The way I read the notation page linked earlier, double pedal is appropriate, since the C, 2 lines below the bass cleff staf is the start of the "pedal" range.me wrote:a good number of people on this topic have mentioned that they can play, or have used in reference "double pedal C" i'm almost positive they dont mean a double pedal C. because that would be the same as the 64' organ pipe. a better phrase to use would probably be "pedal C" .
The Lowest Note
- ThomasDodd
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- tubarnak
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Maybe this link could help... I've been trying to find sound samples but no results.
http://www.contrabass.com/pages/frequency.html
http://www.contrabass.com/pages/frequency.html
1972 Cerveny 601
1920’s Conn 28J
Bunch-a-bones
To double pedal! And beyond!
1920’s Conn 28J
Bunch-a-bones
To double pedal! And beyond!
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Phil Dawson
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- Chuck(G)
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What no one has mentioned thus far is that no one really "hears" notes this low, nor does our instrument produce them with any amount of amplitude.austuba wrote: well thats all very good and well but then how does roger bobo get his monstor C on his DD tuba in encounters 2....????
its very possible to tune the lip slaps in your mouthpiece (lacking a bettor discription) or even your tounge to a pitch.
and on my FF tuba i can get very clear with great pitch notes below the fundamental (3 F's below middel C) down to 4 BBb's below middel c which im sure mose FF players here can easily as well.
Like the aforementioned 64' resultant organ stop, what your audience hears on that "CCCC" is the upper harmonics of the note, not the note itself, whose actual energy, coupled with the sharp dropoff in sensitivity of the ear at low frequencies would be all but inaudible.
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Mark
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Bill Troiano
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I actually won a $20.00 bet with a contra bassoon player, back in the early 1970's. She told me that she could play lower than I could and I bet her that she couldn't. The trick is to let the contra bassoon play first. She played a note lower than my pedal CC (maybe a low A with the extension). It just sounded like a pulse or vibration. So, employing the tongue slapping technique that Roger Bobo describes, I just slapped my tongue slower than the pulse of her lowest note. She bought it and I won $20.00. Try it sometime on your favorite contra bassoon player.
- The Jackson
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Re: The Lowest Note
......bbbbbvvvv......bbbbbvvvv.....

- TUbajohn20J
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Re: The Lowest Note
I can almost get down to a double peddle B flat (yes the B flat below peddle B flat). I can play the C but when i let the valves up for B flat it skips up a partial
Conn 26J/27J
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- tubatom91
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Re: The Lowest Note
about Gb 0. A little lower (if you REALLY consider those "notes").
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia-Nu Omicron Chapter
Holton 345 BBb 4V
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Holton 345 BBb 4V
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- Steve Marcus
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Re: The Lowest Note
In Gene Pokorny's recording of the "Pedal Point" exercise (with the synthesized accompaniment), he plays down to EEE.
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noriegatuba
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Re: The Lowest Note
Ok, so there's the regular pedal D. I've hit the D below that, so I guess one can call it double pedal D. (oh, and you have to go chromatically down or else there's little hope)
José Noriega
Principal Tuba
Orquesta Sinfónica Vallarta
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- Todd S. Malicoate
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Re: The Lowest Note
This has been covered a few times before, but my way of thinking is that only notes below the fundamental of a tuba are really "pedals." Noriegatuba, and others on the forum, obviously disagree, and that's fine.
But, just for the sake of curiosity, for those of you who call really low notes above the fundamental "pedals"...
How far up do you call those notes pedals? For example, noriegatuba, considering the note you call "regular pedal D," is the note a half-step above that pedal Eb? Then pedal E? How far up do you still call that note a pedal? It would seem a little silly to call the A three ledger lines below the bass clef staff a "pedal," so I'm just wondering where the cut-off is.
I'm going to assume that you are talking about your C tuba, since there's no way you have enough valves to play the D below what you call pedal D (and I would, too, on an F tuba) on your F.
For the record (and for the sake of the testosterone display this thread has become), I can play down to the E below the fundamental on a C tuba with a buzzing embouchure. It sounds like a "real note" to me, with a real sense of a pitch. I've performed the G just above that a few times in my transcription of the Canadian Brass' "Tuba Polka." It's a nice range to have access to, since flute players are known to be susceptible to the "charms of the tuba pedals."
But, just for the sake of curiosity, for those of you who call really low notes above the fundamental "pedals"...
How far up do you call those notes pedals? For example, noriegatuba, considering the note you call "regular pedal D," is the note a half-step above that pedal Eb? Then pedal E? How far up do you still call that note a pedal? It would seem a little silly to call the A three ledger lines below the bass clef staff a "pedal," so I'm just wondering where the cut-off is.
I'm going to assume that you are talking about your C tuba, since there's no way you have enough valves to play the D below what you call pedal D (and I would, too, on an F tuba) on your F.
For the record (and for the sake of the testosterone display this thread has become), I can play down to the E below the fundamental on a C tuba with a buzzing embouchure. It sounds like a "real note" to me, with a real sense of a pitch. I've performed the G just above that a few times in my transcription of the Canadian Brass' "Tuba Polka." It's a nice range to have access to, since flute players are known to be susceptible to the "charms of the tuba pedals."
- sloan
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Re:
I understand that most tubas come with 3, 4, 5, or even 6 ways to change the length of the tuba...jsipes wrote:That 'D' had to have been horrendously out of tune, and here's why. Concert A above Middle C, which is the C on the ledger line above the bass clef staff, is currently set to a frequency of 440. For every octave that you go down, the frequency of A is halved. Also, take into account the even-tempered scale. For the D that you mention, the frequency of the A below it would be (according to A=440) 13.75 Hz. That means that D is 18.354 (roughly) Hz. The lowest tone audible to the human ear is right around 20 Hz. Therefore, in order to hear the note, you would have had to have actually been playing an Eb around 47-48 cents sharp. Which is not a D. Also, and I'm surprised that nobody has mentioned this either, it's called a BBb tuba because the fundamental pitch of the horn, given its length, is a BBb on the Grand Staff...in other words, a pedal BBb. Anything lower would be an undertone. Sorry to rain on your parade, Kevin.
Kenneth Sloan
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Nick Pierce
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Re: The Lowest Note
Dang, what flute players are you talking to? And how do I find others like them?Todd S. Malicoate wrote: It's a nice range to have access to, since flute players are known to be susceptible to the "charms of the tuba pedals."
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Re: The Lowest Note
Wouldn't that mean that you could just fart and get the same effect?Todd S. Malicoate wrote: It's a nice range to have access to, since flute players are known to be susceptible to the "charms of the tuba pedals.
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Nick Pierce
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Re: The Lowest Note
By the way, Graingers "Children's March: Over the Hills and Far Away" has pedal BBb's at the end.
You may now continue with your regularly scheduled programing.
You may now continue with your regularly scheduled programing.