time travel mind games
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- bloke
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time travel mind games
Regardless of the size of a 1960’s manufacturer’s facilities, name a 1960’s-made (by TODAY’s tuba size standards) 5/4-size C tuba that – one to the next – CONSISTENTLY offered excellent intonation characteristics (not epic/four-inch-range #1 slide pulling, and no #3 nor main slide manipulation).
bloke “I’m coming up with nothing.”
bloke “I’m coming up with nothing.”
- Doc
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Re: time travel mind games
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- bort2.0
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Re: time travel mind games
How many 5/4 sized CC tubas we're even made at that time, which had high enough production runs to even evaluate "consistency"?
A few Rudy's, maybe?
A couple of Conn Don/Non-atelli maybe?
Can't think of much else...
A few Rudy's, maybe?
A couple of Conn Don/Non-atelli maybe?
Can't think of much else...
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Re: time travel mind games
I was thinking the same thing. In that regard, "5/4 CC" is late to the "widely-available" party. If you wanted a big tuba, BBb would be easier to find/order.
Was Cerveny making big CC tubas back then?
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- bort2.0
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Re: time travel mind games
I think the older brands like Cerveny and Alexander have always made CC tubas. Now I can't remember... but wasn't there some European country where CC tubas were actually preferred, even back in the day?
So yeah, maybe some big Cerveny CC tubas, perhaps a few Alex 164 CC's?
For European companies... I'm doubting there were any large-enough Miraphones at the time, and same with B&S, I don't know what their CC product line was at that point. Meinl Weston...? Gronitz? Hirsbrunner? A few B&M Marzans? What was Kurath/Willson up to in the 1960s?
For American companies, what was around in the 1960s? Stretching my memory... but I think Conn was mostly making smaller CC tubas like the 2J and 3J. King... did they ever regularly produce a CC? Holton... a couple of 6/4 factory CC's, but not much. Martin -- if still around -- again, just a few CC in their history. Olds/Reynolds didn't make anything CC iirc.
Asian companies, I just have no idea. Yamaha was around, but I don't know when they started making tubas. But still, were any in CC, and in what quantity if so?
- jtm
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Re: time travel mind games
Was Miraphone making a CC bigger than the 188 when that model came out in the late 70s?
Does this time machine have some old catalogs?
Does this time machine have some old catalogs?
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This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
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This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
playing some old German rotary tubas for free
- bloke
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Re: time travel mind games
The INTONATION requirement - in the first post (if not ignored) - is going to be THE single most challenging hurdle.
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Re: time travel mind games
If memory serves, Bohland & Fuchs made some CC tubas before WWII, but I don't know how common they really were. Of course, that is before the time frame Joe asked about.bort2.0 wrote: ↑Thu May 05, 2022 9:50 amI think the older brands like Cerveny and Alexander have always made CC tubas. Now I can't remember... but wasn't there some European country where CC tubas were actually preferred, even back in the day?
So yeah, maybe some big Cerveny CC tubas, perhaps a few Alex 164 CC's?
For European companies... I'm doubting there were any large-enough Miraphones at the time, and same with B&S, I don't know what their CC product line was at that point. Meinl Weston...? Gronitz? Hirsbrunner? A few B&M Marzans? What was Kurath/Willson up to in the 1960s?
For American companies, what was around in the 1960s? Stretching my memory... but I think Conn was mostly making smaller CC tubas like the 2J and 3J. King... did they ever regularly produce a CC? Holton... a couple of 6/4 factory CC's, but not much. Martin -- if still around -- again, just a few CC in their history. Olds/Reynolds didn't make anything CC iirc.
Asian companies, I just have no idea. Yamaha was around, but I don't know when they started making tubas. But still, were any in CC, and in what quantity if so?
I'm not sure when the 190 was first produced in CC, although they were never made in great numbers, but even so...
...this would exclude them, as it would almost every other large CC tubas (few as they might be) made during that era. And the same applies to many 4/4 CC tubas made during that time also.
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- jtm
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Re: time travel mind games
A fellow in one of my bands plays a largish European rotary C tuba (big enough to not fit in the trunk of an Accord, where I'm pretty sure a 188 would fit). If the C in the staff is in tune, then the C below the staff is so flat that he plays C with 1-4. Bb with 1 should be similarly flat, but I didn't ask which fingering he likes for that. Seems like a very confusing way to work.
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- bort2.0
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Re: time travel mind games
Then help me out, what 5/4 sized CC tuba was built in the 1960s in large enough numbers so as to compare them and draw conclusions about consistency?
- bloke
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Re: time travel mind games
3 out of 3 would be consistent.
1 out of 2 would be inconsistent.
A 35c-low open G is a non-starter.
A 20c-low 2-3 E-flat (yet: with the #3 slide pushed in all the way) is a non-starter.
I believe the conclusion (to which many will soon be drawn towards) is that quite large easily-playable C tubas (though still - in my observation - are not common - ie. borderline anomalies) are a quite recent set of inventions.