I'm pondering this. I don't think I've ever bought a tuba (except for Solder Practice and also except for the Martin fiberglass tuba that I should dub Epoxy Practice) that wasn't a Very Serious Tuba.timayer wrote:I don't necessarily disagree, but I also don't necessarily agree. Younger players do tend to want newer, shinier horns, but I think the cause is not that they want new and shinier, it's that playing isn't solely for fun yet. Once enough time passes, and the realization and acceptance that we're not going to play in the Chicago Symphony sets in, then the calculus for what horn to play sets in. For myself, I found that at that point, I wanted to play a horn with some fun, history, and/or a good story. And I wanted to try different types of horns - again, for fun. My PT6 was a great horn, but it was a Very Serious Tuba.Rick Denney wrote:The days of tubas selling because they have a great story or provenance, or because they come from the heyday (or present day) of American or German manufacture are gone. The age group that respected those stories already has what it wants, or has aged out.
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For young players, new and shiny rates higher than provenance.
But do you mean a tuba that will "look right" when sitting in front of an audition committee? If so, then I've never been in the market for a Very Serious Tuba. That said, the instruments I've ended up with have Very Serious covered pretty deeply--a Holton 345, a Hirsbrunner HBS-193, a B&S 6-valve post-Symphonie "Symphonie", and even the Yamaha 621 F. In all cases, the purchases were motivated by what the tubas did, and even though I'm a second-rate amateur, their qualities were apparent to me and those around me. Same for the new Eastman. I suspect a young music student looks at me and thinks I'm the worst kind of poseur, but it seems to me those are Very Serious Tubas, even though I'm not a Very Serious Tuba Player.
Rick "of course, having fun is serious business" Denney