Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
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- Dave Detwiler
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Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
Hi again, all,
Here is my ranking, by size, of the Subcontrabass Tubas I have been able to track down in my research. Do you know of any others that I have somehow missed - and can you verify their existence, whether now or in the past? Or do you have more reliable data on any of the ones listed?
Thanks so much!
Dave
Here is my ranking, by size, of the Subcontrabass Tubas I have been able to track down in my research. Do you know of any others that I have somehow missed - and can you verify their existence, whether now or in the past? Or do you have more reliable data on any of the ones listed?
Thanks so much!
Dave
Played an F. E. Olds 4-valve BBb in high school (late '70s)
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
- Dave Detwiler
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
To see photos of most of these, here is my blog post with the same information: http://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2021/01/ ... tubas.html. Enjoy - and let me know if you are aware of more of these monsters!
Played an F. E. Olds 4-valve BBb in high school (late '70s)
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
- Dave Detwiler
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
Last call for any additional subcontrabass tuba sightings - thanks!
And @bloke, what can you tell me about the Hoffnung tuba, having apparently seen it and played it?
And @bloke, what can you tell me about the Hoffnung tuba, having apparently seen it and played it?
Played an F. E. Olds 4-valve BBb in high school (late '70s)
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
- iiipopes
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
Cerveny made a contra F tuba, and I think there is a tightly wrapped contra Eb tuba on a thread on TubeNet.
Jupiter JTU1110 - K&G 3F
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
"Real" Conn 36K - JK 4B Classic
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
If that is the instrument that is in Texas, I spent just a long enough time with it to have my picture taken with it, and to discover that it’s a giant vacuum cleaner. Its own mouthpiece overshot my face, and I’m not a person with a small face.Dave Detwiler wrote: ↑Tue Feb 02, 2021 6:24 am Last call for any additional subcontrabass tuba sightings - thanks!
And @bloke, what can you tell me about the Hoffnung tuba, having apparently seen it and played it?
Regardless of how much gigantism is involved in designing an instrument, the human end of it probably (??) needs to accommodate humans.
- Mithosphere
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
https://imgur.com/gallery/y70coEk
EEb subbass tuba. Compact wrap 26-27 feet long, .800" bore, 18 inch bell
EEb subbass tuba. Compact wrap 26-27 feet long, .800" bore, 18 inch bell
- Mithosphere
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- Dave Detwiler
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
Thanks, Ian (@Mithosphere. But this raises a few questions:
1. If a 13-ft Eb tuba is considered a bass tuba, wouldn't a 26-ft Eb be a contrabass, and then a 52-ft Eb, such as the Saxhorn bourdon (no. 1 in my ranking above), be a subcontrabass? Or is "sub-bass" a category used with Eb tubas?
2. What is the make and year of your 26-ft Eb?
3. I have not yet found any hard evidence (articles or images) for a subcontrabass Cerveny. Bevan mentions one (or is it two?) in his book, but with no documentation. What more can you tell me?
Thanks again!
Dave
1. If a 13-ft Eb tuba is considered a bass tuba, wouldn't a 26-ft Eb be a contrabass, and then a 52-ft Eb, such as the Saxhorn bourdon (no. 1 in my ranking above), be a subcontrabass? Or is "sub-bass" a category used with Eb tubas?
2. What is the make and year of your 26-ft Eb?
3. I have not yet found any hard evidence (articles or images) for a subcontrabass Cerveny. Bevan mentions one (or is it two?) in his book, but with no documentation. What more can you tell me?
Thanks again!
Dave
Played an F. E. Olds 4-valve BBb in high school (late '70s)
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
Led the USC Trojan Marching Band tuba section (early '80s)
Now playing an F. Schmidt (=VMI) 3301 and goofing around
on a 1925 Pan American Sousaphone and an 1899 Conn tuba!
- Mithosphere
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
This was he same question I had - since it’s more or less a one-off instrument, it’s hard to figure out how it’s classified. At 26-27 feet long - double the length of a standard bass in E-flat, that would fall in the range of the contrabass. Although if week look at organ notation, as I was told by someone either on that other tuba forum or YouTube, it’s considered a subbass.... but then the Okemos, MI 26-27 foot E-flat helicon is called a subcontrabass...
I’ll have to find that old thread, if the posts haven’t been deleted, to see if I can find the University of Illinois concert program that lists this E-flat tuba in question, although I think they called it a contrabass. I know it was probably made by Bohland & Fuchs pre-1920.
Cerveny made really early tubas and I think someone had found an old catalog showing models like a subcontrabass, but I think we’re talking about the big rotary valve be that is the Amati in B-flat - there was all sorts of talk on what key it was in on the old old Tube—- I mean old tuba forum pre-2004.
I’ll have to find that old thread, if the posts haven’t been deleted, to see if I can find the University of Illinois concert program that lists this E-flat tuba in question, although I think they called it a contrabass. I know it was probably made by Bohland & Fuchs pre-1920.
Cerveny made really early tubas and I think someone had found an old catalog showing models like a subcontrabass, but I think we’re talking about the big rotary valve be that is the Amati in B-flat - there was all sorts of talk on what key it was in on the old old Tube—- I mean old tuba forum pre-2004.
- SteveMarcus
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Re: Are you aware of any other Subcontrabass Tubas?
Now that the Okemos building is gone, it could be assumed that the EEb subbass/subcontrabass helicon and all the other tubas that hung from the ceiling or rested in the basement are in the hands of the former owner of the defunct museum/restaurant.Mithosphere wrote: ↑Wed Feb 03, 2021 1:14 pmthe Okemos, MI 26-27 foot E-flat helicon is called a subcontrabass...
Any info?