Todd S. Malicoate wrote:
JPNirschl, after one too many???, wrote:I wanted to be an orchestra teacher. Frankly, it's not possible on a BBb. Check out the Wagner etudes and excerpts on BBb. Then try to stop laughing.
Not possible? What do you mean by "orchestra teacher"? There have been several successful players, even in America, who have used Bb as their primary instrument. Ross Tolbert of the Minnesota Symphony comes to mind as a good example, and there are many others.
Wagner wrote etudes? Why would you use his music to make the point that Bb is the wrong tuba? Weren't his contrabass tuba pieces written with Bb in mind? Don't many (if not most) German professionals use Bb tubas?
Very strange post.
I won't comment on the "orchestra teacher" bit

, but I have to chime in on the whole BBb tuba thing.
At one time (and it's probably still the case in most German orchestras) the expected tuba for a "Kontrabass" part in a German orchestra was pitched in BBb. I seriously expect that has been the case since the parts were first played by a tuba. I guess the Germans are doing the impossible . . .
The fact of the matter is that if you can play, you can play. You should be able to play whatever you're asked to play on whatever instrument you have to play it on or are paid to play it on.
It bothers me that somehow BBb is percieved as a second-class instrument. I suppose it's a lot of marketing hype. Allow me to illustrate my point. Every year, young people in college and high school are told by someone they respect, and probably rightfully so, that they need to switch from BBb to CC. Well, what are they looking for in a CC? A large-bore, large-bell expensive CC that is designed to sound very much like a BBb tuba (big, dark, very supportive sound). The sad fact is that a good BBb is considerably less expensive than a CC. How do they pay for these things? Either mommy and daddy shell out for one (HOORAY!!!) or they add the tuba cost to student loans (eek!!

)). So said individual now has a horn they can't play, and are very seriously in debt at least partially due to an instrument that will never pay for itself in terms of gig money.
I really think we as a community need to leave these kind of prejudices behind. You DO NOT have to play CC (or F, or whatever key) to be a serious musician. Or even an orchestral tubist. Does it help playing in sharp keys? Perhaps, but most of that is due to the skill of the player sitting behind the mouthpiece, not the horn. And, as a sectional player in an orchestra, you're playing with trombones pitched in Bb. It would seem that intonation with them would be a little easier if you had a tuba in BBb . . .
Sorry for the rant. Really. But I had to get that one off my chest.