Well, I did. I played from 6th grade till 12th on Eb's. I auditioned for college on Eb. I got to college and found--to my real surprise-- that they had no Eb tubas:none! So, then I took a quick submersion course in BBb fingerings, placement, ear-training, the whole works. And lot's of performances hitting me in the face as a newbie freshman. Talk about fun!tuba4sissies wrote: but who started on a Eb?
Back in the day ... [haha old people]
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scottw
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When was that and where was the college... just curious.scottw wrote:Well, I did. I played from 6th grade till 12th on Eb's. I auditioned for college on Eb.tuba4sissies wrote: but who started on a Eb?
Dan Schultz
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Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
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As I recall, it's not an issue for folks with a solid sense of relative pitch, just those with absolute pitch who have picked up the habit of equating written notes to absolute pitches.MaryAnn wrote:It makes sense if you read music via fingerings. It is a flaming nightmare if you happen to read by pitch. (but we already had that discussion, some time back.)
It seems to me that if written notation is learned as a way to show relationships between pitches and not as a definition of pitch, there wouldn't be a problem for the absolute perfect pitchers.