Bob Kolada wrote:Frankly, American baritones are lovely playing and very useful switch instruments which, unfortunately, most people look down their noses at. I prefer them to Bessons as solo instruments due to their much clearer sound. They are one of those charming American instruments (though I wonder where those German polka band baritones come from) that has been almost completely overlooked.
Indeed. The hybrid bore size and bugle taper give these instruments their own voice that is neither euphonium nor brass band baritone. For American mixed-wind concert bands, I prefer that tone, as it has a "horn" quality about it that can blend with either woodwinds or brass, and can still bring out, for example, the counter melody of a march when needed, that in an American configuration mixed wind concert band setting sometimes gets woofy sounding on euph, especially if too deep a mouthpiece is used.
Then again, I also prefer "straight" cornets to trumpets in concert bands as well.
Echoing the bore arms race, early cornets and trumpets were @ .422 to .438. Maynard Ferguson came to prominence playing a Conn 38 with a .438 bore, and many jazz players played King Super 20's and other similar trumpets with a "medium" .448 or thereabouts bore. Then Bach made the ML the standard at .459, and then on their 229 "Chicago" C a .462 so Bud Herseth along with Jacobs and crew could carry the dead Chicago hall. Now the L and XL have been made for decades, like Miles Davis playing a large bore Martin Committee, but yes, in the past 30 years, larger bores have become the norm rather than the exception. My uncle's WWII-era King Silvertone cornet was a "standard" with a .458 bore, deemed "medium bore" as engraved on the valve casing, and now Flip Oakes and others go as large as .470, which is larger for a trumpet or cornet than the average trombone bore of a century ago.
Kanstul is actually going back to smaller bores with their new line of tubas, and getting rave reviews. I prefer my smaller leadpipe and smaller bore main tuning slide on my particular old Miraphone rather than the newer larger bore leadpipe, main tuning slide and larger bow. King has kept basically the same .687 bore for over a century, varying bugle configuration and bell details, but changing nothing significant to the valve block. Reynolds, coming over from York to work for H.N. White, got that one right, and so has Conn, which also has used basically the same .734 valve block for helicons and souzys for over 125 years. So in the midst of ever growing bores, there are still a couple of solid constants.
I just wonder what bores and leadpipe/bugle profiles will be a few decades from now.