I found these pictures at webshots.com and thought I'd share with everyone. It looks similar to the vienna horn from another post but this horn is huge! They claim it has seven valves and weighs 80lbs. I thought it was nice of them to make the bell removable! Does anyone have any information to share about this horn?
Hey! Those pictures are from the 2004 TubaChristmas in State College, PA! That's at our performance venue and cooincides with the local Festival of Trees, hence the Christmas trees in the background. Dr. Young didn't make it this year, but our local Ophecleide player was there again.
Miraphone Norwegian Star Eb
King 4V BBb ~1913
Holton 4V Eb 1920
Holton 3V Eb 1930
Beergardenblatter wrote:that this is the first valved brass instrument to be "fully chromatic" . That of course is not true.
They used the words "truly chromatic". With the design you can play chromatic with only one valve, thus, no slightly out of tune valve combinations. The fingering would be:
open Bb
1
2
3
4
5
trigger E
trigger + 1
trigger + 2
trigger + 3
trigger + 4
trigger + 5
open Bb
Each note has its own slide, you could tune to perfect pitch for the key you're in, or equal tempered if you wish. The only tuning issues would be the open partials.
Beergardenblatter wrote:I imagine some slight further digging will easily reveal some additional more conventional multi-valve brass instruments that are "truly chromatic". There's a multitude of configurations and ideas that have been tried over the last 200+ years, making a claim to be "first" can be tenuous.
I'll make it easier for ya... how about the first truly chromatic instrument, even the first microtonal instrument... the sackbut!
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker" http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
bloke wrote:Originally, it was a plain-ol' four-piston King...except with one less pair of bows that the "normal" version. (I saw the un-dicked-with instrument back around 1974 in Knoxville.)
I wonder how much better in tune it plays than a plain wrapper 2341?
...
It was turned into what it is by Gronitz, to Dr. Youngs specs.
I never understood about that "perfect intonation" stuff with more valves. The reason I pull slides is not so much to deal with the sharpness of using valve combinations (as opposed to using single valves), as to deal with quirks in pitches. Many tubas do not have their open tones absolutely in tune, and there are further variations from theoretical pitch while using valves.
I think in the case of this double tuba, the quest for theoretical perfection has outstripped practicality by a big margin.
Here is a top two list of what we need for perfect intonation:
2) A separate valve for each and every note the tuba can play.
1) A separate tuba for each and every note (think panpipes).
[My personal finding is that practicing more makes my tuba more in tune!]