euph in C?

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circusboy
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euph in C?

Post by circusboy »

I saw an ad recently for a (no longer made) Miraphone Kaiser Bariton in C. Sounds like it'd be an easier switch, fingering-wise, for CC tuba players.

Image

Anybody ever blow one of these or one like it?

Is it possible to cut a Bb euph to C? Anyone done that?
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iiipopes
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Post by iiipopes »

Amati used to make a C euph. I don't know if they still do. I recall hearing about intonation problems with it.
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Post by jacobg »

I have a 1930's Austrian 3 valve oval euphonium that is so sharp it plays quite in tune in B! It would be a good candidate to cut to C, if anyone wants to take it off my hands.
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Post by Ace »

Amati still shows a C/Bb euphonium in their catalog. It's an upright bell piston horn, 3+1 configuration.

At one time, I owned a very well-built Cerveny upright euponium in C, four rotary valves, with extra tuning slide to put the horn in Bb.

http://www.amati.cz/english/production/ ... p_534g.htm

The horn shipped with a ridiculous 11 CL mouthpiece which really stunted the low range. I put a European shank 3 G on it and that opened things up, darkened the tone, and cleaned up some intonation problems. The fit and finish on that horn were first rate.
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Post by Chuck(G) »

Weril offers a 3-valve euphonium in C, the H612. Never seen one; never played one.
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Post by djwesp »

Chuck(G) wrote:Weril offers a 3-valve euphonium in C, the H612. Never seen one; never played one.

If it is like the one I played in Brazil christmas before last, I wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole.
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circusboy
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Post by circusboy »

I understand your point about CC fingerings, etc., but don't 99.9% of CC players start out/learn on BBb?
Well, Doc, I guess I'm in that .1% that didn't. I first learned Eb fingerings, then F, now C.

Still wondering if anyone's already cut a Bb to C, how it went, what it cost . . . .
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Post by Chuck(G) »

circusboy wrote:Well, Doc, I guess I'm in that .1% that didn't. I first learned Eb fingerings, then F, now C.
So what's the problem? Lots of euphers don't read BC, only Bb TC,

And your Eb BC fingerings are the first cousin to that (add 3 flats to the key signature and play the TC euph as Eb BC). No need to transpose.
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Post by Z-Tuba Dude »

circusboy wrote:Still wondering if anyone's already cut a Bb to C, how it went, what it cost . . . .
I doubt that you will find anybody who has "made the cut"...there is not as much of a market for C euphoniums, as CC tubas.
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Post by iiipopes »

Hey! A C euph would make a great companion to a C melody saxophone! :P
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Post by prototypedenNIS »

Weril Makes a C euph (only 3 valves though)
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