Ok, stupid question. Attending the last tuba/euph recital in the local Octubafest, I got to listen to a guy wail on what appeared to be a YFB 621.
So, tuba customizers, is it "impossible" to yank the piston set out of, for example, the above F tuba, and insert a set of rotors? Not ever having seen the wraps side by side I'm clueless as to the impossibility or the whyfors of such impossibility.
Separate question: would most people choose to play the Effie suite on a large CC tuba? I'd think that was a no-brainer for a bass tuba, after hearing it at the same concert. Eb in particular....lowest note I remember hearing was a G below the staff, and then that ending note of C below the staff could cause a rotary F player to be nervous all the way through to the end, but an Eb player could just rest easy.
MA
Swapout
-
Mark
Re: Swapout
Anything's possible. Is it cost effective? I don't know. Have you tried a Miraphone Firebird? It's a little bigger than the 621 and your 182, but it is still a small F tuba.MaryAnn wrote:Ok, stupid question. Attending the last tuba/euph recital in the local Octubafest, I got to listen to a guy wail on what appeared to be a YFB 621.
So, tuba customizers, is it "impossible" to yank the piston set out of, for example, the above F tuba, and insert a set of rotors? Not ever having seen the wraps side by side I'm clueless as to the impossibility or the whyfors of such impossibility.
Everytime I have seen it performed an F tuba was used.MaryAnn wrote:Separate question: would most people choose to play the Effie suite on a large CC tuba?
- MaryAnn
- Occasionally Visiting Pipsqueak

- Posts: 3217
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 9:58 am
Re: Swapout
None in particular. I haven't played any tuba to speak of for a couple of years, but I remain an interested bystander. My piston-to-rotary conversion question is just the engineer brain talking to itself.bloke wrote:To which player are you specifically referring?MaryAnn wrote:...that ending note of C below the staff could cause a rotary F player to be nervous all the way through to the end...
MA
So, no, I'm not still looking for the perfect tuba for myself....the 184 CC I have is really the best fit I'm going to find for a contrabass (mini one, but still that range) and I don't have any reason to play bass tuba anywhere anyway. I still drool over the occasional offering though. I'm playing horn in a couple quintets and a concert band, and spending my practice time on oboe. To quote a friend of mine, the oboe itself is fine but it is the ding-blasted reeds that are the problem.
MA
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

- Posts: 11516
- Joined: Tue Mar 01, 2005 4:41 pm
- Location: 8vb
Re: Swapout
... and to quote a friend of mine, the oboe itself is fine, the reeds are fine, in fact, everythings fine until you actually have to use one...MaryAnn wrote:To quote a friend of mine, the oboe itself is fine but it is the ding-blasted reeds that are the problem
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
- jonesbrass
- 4 valves

- Posts: 923
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 11:29 am
- Location: Sanford, NC
Re: Swapout
Hey, MaryAnn! Interesting question. Alec Wilder was a good friend of Harvey Phillips, and I've heard that he played 99.9% of everything on CC, so I'd imagine his premiere would have been on CC tuba.MaryAnn wrote:Separate question: would most people choose to play the Effie suite on a large CC tuba? I'd think that was a no-brainer for a bass tuba, after hearing it at the same concert. Eb in particular....lowest note I remember hearing was a G below the staff, and then that ending note of C below the staff could cause a rotary F player to be nervous all the way through to the end, but an Eb player could just rest easy.
MA
As far as the stuffy low C on bass tuba, I really can't relate. I think there are definitely at least two parts to that equation: the horn and the player.
Willson 3050S CC, Willson 3200S F, B&S PT-10, BMB 6/4 CC, 1922 Conn 86I
Gone but not forgotten:
Cerveny 681, Musica-Steyr F, Miraphone 188, Melton 45, Conn 2J, B&M 5520S CC, Shires Bass Trombone, Cerveny CFB-653-5IMX, St. Petersburg 202N
Gone but not forgotten:
Cerveny 681, Musica-Steyr F, Miraphone 188, Melton 45, Conn 2J, B&M 5520S CC, Shires Bass Trombone, Cerveny CFB-653-5IMX, St. Petersburg 202N
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

- Posts: 4876
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:06 am
- Location: Practicing counting rests.
Re: Swapout
FWIW, most of the CC's that HP played are probably comparable to many of today's 6/4 F's (notwithstanding the low C).jonesbrass wrote:Alec Wilder was a good friend of Harvey Phillips, and I've heard that he played 99.9% of everything on CC, so I'd imagine his premiere would have been on CC tuba.
Adjunct Instructor, Trevecca Nazarene University
-
eupher61
- 6 valves

- Posts: 2790
- Joined: Tue Oct 10, 2006 9:37 pm
-
MikeMason
- 6 valves

- Posts: 2102
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 1:03 am
- Location: montgomery/gulf shores, Alabama
- Contact:
Concerning the range of the piece, I once heard the name effie was indicative of the range.Low f to high e. f e. f e. fe. effie.....good story anyway....
Pensacola Symphony
Troy University-adjunct tuba instructor
Yamaha yfb621 with 16’’ bell,with blokepiece symphony
Eastman 6/4 with blokepiece symphony/profundo
Troy University-adjunct tuba instructor
Yamaha yfb621 with 16’’ bell,with blokepiece symphony
Eastman 6/4 with blokepiece symphony/profundo
- OldsRecording
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1173
- Joined: Thu Feb 15, 2007 6:26 pm
- Location: Agawam, Mass.
Re: Swapout
Actually, I'd think that oboe and tuba would be a good combination, because don't oboists eventually go insane from all of that air pressure building up inside their heads anyway? Playing tuba after a long practice session on oboe would alleviate that, wouldn't it?windshieldbug wrote:... and to quote a friend of mine, the oboe itself is fine, the reeds are fine, in fact, everythings fine until you actually have to use one...MaryAnn wrote:To quote a friend of mine, the oboe itself is fine but it is the ding-blasted reeds that are the problem![]()
bardus est ut bardus probo,
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
- keegan watson
- bugler

- Posts: 43
- Joined: Wed Sep 12, 2007 2:16 pm
Swapout
The valves on the 621 are pretty nice so I wouldn't change them
I am/have played the effie suite on both F and CC I don't think one is harder than the other just different
I am/have played the effie suite on both F and CC I don't think one is harder than the other just different