Don't misinterpret any of the following as "what I'm doing is harder than what you're doing".
That having been said, what I'm doing now is more difficult for ME than what I was previously doing...and I'm also getting older.
I've spoken privately with one of my (and a high-profile one) betters who is also playing a good bit of 6/4 (piston) B-flat, these days,
and - even though piston - they asked me (paraphrased) "...so how are you getting around the 'brrrrr' attacks that so easily occur when playing B-flat?"
which tremendously impressed me regarding their candidness and admission of being-a-real-person-ness.
I love the resonance of the additional two feet of tapered bugle (18 feet vs. 16 feet), as well as the resonance of the particular instrument that I (well...I waited a DECADE to find one of these used, so I'd better-the-heck like it ) have chosen.
So many of the rotary "kaiser" B-flat tubas offer really dubious scales (without pulling/tugging/alternates/etc.) and tend to be noisy (old valves/old linkage/etc.) that (with the "heavy lifting" that I'm doing with my instrument - compared to any 6/4 piston C I've ever played) I just couldn't imagine trying to play (well...) a "lesser" model of this style of instrument (which would demand even so much more effort, on my part).
There are several factors:
- two more feet of bugle (amazing additional resonance, but more effort to negotiate musically, and also more air required...again: from an old guy)
- larger bore (yes, the valves are farther down the bugle, but (so what?) all of that cylindrical tubing's area (25% more AREA, even though only 11% more DIAMETER) - even though only is not only much larger, but all of it is much longer - being B-flat lengths).
- rotary valves vs. pistons - Pistons offer what I think of as an "instantaneous half-valving" opportunity (for legato playing) which really isn't available with rotary valves. Thus rotary valve "slurs" are either good or they are (LOL: embarrassing) failures...nothing in-between.
The thing that pulls me to this (and I've never been this way...anyone who's read my very long history of posts knows that I'm a "hand me ~A~ tuba, as long as it offers easy intonation" person) tuba is its resonance. Its really fun (exciting) to be on the pilot end of a sound generator such as this one.
...so these things - technically speaking, regarding my own efforts - had to be pushed up a notch (again, while dealing with aging process)
- more accurate buzz (frequency) compared to C instruments. With C instruments (again: two feet less expanding bugle), "pretty good" is good. With this B-flat (and many other B-flat instruments) moving to another pitch with the lips buzzing at more than a handful of hz. off, is going to (as my friend and I both strive to avoid) result in "brrrr" attacks.
- Slurs also must land (nearly perfectly) on the correct lip frequency as well (all the same reasons/good-results/bad-results).
- EVERYTHING requires more air vs. a 6/4 piston C tuba...If there's an opportunity to take in air, I'd darn well better take it, and - if I want to avoid under-playing - I'd darn well better USE that air.
- Slurs not only need to be accurate, but I (absolutely!) must avoid falling into a bad habit of the (crappy) slur work-around of "huffing" the slurs...as doing that is NOT legato.
The rotors and linkage on this instrument are absolutely perfect, and perfectly silent. I just couldn't imagine (in addition to dubious intonation) attempting to negotiate some other old kaiser B-flat with clanky/slow/whatever rotors...what a horrible obstacle that would be, as well as a horrible distraction (on top of all of the additional required dialing in of my own playing - ie. concentration - required to play this instrument).
[insert summation sentence or paragraph - which adds zero additional useful content - here]
even more boring blather about kaiser B-flat vs. 6/4 piston C playing
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- bloke
- Mid South Music
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- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19308
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3847 times
- Been thanked: 4100 times
Re: even more boring blather about kaiser B-flat vs. 6/4 piston C playing
LOL...
Actually WRITING this stuff down improved my practice session, this morning.
(into Rochut bk. III, which I've neglected up until this late date (as I bought it back when it was $2.75, now: $19.99 )...an A major sort of brisk/long etude with a bunch of doodle-e-doos...four or five passes through it - each time, avoiding a few more pitfalls, while striving to take my own advice...)
Actually WRITING this stuff down improved my practice session, this morning.
(into Rochut bk. III, which I've neglected up until this late date (as I bought it back when it was $2.75, now: $19.99 )...an A major sort of brisk/long etude with a bunch of doodle-e-doos...four or five passes through it - each time, avoiding a few more pitfalls, while striving to take my own advice...)