One of the great mysteries of socialism.jamsav wrote:I wonder why these are set so high ?
Cliff Bevan even wrote about it the Besson design putting the mouthpiece at mid-forehead.
I would invest in a Baltimore Brass playing stand.
I once owned a Besson Stratford Bb, which is basically the same instrument though uncompensated, and probably made to be cheaper in other ways, too (such as a tuning slide in the leadpipe). Mine had been used as an offensive weapon in some war or another, judging from the 174,395 dents. But it was all I head for my comeback to tuba playing, so I made it work. It had three basic problems: 1.) It would not accept a mouthpiece to my liking, and finding a Wick in those days (many years before Al Gore invented the internet) required knowing about it and then knowing where to send off to get it, 2.) the instrument played generally flat (probably because of the mouthpiece problem), and 3.) the mouthpiece hit me mid-forehead. At the same time I had the ball removed (there's room for only two in that vicinity), I had the tech cut about two inches off the leadpipe where it went into the tuning slide, and replace the receiver. That fixed all the problems in one go. Then, I shortened the valve tubing on two of the valves, so that the 2-3 combination conformed to some semblance of a western diatonic tonality, and then it was elevated from complete crap to merely mediocre. I didn't miss it after I eventually replaced it, but when I offered it in trade for some other instrument, the guy who received it played it for a few minutes and pronounced it the best in-tune cheapie Besson he'd ever played. The three-valve compensators were far better, and in terms of intonation probably the best of the lot.
Rick "who owns and loves his extremely battered old New Standard euphonium" Denney



