genuine kaiser tuba resonance
Posted: Sun Sep 22, 2024 9:02 am
https://www.facebook.com/reel/116191363 ... 7S9Ucbxw6v
This is a fine Greek tuba player who is also a composer. His biography gives the history of his experiences performing in German orchestras, and he currently performs with an orchestra in Berlin.
https://vikentios-tuba.com/
I thought some of you might be interested in hearing the characteristic resonance - close up and personal - of an authentic German kaiser tuba, and how it differs from the wide-belled York style tubas that so many of us Americans are familiar with and/or own ourselves.
To be clear, my own tuba is a hybrid, and doesn't feature a bell of this shape. Mine has features of a kaiser all the way up to the bell, and then features a 6/4 York shaped bell, so mine doesn't offer this much "edge" unless my own playing is "over the top". A kaiser (as heard) offers this type of resonance at a normal fortissimo. To my ears, it blends with very loud trombones, and it also allows the tuba to be heard more clearly and easily in the orchestra at loud volume levels as it throws out more overtones as aural clues for the patrons and other musicians alike. These are not "the tuba should be felt and not heard" tubas. These are heard tubas.
A far more commonly found model in the United states, the Meinl-Weston 25, is sort of a scaled-down kaiser. It offers the same type of resonance but just isn't quite as big an instrument.
This is a fine Greek tuba player who is also a composer. His biography gives the history of his experiences performing in German orchestras, and he currently performs with an orchestra in Berlin.
https://vikentios-tuba.com/
I thought some of you might be interested in hearing the characteristic resonance - close up and personal - of an authentic German kaiser tuba, and how it differs from the wide-belled York style tubas that so many of us Americans are familiar with and/or own ourselves.
To be clear, my own tuba is a hybrid, and doesn't feature a bell of this shape. Mine has features of a kaiser all the way up to the bell, and then features a 6/4 York shaped bell, so mine doesn't offer this much "edge" unless my own playing is "over the top". A kaiser (as heard) offers this type of resonance at a normal fortissimo. To my ears, it blends with very loud trombones, and it also allows the tuba to be heard more clearly and easily in the orchestra at loud volume levels as it throws out more overtones as aural clues for the patrons and other musicians alike. These are not "the tuba should be felt and not heard" tubas. These are heard tubas.
A far more commonly found model in the United states, the Meinl-Weston 25, is sort of a scaled-down kaiser. It offers the same type of resonance but just isn't quite as big an instrument.