Edit: Not because J. plays out of tune, but as he has said himself, he is one of a vert few people playing rotary tubas in the UK. And due to the ivy, my thoughts immediately went to England.
If that's the irate wife above pouring the water, it could be any liquid from chamber pot juice to boiling oil.
tuba, "veteran of marital wars" tooter1940
tubatooter1940 wrote:If that's the irate wife above pouring the water, it could be any liquid from chamber pot juice to boiling oil.
tuba, "veteran of marital wars" tooter1940
Considering your more recent tuba-acquisitions your very local governor appears being rather generous in respect of her Veterans’ Rehab hand-outs.
imperialbari wrote:Had this been in the UK, then poor Jonathan.
K
Edit: Not because J. plays out of tune, but as he has said himself, he is one of a very few people playing rotary tubas in the UK. And due to the ivy, my thoughts immediately went to England.
Well, I do have ivy on my wall, but thankfully no irate woman poring water on me (so far!)
Yep. Look closely at the interior wrap, the garland, the dubros, the dogleg into the main tuning slide, the bell flare that looks like the tuba version of a Bach 37 trumpet bell: newer 186.
As far as the person holding it? Probably just a contract model, and not an actual person who plays a tuba, either vocationally or avocationally.
Donn wrote: in fact English ivy is an invasive weed in many parts of North America.)
like, for example, my backyard. I spent 3 hours on Saturday "discouraging" English Ivy from climbing (and choking) all of the trees. It makes a nifty ground cover - but when it starts climbing the trees it's a real pain.