I can relate to that. Peter Graham probably had the BBb 3 + 1 tubas in mind when he wrote the opening obligato figure in Harrison's Dream. Playing the fast 16th note sequence of low concert C#, D#, E, F#, C#, D#, C#, D#, E, F#, etc. on a CC tuba (with the loud wood block preventing the basses from dragging!) was extremely difficult. Concert C# requires all 5 valves on a CC tuba. But on the 3 + 1 BBb, the split fingering is so much more manageable on those notes!AndyCat wrote:...without the independance of the (3+1) 4th valve in my playing experience...a couple of pieces were, for me, physically impossible.
Rick Denney wrote:
The competiveness is the purpose of brass banding, and therefore it must be the prime motivation.
Chuck(G) responded:
In fact, the annual NABBA competition even accommodates bands that are not wanting to compete head-to-head. Bands who would like adjudicators' comments but no comparative/competitive scores can enter the Exhibition Section. Bands that use instrumentation that does not conform to traditional British brass bands can enter the Open Section.Not at all. I suspect there are a fair number of brass band musicians who would take strong exception to your statement. I belong to a non-competing brass band...





