The Meinl Weston 2182 may be just the horn you're looking for- have you tried one? The bottom bow and bell are exact copies of an Alexander, but it has pistons, a more solid low range, and good intonation.Frank Ortega wrote:The horn I regret selling most would probably have been my Alex F. It was the old style 3 valves in the left and 3 valves in the right hand when I bought it, and had been converted to the more conventional 4 +1 configuration by Dick Ackright. When I listen to the recordings I have of myself playing that horn, I think it is the most beautiful sound that I've made on an F tuba. However, the low register was incredibly difficult to deal with. This is why I've recently bought a Miraphone Firebird. I think it captures some of that beautiful German sound with a much more accessible low range. If Alexander has done anything in the past 20 or so years to improve the low register of their F tubas, I would certainly love to try one. But, I have also found them hard to come by to try them out. Do they show up at the big conferences?
-Frank
When I was looking for an F tuba, I knew exactly the sound I wanted: Michael Lind from his Virtuoso Tuba CD. That has been my ideal sound concept and goal from the beginning- clear and so rich it almost feels like the sound wraps around your ears like earmuffs (anyone know what I'm talking about?). I'm able to make that sound on the MW 2182, and I'm in heaven. I only found out about the legit Alexander connection after I bought the horn- that Michael Lind plays an Alex F, and the bottom bow and bell of the 2182 are copies of an Alex F- the facts confirmed what my ears told me.
I was choosing between the Firebird and MW 2182 for a while, but ended up going with the 2182 for the sound. When I got that sound, I had to have the tuba.





