better and easier. Sure, I've improved, gradually, over the year, but a lot of it is the tuba. The latest is probably one I can set aside for a while, as bloke says, and come back to it without having to relearn everything. The first one certainly wasn't.bort2.0 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 8:52 pm ...
I watch some of these guys what videos moving first, fourth, even third valve slides all around, a tuning trigger or two, main tuning slide triggers... That's just not for me. And in my experience, all the old dudes who have been playing forever sound great, or in tune, and are not working super hard to do that. I would like to think it doesn't take 50 years of playing to get to that point.
It's the player not the tuba, but hey, it's also kind of the tuba, too.
bloke wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 12:34 am @bort2.0
I'm only functionally (so-called) "smart" - as I made it clear in another post in another thread, but when someone puts their mind to it - in addition to shopping for instruments based on intonation characteristics (rather than looks, others online opinions, or "legacy player X played one of these..." etc.) its possible to analyze all the minor problems and figure out ways to not frantically/constantly move one's hand all over the instrument (as if spinning plates on sticks). Notice that I'm putting a great deal of responsibility on the instrument itself; in other words responsibility on the the player to choose an instrument that (not only isn't hopelessly wonky, intonation-wise, but also) offers remarkably good - if not inexplicably good - inherent intonation characteristics. At the risk of getting personal, most of the instruments that you have paraded in front of all of us haven't met that standard, and one - that you sold long ago - most likely did.
That having been said - in a fairly demonstrative way, imagine all the makes and models of tubas designed in the last few decades that would have been abysmal failures (sales-wise) had those shopping for them put intonation characteristics first and foremost above all other playing characteristics... and no, I'm not about to list any of them.
Circling back to the banner of this thread, I I'm just expressing curiosity as to whether anyone here is actually played on one of these things (the particular model) in a critical way. I've said it before many times, I've said it recently, and I'll say it again: As far as "politics" are concerned, defending or criticizing particular makes and models of instruments is by far the most political thing discussed here, and actually getting down to the nitty-gritty and discussing their intonation characteristics is to (finally) not talk around the edges of the elephant in the Elephant Room.