De Prins tuba?
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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
- Uncle Buck
- 5 valves
- Posts: 1243
- Joined: Fri Aug 27, 2004 3:45 pm
- Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
- Contact:
Potential
Looks to me like this horn has the potential to be a good all-purpose (or most-purposes) horn. Sure would be comforting to know a little more about it, though.
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- bugler
- Posts: 186
- Joined: Sat Jul 10, 2004 10:31 pm
- Location: Wilkes-Barre, PA
I have one of these exact horns. The bore is .687", the bell 19 1/4" dia. It plays like the King 2341 I had back in high school--rich tone, and a surprisingly big sound for the bore size, agile, responsive.
Walter Sear is a respected sound engineer whose studio has been open for 50 years in NYC. He went to one of the name music institutes--Curtis, if I recall correctly--and was the tubist in the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra.
He designed a number of tubas and had them made in Europe. This particular horn is considered by some to be his best effort. Mahillion and Cerveny also built horns to his design from what I have read. One source states that his designs are the basis for the best of Cerveny's horns still and that he pretty well saved Cerveny at one point through his import business to the U.S.
Hope this helps.
Walter Sear is a respected sound engineer whose studio has been open for 50 years in NYC. He went to one of the name music institutes--Curtis, if I recall correctly--and was the tubist in the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra.
He designed a number of tubas and had them made in Europe. This particular horn is considered by some to be his best effort. Mahillion and Cerveny also built horns to his design from what I have read. One source states that his designs are the basis for the best of Cerveny's horns still and that he pretty well saved Cerveny at one point through his import business to the U.S.
Hope this helps.
It is impossible to make things foolproof because fools are so ingenious.