I gladly will take your photos of the Concertone for my galleries. It obviously is part of a stencilling scheme.
The worst ones we see and ever saw of those are the current mainland-China ones.
I never will be the greatest lover of piston instruments from Warsaw-Pact area, also from before that area got its name after WWII. But the fact, that the Saxonians and Bohemians knew the trade of building brass instruments, has been proved again and again.
Joe S (bloke) a few months ago had a thread on a Buescher Eb full circle 4 pistons sousaphone. Sadly I cannot locate this thread, as it provided a god visual contrast to the non-full circle Eb illustrated in this present thread.
I have far too many basses, so I can tell you, that non-full circle Eb sousas are more friendly on the bodies of "grown-up" persons, than are the full circle versions. I’m no quarter-back-type, neither am I pregnant, but my belly button is reasonably cushioned. (And my basses # 9 & 10 are arriving this Saturday).
When entering the sample illustrated abov ehere in the index of my galleries, I discovered, that it was the first sample of non-full-circle King Eb’s represented there, so my original question still stands.
A bit more about stencils: I don’t like the idea of such sort of masked trading.
However I must realise, that if it hadn’t existed, many of our predecessors forming the bulk of the band movements in several countries never would have been in a social and economical situation, where their participation in band playing would at all have been possible.
Some TubeNetters were raised through the depression of the 1930’ies. I was raised in extreme poverty in post-war Germany (even if I am a thoroughbred Dane). But bands made it through these crises and probably were part of the scheme keeping up the survival spirit.
And the tuba naming my own web-projects in its own odd way is a stencil instrument. The York Master instruments were made by Böhm & Meinl (now Nirschl).
My download homepage has a link for the index of all my uploaded music files. You can download them for free, when I have received your reply to my "Welcome"-mail. Players already approved for the group in question of course have direct access.
Klaus Smedegaard Bjerre of Denmark
Retired teacher
Index over 45MB+ of free music files in .pdf format to be found in the Files area of:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterBBb/
(Approved membership required)
Index over 2.3GB of brass instruments galleries and catalogue scans to be found in the Files area of:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMaste ... PhotosIII/
(Membership is open for all)