bttmbow wrote:Don't just "buy a Yorkbrunner" to bet the name; buy a GREAT horn, REGARDLESS of what the name is, the "size" is, or the "fad" is. The proof is when you pick "that horn" up and play, you are HAPPY with the way you sound (and dare I say... FEEL) on that horn. If you KNOW you want a 6/4ish thing, try as many different ones as you can, but consider trying other _/4s as well.
If I may presume to reinforce Chris's comments, I would add that I have play-tested probably a dozen Yorkbrunners. They have ranged from magical to..."Next!"
Dave Fedderly is (or was--I don't know if it's still available) selling his Yorkbrunner, which he has played and tweaked for many years. It's magical. But he thought the Meinl-Weston handmade Baer-model BAT was better enough to be worthy to replace it. I have played an original handmade Yorkbrunner, like the one Mike Sanders plays, and it was magical. Mike sounds fabulous on his--sweet, ever-present, massive, but totally under control. But I have also played Yorkbrunners that I felt like sucked the air out of me, and I've played a few that made me wonder if something was stuck in the bell.
Of those dozen or so, there are perhaps two or three that rank higher in my mind than my battered old Bb Holton.
That should tell you that even from the perspective of a second-rate amateur, Yorkbrunners are pretty variable. A great one is great, but there are other great tubas in this size class, too. And many are a lot cheaper.
And all that is separate from the question of the sense of starting with a 6/4 tuba. Even in my limited community-band world, I bought the big tuba only to supplement a collection of smaller instruments. I use the Holton more than the others, but the Holton is completely hopeless in some of those circumstances--it's just too big. And I play in a large ensemble most of the time. If I had to have only one tuba, the Holton could not be it. Thanks goodness that choice hasn't been imposed on me.
Rick "for whom the differences between great and not-so-great big tubas glow in the dark" Denney