Rick Denney wrote:Steve Inman wrote:There is a bias in the tuba community for the F bass tuba, and just because you try to buck the trend doesn't mean it will be easy.
Steve, the funny thing here is that the original poster asked about whether playing a C was required for a pro, not F. And he was comparing that to an Eb. So, it's not an Eb versus F thing, or even a Bb versus C thing, but rather a big bass tuba versus contrabass tuba thing.
Outside the UK, I don't think there are many pros who think an Eb can be the only instrument--for many kinds of pro gigs. One good point against what I'm saying is that there are lot of pro gigs that would work fine on a small tuba. In fact, my little F is the only tuba that is a proven money maker for me. But kids going to college on these shores who want to play Eb instead of a contrabass will have a lot to prove.
It would also be true comparing a Bb to a C. But I think it's less true comparing an Eb to an F, and there, our tormenter is probably right that Sheridan and Baadsvik have opened some doors.
I was addressing the Bb or Eb vs. C for a college kid studying performance (and my comments apply only to that situation). Any kid wanting to learn to be a pro in college had better not be afraid of playing a C. Grownups can decide for themselves, and kids not aiming at a performance degree should play what pleases them and that they can afford, and be grateful for the opportunities of our good life.
Rick "who thinks advising about politics isn't the same as being a politician" Denney
Agreed. My initial post attempted to answer the BBb vs. CC question. Subsequent posts attempted to discuss whether or not Eb was superior to F in the bass tuba world. As to this secondary sub-thread, and as djwesp confirmed by mentioning that some flack was received when the Eb was admitted to, instead of an F, I agree with you that the current bias (trend, even) is for the F and it's not worth chosing and fighting for an Eb -- at least not while studying for a BA. But I understand djwesp's irritation -- being criticized for an Eb tuba would truly piss me off, as that has nothing to do with ability to play the literature. The discussion should ONLY have been on the topic of musicianship, not the key of the tuba. Now to the Eb "trend" if there is one in the US -- it appears to me to be spotty at best, and more likely found amongst adult amateurs who have discovered the limitations of many rotary F tubas, and/or want one bigger bass tuba as an only horn (something I'm still considering). I do know of a few pros who have and use Eb tuba regularly or exclusively as their bass tuba. But these still seem fairly infrequent situations from all I see and read.
I have over the years played tubas pitched in all 4 keys -- switching when there is a clear musical need. I played a YFB-621 to cover the bass voice in a quartet that was written for 2nd 'bone or euph. My Besson 983 sounded too broad to my ear. So for that gig, I WANTED to sound like a pregnant euph! I'm playing Eb today for my bass tuba, 'cause the quartet group evaporated and I wanted a little bigger bass tuba sound. But in the bass tuba world, there's the "big" vs. "small" agrument also. You always go with the sound you need, not the key. Playability is also critical. Until I recently played the Firebird F, I had sworn off rotary F tubas as unacceptable for my use 'cause the low CC was too unpredictable. And a month back, I heard a very talented tuba salesman at WWBW demo a YFB-822 vs. a MW 2141 -- I was very impressed by both.
If you want a big bass tuba sound with an F, get the YFB-822 or the Willson F. Smaller F sound -- Firebird. Big Eb bass tuba (aka small CC sound) -- Willson, MW2141, etc. Small Eb bass tuba sound (aka "true bass tuba" not 3/4 CC sound) -- perhaps the Yamaha 321, perhaps the Norwegian Star, definitely the "Star Light" coming soon.
If you want a one-tuba-fits-all (my opinion): Willson Eb, MW2141, Rudy 3/4 CC, YFB-822.
If you want to be a college music performance major, get a Miraphone 186 CC or equivalent. There's no harm in switching to CC and that's the mainstream in the USA. Not absolutely essential, but the same bias that djwesp found with the Eb will likely cause resistance to BBb, as you said.
That's my perspective at the present time ....
Cheers,