Inderbinen, a small Swiss company has recently started making euphoniums. Almost makes me want to play euph again. All completely hand-made. About $12K.
I e-mailed these folks almost a year ago to see if they had any plans to make a tuba. They didn't at the time, but I think the addition of this euph is a great start. I've heard their saxes and trumpets on recordings: tasty!
circusboy wrote:Inderbinen, a small Swiss company has recently started making euphoniums. Almost makes me want to play euph again. All completely hand-made. About $12K.
When they say "completely hand-made" what does that mean, exactly? Just about any tuba/euphonium is completely hand made--at least no one's reported a tuba-assembling machine yet.
For $12K and no buffing, you deserve a very detailed answer.
But there's still no answer to the question about "hand made".
Does this mean no power tools are used? Bells must be spun, valves must be machined, tubing must be drawn. Roughing out a bell before spinning it looks pretty much like any number of lesser-priced shops.
schlepporello wrote:Sorry.
I'm a "bling" kinda guy and raw brass on a new horn doesn't quite cut it for me. I'm not gonna spend five figures on a horn that looks like a straightened out band room reject. If I'm gonna spend that much on a horn, it'd better sparkle and shine. I'll work on the sound myself.
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker" http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
I handled one of those euphs at the National Finals, Royal Albert Hall in October.
Glyn Williams of Fodens was raving about it (but does'nt play one in the band!) and brought it back from the Frankfurht music show. I could'nt blow it, but the valves were superb, and it seemed very well made indeed, though the bell was quite thin and had already been creased.