WHAT IS THE MOST TUBAS YOU HAVE EVER PLAYED IN A BAND WITH?!
- MartyNeilan
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Regional and Allstate "symphonic bands" in high school had 6 tubas, the "wind ensembles" had two. I was in my share of each and must say I usually preferred the two tuba sound. While you can tune 6 non-pro tubas to play Bb's in tune, many other notes come out sounding with a very substantial "vibrato" of intonation differences. The end result often muddies rather then reincofces the bass line. The only exception was Reed's "Russian Christmas Music" where just the sheer amount of sound on the last section made up for tuning issues.
As for the "taking everything down" part, while you may think that is cool, the end result usually sounds like CRAP. Save it for one, maybe two players only and at prominent cadence points. Unless you just want to be selfish and make the whole tuba section sound bad.
As for the "taking everything down" part, while you may think that is cool, the end result usually sounds like CRAP. Save it for one, maybe two players only and at prominent cadence points. Unless you just want to be selfish and make the whole tuba section sound bad.
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- tuba114
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- ai698
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That makes two of us in a band of 748. Cameron and I also played in the Liberty band in 1986 with only forty.Barney wrote:1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles ..... I played in the marching band for the opening ceremonies... there were 48 tubas (sousaphones, actually).
Steve W
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
- CJ Krause
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at Sam Houston we usually used 5 to 6 in the Symphonic band which had anywhere from 113 to 133 in the band depending on what big orchestral transcription we were doing. we did the Pines with around 132 and 6 tubas, 6 tenor bones, 2 bass bones, 4 euphs, 8 honrs and 26 trumpets... we got a 25 min standing ovation and we split the brass at the end and played from the back of the auditorium. we all marched off and they kept the back row open so we could stand and play bells front for the beig ending. my last year at Sam and my last TMEA
it was a blast
it was a blast
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- windshieldbug
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16 in marching band, but I talked the wind ensemble director into only using one (myself), which was not only great prep for an actual symphony gig, but hugely pissed off the college orchestra conductor, who was used to getting the "top" instrumentalists...
(which I highly recommend, 'cause a lot of what you do in orchestra is count rests, THEN play your a@@ off, IF the strings are up to it... )
(which I highly recommend, 'cause a lot of what you do in orchestra is count rests, THEN play your a@@ off, IF the strings are up to it... )
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- ai698
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TubaRay
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Ditto your opinions, here.MartyNeilan wrote:Regional and Allstate "symphonic bands" in high school had 6 tubas, the "wind ensembles" had two. I was in my share of each and must say I usually preferred the two tuba sound. While you can tune 6 non-pro tubas to play Bb's in tune, many other notes come out sounding with a very substantial "vibrato" of intonation differences. The end result often muddies rather then reincofces the bass line. The only exception was Reed's "Russian Christmas Music" where just the sheer amount of sound on the last section made up for tuning issues.
As for the "taking everything down" part, while you may think that is cool, the end result usually sounds like CRAP. Save it for one, maybe two players only and at prominent cadence points. Unless you just want to be selfish and make the whole tuba section sound bad.
Ray Grim
The TubaMeisters
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The TubaMeisters
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XtremeEuph
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- Cameron Gates
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Right you are Steve. That was a great summer. What a sound that band made. Weren't there 76 bones and 100 trumpets? Very light on the woodwinds - that was nice.ai698 wrote:That makes two of us in a band of 748. Cameron and I also played in the Liberty band in 1986 with only forty.Barney wrote:1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles ..... I played in the marching band for the opening ceremonies... there were 48 tubas (sousaphones, actually).
I know Dennis Askew was also in that band, are there any others you can think of? I remember one guy that was in the same squad (of 4) that I was named Tom McComb (sp). Anyone know where he is now? He was from Illinois and could play the stew out of the sousaphone.
It is a shame that more people cannot have the experience we had with the monster college bands full of players from all over the country. I can't even begin to think of a situation now with security and budget issues that a band like that will ever be formed again.
It was much different than any college band: all meat, no ringers. I have never heard a college band come close to the sound of those groups.
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- ai698
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Don't forget meeting Debbie Allen and Gregory Peck on the ferry to Gov. Island.Cameron Gates wrote:Right you are Steve. That was a great summer. What a sound that band made. Weren't there 76 bones and 100 trumpets? Very light on the woodwinds - that was nice.ai698 wrote:That makes two of us in a band of 748. Cameron and I also played in the Liberty band in 1986 with only forty.Barney wrote:1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles ..... I played in the marching band for the opening ceremonies... there were 48 tubas (sousaphones, actually).
I know Dennis Askew was also in that band, are there any others you can think of? I remember one guy that was in the same squad (of 4) that I was named Tom McComb (sp). Anyone know where he is now? He was from Illinois and could play the stew out of the sousaphone.
It is a shame that more people cannot have the experience we had with the monster college bands full of players from all over the country. I can't even begin to think of a situation now with security and budget issues that a band like that will ever be formed again.
It was much different than any college band: all meat, no ringers. I have never heard a college band come close to the sound of those groups.
I wish I had a list of all the members of the Olympic and Liberty band. Heck, I wish I still had a video of the opening ceremonies of the Olympics. I lost mine about 20 years ago.
Steve W
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
- ai698
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Oh, and for the Olympic band types- Brad McDavid (BD at U of Washington, former i dotter at Ohio State) wanted to have a reunion for the 2004 Summer Games. Don't know if it happened or not.
We still have time for the 1986 Liberty Band 2006 reunion at William Patterson College
We still have time for the 1986 Liberty Band 2006 reunion at William Patterson College
Steve W
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
Rudolf Meinl RM45 CC, Meinl-Weston 46 F, Mack-TU410L
- prototypedenNIS
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8 Cadet Tatoo band 2000
or heavy metal tour w/ John Griffiths in Winnipeg 2002... aboot 50
or heavy metal tour w/ John Griffiths in Winnipeg 2002... aboot 50
Last edited by prototypedenNIS on Tue Mar 14, 2006 5:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
denNIS
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I have no idea -- it was somewhere between 70 and 90-something in a massed performance of the national anthems at a DCI Finals. There was also probably 40 or 50 of us in a DCM/DCE/DCA/DC Quebec "All Star" corps that marched Macy's in '91. NBC had learned from a previous extra-large corps broadcast (Orange Bowl parade in '89) that they needed high-SPL microphones that wouldn't break because of our sound levels. 450+ drum corps brass can put out a LOT of noise.


