Donn wrote:Could it be that Dr. Young is simply wrong, or at least taken out of context? Does the prescribed ratio obtain anywhere? It looks to me like even the jump from flugelhorn to alto loses several millimeters on mouthpiece size. And Bb tuba bore sizes vary maybe 20% without severe injury to the acoustics.
I'll let you be the one to suggest that to him. You'd better be on your A game when you do.
But I submit that we don't have any way to evaluate "severe injury". We know what a contrabass sounds like and we have used that sound as the basis for defining the music we can make. It may well be that a tuba scaled as Dr. Young suggests would not sound desirable to us, even though it would sound like a recording of a flugelhorn played back at quarter speed.
Conversely, try playing recorded tuba sound at quadruple speed. I think you'll agree that a flugelhorn player would think the sound too bright.
We need that brilliance to keep the sound from turning to mud or getting too woofy. Tubas have a healthy range of overtones that give them their characteristic sound--more healthy than the smaller instruments.
And there's the rub with a sub-contra. When I play a low Bb, I end up without about 12 octaves worth of audible overtones, spaced at 58-Hz intervals. Some are stronger than others, to be sure. But I hear "low Bb" because those harmonics are 58 Hz apart, creating a low Bb difference tone in my ear.
A 29-Hz pedal Bb is right at the floor of audible, in terms of the fundamental. It has a richer sound than the 58-Hz Bb because it contains a bunch of overtones not present in the 58-Hz sound, such as overtones at 87 Hz, 145 Hz, and so on. They create more density of frequency content, and also create a difference tone of 29 Hz. But I'll bet they have nearly no fundamental actually in the sound and I'll be the upper harmonics are stronger than with the 58-Hz Bb.
The 29-Hz Bb would be the second partial on a sub-contra (and I'm sticking with the Bb sub-contra for this discussion). If you could play it loud, would the sound do anything for anyone? You'd be adding a LOT of harmonic content into the sound of the group, creating a LOT more tones for them to try to tune to. I think clarity would suffer.
Try this: On a BBb tuba, play a double-high Bb. Then, play the same pitch on a euphonium. Which sound has more clarity and strength? For 99.9% of the players out there, the tuba loses its characteristic sound up that high, and the euphonium is still in its singing register. Even if you are Pat Sheridan and can play a beautiful double-high Bb on a BBb tuba, you'll still sound clearer and stronger on a euphonium. If it happens between a BBb tuba and a euphonium, it will also happen between a BBBb tuba and a BBb tuba. It would be like the recording I heard of NYPO under Bernstein playing a kids concert where a 'cello solo was played on double bass. The bass player was good, but it was still not nearly as clean as it would have been on 'cello.
Who needs the bottom 1000 Hz or so filled up with harmonics every 29 Hz? If you can't hear the difference tone, then it will sound like noise. Noise = wheezy.
Rick "not a player who is compelled to drop everything an octave, even if he could" Denney