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This is for posting links to off site deals that you are not personally selling,but wanting to pass along good deals
This is for posting links to off site deals that you are not personally selling,but wanting to pass along good deals
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- bugler
- Posts: 210
- Joined: Mon Mar 27, 2006 1:34 pm
- Location: Indy
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- bugler
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 3:22 pm
The large tuba in the photo is one I believe I used to own, unless they made more than one. It was made by VanCavalert (sp?) of Belgium. I have never played or owned a worse instrument.The three notes that were in tune sounded great, the remainder were ghastly. I sold it to Jim Newell of the Buy and Sell Center in Eugene, OR. I also gave him the photo that is in the tuba book. I found it accidentally at the Oregon Historical Society in Portland, researching a history paper while in college. There is another photo of the beast residing in the Willamette College band a few years later.
The photo posted by Bloke brings back many horrible memories. I bought the horn from a man in Corvallis, OR (my hometown) for next to nothing, as a project. I eventually took the horn to John Richards, the longtime underappreciated tubist of the Oregon Symphony, and after a few phrases, he wrinkled his nose and said "Mike, it plays every bit as bad now as the day it was made." I was to be rid of it.
The photo posted by Bloke brings back many horrible memories. I bought the horn from a man in Corvallis, OR (my hometown) for next to nothing, as a project. I eventually took the horn to John Richards, the longtime underappreciated tubist of the Oregon Symphony, and after a few phrases, he wrinkled his nose and said "Mike, it plays every bit as bad now as the day it was made." I was to be rid of it.
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- bugler
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 3:22 pm
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
- Posts: 5679
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:48 am
- Location: Not out of the woods yet.
- Contact:
The last time I checked, Jim still had it in his barn. It's truly awful--instead of a big mellow sound, you get this sort of reedy sound that makes you start looking for a big hole somewhere. Bore, IIRC, is about 0.810".Mike Ferries wrote: The photo posted by Bloke brings back many horrible memories. I bought the horn from a man in Corvallis, OR (my hometown) for next to nothing, as a project. I eventually took the horn to John Richards, the longtime underappreciated tubist of the Oregon Symphony, and after a few phrases, he wrinkled his nose and said "Mike, it plays every bit as bad now as the day it was made." I was to be rid of it.
Jim mentioned that Richards experimented with a folded sheet of cardboard down the bell to improve things.
Probably best left hanging on a wall or turned into a lamp.
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
- Posts: 5679
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:48 am
- Location: Not out of the woods yet.
- Contact:
- Daniel C. Oberloh
- pro musician
- Posts: 547
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 9:22 pm
- Location: Seattle Washington
I'll give it a shot. Far right euph and double bell: Conns, far right is a Wonder model made around 1900/1901 Conn's Elkhart and New York era. The double bell is late teens at the earliest New Wonder (probably gold plated). The Eb second from the left: Holton, Euph in the middle: Boland and Fuchs, The big one is French (Couenon, sp?), probably a stencil for Lyon and Healy or posibly another importer. Just an educated guess.
Daniel C. Oberloh
Oberloh Woodwind and Brass Works

Daniel C. Oberloh
Oberloh Woodwind and Brass Works