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Re: Big tuba
Posted: Sat Sep 21, 2013 10:55 am
by bigbob
Big is not the word maybe giaganticus!!!Do you know what make it is and is it a BBb or CC??any more info?? It looks like the horn is bigger than the orchestra!! How about that mouthpiece?? Is it funtional??I noticed the player was using a reguler MP........Thanks for the pics!...BB
Re: Big tuba
Posted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 9:30 am
by bigtubby
Are these last two videos of the same Cerveny/Amati sub contra? It looks as if it was built as a display and not a player, one would have to be a seven foot tall orangutan to reach the paddles!
Re: Big tuba
Posted: Mon Sep 23, 2013 6:20 pm
by bigbob
Why is the tubing and mouthpiece so high??Why not put it lower so you can play the keys??..Is this a BBb Or a CC?? I think the first tuba was much easier to play.....BB
Re: Big tuba
Posted: Mon Sep 23, 2013 11:33 pm
by bigtubby
bigbob wrote:Why is the tubing and mouthpiece so high??Why not put it lower so you can play the keys??..Is this a BBb Or a CC?? I think the first tuba was much easier to play.....BB
The first tuba
was built to be played as were several other sub contrabasses like the Harvard Besson (IIRC?).
What I thought was a Cerveny (the last two videos above) in fact is a Bohland and Fuchs instrument in FFF that was built in 1911 and displayed in the 1913 World Exhibition. According to Wikipedia:
This tuba is "playable", but two persons are needed; one to operate the valves and one to blow into the mouthpiece.
The proportions appear to be very similar to a normal BBb tuba that and the oversize mouthpiece suggest to me that it was designed more for display. Like a 9/4 "scale model".
I'm guessing that Amati "inherited" the B&F with the post WWII consolidation?