Ice wrote:My problem is not that I don't want to learn C Tuba... My problem is that I am being forced into learning a key... When I first posted this question I was simply wondering if there was a notable difference between Bb and C Tubas that would make a difference... Seeing as how my instructor won't answer this question...
I understand that in college I will be asked to "LEARN"...But before I LEARN CC Tuba I want to LEARN BBb Tuba so that I can at least play one key... I don't like starting things to not finish them... sorry I started this....
There are at least two concepts about learning the various pitches of tuba. Some see each pitch as a learning project, which has to be completed before the next pitch is approached. This concept often is followed by the idea that the black dots indicate which valves to press.
Others read music as sequences of intervals and other musical occurrences happening to be placed somewhere on a staff, which has one clef or another to the left followed by an indication of a key. With this concept you have to know all your intervals and scales on your instrument of whatever pitch. The revelation for people having moved around between various brasses is, that they basically are all the same. There may be differences in numbers of valves and in lengths of valve slides, but these details may be handled with ease, if one is at home in our diatonic notation system.
Going from one pitch to another doesn’t imply starting over from scratch. Rather it is a continued development. Some say drop your BBb, when learning CC. I do not agree. My method when teaching similar problems in other instruments is about keeping the original reading going in extensive ensemble work, while the new learning happens in private lessons and in the practicing for these.
Currently I don’t play from music, as I cannot read music off paper due age related eye problems. But I still can imagine music notation, and I know how I would handle diverse situations. I had the good fortune to have some rudimentary piano lessons as a kid, and I was forced to learn to transpose as a youngster. The alternative would have been rewriting lots of parts. But even I have permutations of instrument pitches and notation practices, which make me feel much more comfortable than others. In bass clef concert I will take a euphonium, a trombone, or an Eb tuba, if that will do the job. With my BBb basses I prefer British brass band notation, as the bass clef gives far too many ledger lines to the BBb. Or give me a string bass part and I will read it octave down.
Even bloke, who is a way better player than me, admits being more comfortable reading orchestral music, when playing an F bass rather than an Eb. And that man has performed endless numbers of jazz concerts on sousaphones and helicons in Eb with whatever number of valves.
BBb and CC tubas are not alternatives to exclude each other. If your starting point is the music, you just learn to handle the one you happen to play in any given situation.
Klaus