Low Cost CC Tuba

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imperialbari
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by imperialbari »

What I said: You are so profoundly thorough!

Oh, what a beacon of consistent thinking!

Any black powder left over from that wedding shoot-out at your place?

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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by TUBAD83 »

the elephant wrote: I am not bashing them. I am pointing out our new reality, which was Made in the USA.

However, I have never seen European tubas of the quality that was coming out of China a few years ago. Never. And you can almost always get repair parts, and many shops actually STOCK the parts of these tubas! I have never seen any shop anywhere that stocked Jin Bao parts…

The Chinese are giving us a serious push off the top of the hill. Will we stay up here or will we be rolling down calamitously in the next few years? Or are we already down there and just becoming cognizant of the fact?

:shock:

We need to wake up NOW!

And keep in mind the Chinese government's Human Rights record. They ARE evil.


The horns will get better--more people will buy them and eventually there will be available replacement parts. There is obviously a market for these horns and, especially in this economic climate, it is only going to grow--like it or not.

Yes China's government is evil---but what does it say about us when we do billions of dollars in trade with them?? We are their BIGGEST CUSTOMER.

Gotta go--looking for a new semi-auto scatter gun for the house (suggestions anyone?)

JJ
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by imperialbari »

Musical instruments are tools for cultural expressions.

In Italy there was a symbiosis between the virtuoso violin playing/writing, and the makers of the best violins known so far.

In Central Europe as of almost 200 years ago there was a symbiosis between the inventors and developers of techically improved brasses and the musicians expressing themselves through these improved brasses.

Western music is not a core part of mainland Chinese culture. The local makers of brass instruments never will be driven by the same musical motivation as seen in the above samples.

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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by ztuba »

When yamaha, and Jupiter first came out ... their horns were not the best either... you can't go from not making horns to being a master craftsman without cranking out some crap. just my two cents .. in 10 years these might actually be very nice horns
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by imperialbari »

ztuba wrote:When yamaha, and Jupiter first came out ... their horns were not the best either... you can't go from not making horns to being a master craftsman without cranking out some crap. just my two cents .. in 10 years these might actually be very nice horns
As I understand it, the Japanese started out on a much higher level of tech and industrial experience. And for reasons yet unknown to me the Japanese have a much greater affinity towards Western music, also in the band/military forms.

Taiwan may have its own, somewhat later, motivations to lean towards the West.

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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by TUBAD83 »

ztuba wrote:When yamaha, and Jupiter first came out ... their horns were not the best either... you can't go from not making horns to being a master craftsman without cranking out some crap. just my two cents .. in 10 years these might actually be very nice horns
Give it 3-5 years before they are on par with the European horns. I am old enough to remember when Yamaha produced crappy tubas and alot of people dismissed them--that is no longer the case because Yamaha adapted and improved the quality. Do not underestimate China's ability to do the same in order to give people what they want. I hope the U.S. and European tuba makers are paying attention.

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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by bort »

The same way people swear by car makers ("I'll never buy an American/Japanese/Korean/etc. car")...I'll never buy a Chinese tuba.

Don't care, just won't do it.
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by Sylvano »

Some of you may have seen my post about the Schiller "Chinese" .547 (3 leadpipes, Thayer type valve) trombone I bought last spring.
It doesn't play as well as a Shires but it was $600 or $700 or around that. But I can tell you that it plays as well as a Bach 42.

Now that brings me to reveal that since I bought the Chinese 5v C ($785 - had some bell damage) and the 4v Hirsbrunner 192 copy ($1680) I have sold my Rudy 4/4 C, B&S PT20p and Besson 981. Not that I wasn't happy with these horns but I could see the writing on the wall (the Great Wall) that the price of tubas will be eventually driven down by these cheaper Chinese imports. Maybe 5 years down the road, the resale value of these fine German and somewhat British instruments will not be so high as it has been in the good old days.

I tested the Rudy and the Chinese C at an orchestra rehearsal and the brass section liked the Chinese better. No joke. I'm not arguing the craftsmanship of Rudolf Sr and Jr (I saw them work on my 5/4 back in 1987), I'm saying that when I played them side by side, there wasn't $10k worth of difference in the sound; not for our smaller per service orchestra as I've given up the idea that some day, I would play in the NY Phil. I also use it in quintet (works very well) and everyone likes the sound.

Imagine the effect of Asian imports on the US/Canada car industry if there would be no protectionism / duties / tariffs / bunch of ever increasing "safety" regulations. I might even be able to buy one of these 660 cc engine micro vans seen all over the world except in the US and Canada. But I can buy a useless Hummer with these big bumper towing hooks that are so useful in urban situations. OK, I'm ranting now...

Sylvain "who has no problem playing/owning Chinese instruments" Gagnon

Horns I still have:
Older silver King Bb 2341
B&H 1942 Imperial Eb
Schiller Bb (the Hirsbrunner copy)
Schiller C (The Miraphone copy)
VMI 3301 Bb (the B&S PT20P Bb version)
Miraphone 281 6v (waiting for a Chinese copy to come out)
B&H Imperial Euph
Yamaha YEP-321s Euph
Kanstul 1670 George Roberts Bass Trombone
Schiller Axial Flow Large Bore tenor
Olds Opera O-25 Large bore tenor
Olds LA Studio Small bore
Olds Special Small bore
Conn 6H Silver (1962)
King Silver Flugabone
Olds silver in-slide tuning small bore
B&H Imperial .525 Medium Tenor
Conn 26K silver

Used to have:
Rudy 5/4 C
Yamaha YEB-381s
MW 2155
B&S 4197 PT-20P
Besson 983s
Besson 983
Besson 981
Rudy 4/4 c
King 2340s '60s model
Conn 38K Silver
King Bb Silver sousa
Hirsbrunner HB 2p (Army horn)
Mirafone 186 Bb (Army Horn)
Mirafone 186 C (AF Horn)
Rudy 5/4 Gold brass (Navy Horn)
Last edited by Sylvano on Tue Jul 07, 2009 2:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by jeopardymaster »

Around 1970 my parents bought a very nice second-hand baby grand piano - made by Aeolian in the 1920s and sold as a "Chilton." As I recall they paid around $800 for it and considered it a good buy - it played wonderfully and looked great. Still does.

I inherited it when my mom passed away in 2006. SInce I already had an electronic keyboard, I tried to sell it for 2 years - no takers at any price - and eventually gave it to a young musician and fellow Sinfonian, free of charge.

Will a top-of-the-line tuba follow that curve to illiquidity and, for lack of a better term, worthlessness? Not likely. But there is apt to be some downward movement, no question.
Gnagey CC, VMI Neptune 4098 CC, Mirafone 184-5U CC and 56 Bb, Besson 983 EEb and euphonium, King marching baritone, Alexander 163 BBb, Conn 71H/112H bass trombone, Olds Recording tenor trombone.
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Re: Low Cost CC Tuba

Post by imperialbari »

Traditional grands/pianos have operating costs in form of tuning. Electronic keyboards are cheaper in that area. And they don’t occupy as much space.

Klaus
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