Re: tuba chair
Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2012 9:14 pm
Hopefully there is a feature that prevents said tubist from falling asleep during all of that difficult counting
We have a couple of that sort of shields in our orchestra, quite useful indeedbloke wrote:...I want the sound shield behind the violas to be one-way glass...
...so I can't see the conductor...
It seems they see us as "roll models"!YORK-aholic wrote:I think you miss the point of the chair. It is to lull the tuba-ist to sleep, after which he can be rolled off stage...
I wish I had the chair when I was in school. My part-time job as unloading Rite Aid Pharmacy trucks on the streets of Philadelphia beginning at 4:30 AM, after which, I would attend classes and ensemble rehearsals. On days of orchestra rehearsals, I would put my head down on my tuba that was across my lap and fall asleep until I felt a jab on my right arm that would awaken me to the sound of the bass traombonist's voice saying, "four before rehearsal number twelve, three before...". The tuba chair would have afforded me a much better quality of sleep.Ben wrote:Hopefully there is a feature that prevents said tubist from falling asleep during all of that difficult counting