Posted: Mon Dec 27, 2004 10:30 pm
As an adult amateur today, I played tuba from grade 7 to 11, and only sparingly in grade 12, and not at all at university. I was very surprised that all of the fingerings came immediately back when I purchased my own instrument after a 6 year lay-off, a year out of university. I had played BBb in high school and started back up with a BBb. So, if you stick with the same key of tuba as you previously played, it should be quite easy to get back into it. Over 20 years later, I'm still glad I did.
BTW, I currently own a CC and an Eb tuba, and I'm quite keen on the choice of a large Eb bass tuba as a very versitile instrument for someone who is an adult amateur, unless all your playing will likely be with large ensembles (in which case a larger contrabass horn is probably a better choice). If your playing might favor smaller ensembles, quintet, or brass band types of groups, you might consider taking this opportunity to "re-enter" with something like a Besson 981 Eb, or the Willson 3400 5V piston Eb tuba. Unless you plan to be the only tuba in the band/orchestra, you'll still get a very decent amount of sound, and will probably find the upper register playing to be slightly easier as well. You will have to learn different fingerings, but you might find the benefits to be worth the "investment". This is an option available to you that you may not have considered.
If I had had the funds available a few years back to purchase a Willson 3400, when I was playing Eb exclusively, I would still be an Eb-only player today, I'm virtually certain. (Of course, there is that BAT-temptation thing, since a local friend just took posession of a BBb Holton 345 . . . !!!]
In summary, "Come on in, the water's fine!"
BTW, I currently own a CC and an Eb tuba, and I'm quite keen on the choice of a large Eb bass tuba as a very versitile instrument for someone who is an adult amateur, unless all your playing will likely be with large ensembles (in which case a larger contrabass horn is probably a better choice). If your playing might favor smaller ensembles, quintet, or brass band types of groups, you might consider taking this opportunity to "re-enter" with something like a Besson 981 Eb, or the Willson 3400 5V piston Eb tuba. Unless you plan to be the only tuba in the band/orchestra, you'll still get a very decent amount of sound, and will probably find the upper register playing to be slightly easier as well. You will have to learn different fingerings, but you might find the benefits to be worth the "investment". This is an option available to you that you may not have considered.
If I had had the funds available a few years back to purchase a Willson 3400, when I was playing Eb exclusively, I would still be an Eb-only player today, I'm virtually certain. (Of course, there is that BAT-temptation thing, since a local friend just took posession of a BBb Holton 345 . . . !!!]
In summary, "Come on in, the water's fine!"