Tubas, euphoniums, mouthpieces, and anything music-related.
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Rick Denney wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 2:29 pm
The mute was designed by Walter Sear, and he is pictured demonstrating it in Bevan.
Rick "whose first response to the question about the valve spatulas was 'ugly'" Denney
You're very close, Rick! Check your Bevan one more time.
Maybe it was Rex Connor. My books are too disorganized to find that one in any reasonable amount of time. :)
Rick "books subject to spousal organization: by size" Denney
That's it! I'll subtract .25 point for the spelling (Conner).
Rex Conner's "spaceship" mute, which he designed in coordination with an acoustics professor at the University of Kentucky, sat in his (well, Skip Gray's, at the time) office during my time at UK and was occasionally tried out on a lark. A really curious thing. Almost a tuba Harmon mute, with tons and tons of backpressure, heavy as heck, felt-covered clips that attached it to the end of your bell -- nothing actually goes inside the bell. Made an interesting sound.
Last edited by arpthark on Fri Mar 08, 2024 2:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
despite what this link says, there is no way that tuba if from the 1960's. It has to be at least 100 years old
a friend of mine had a tuba collection that was willed to him, but he wasn't a tuba player. I helped him find homes for all of those instruments.
I was about to embark on a long road trip in 2020 and planned on going to the tuba museum, so I offered to take it with me instead of trying to find a buyer for it. It really didn't play well at all and would have been difficult to sell
the day I picked up the tuba from him was the last time I saw him. He passed away from covid a few months later.
arpthark wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 2:50 pm
Rex Conner's "spaceship" mute, which he designed in coordination with an acoustics professor at the University of Kentucky, sat in his (well, Skip Gray's, at the time) office during my time at UK and was occasionally tried out on a lark. A really curious thing. Almost a tuba Harmon mute, with tons and tons of backpressure, heavy as heck, felt-covered clips that attached it to the end of your bell -- nothing actually goes inside the bell. Made an interesting sound.
That is correct; I wish I could remember the name of the acoustics/physics professor at U.K. ( @davidgilbreath will probably remember) I believe it was the same professor who manufactured the Conner mouthpieces (raw brass with a stainless steel screw-on rim - I still have one). Remember, that was 50 years ago. Rex Conner let me take it to my apartment for a weekend once to try it. It played so softly that the next-door neighbors couldn't hear it, but it felt and played no different than playing with no mute, meaning it didn't feel like something was down in the bell. So it was the perfect practice mute, except as I recall, it weighed almost as much as the tuba itself, so extra muscle was required.