Z-Tuba Dude wrote:imperialbari wrote:.....was obliged to play cimbasso,....
Klaus,
What form of the cimbasso is used in Europe? I assume there must be people who know a little more about the instruments of Verdi's time, than many of us in the States.
I don’t really know shapes and brands used even in my own country any longer, as I live far away from stages and concert halls and don’t travel any more. Rudy Meinl used to have a photo of the bass trombonist of one of our regional symphonies presenting one of their cimbassos.
Some players have complained over the angled shape locking the angle of their bels, so that they couldn’t lift the bell like the rest of the trombone section. 20 or 25 years ago there was a player in Cologne(?) who had an F cimbasso made in the shape of an oversize rotary trumpet for exactly that reason.
The second edition of Bevan’s book has a section telling about the old as well as the then new version of the Viennese cimbasso.
There was a quite insane Italian movie about the sick relationship between an orchestra (most actors being real musicians) and its Maestro. The tenor trombonists played slide trombones, whereas the bass trombonist played a valve trombone in F with 3 rotors. It was bent, but in a fairly open angle, maybe 135°.
As I understand it, American regional orchestras avoid hiring extras when at all possible, which appears like a sensible attitude, when they struggle financially. If they want to play Italian music with 3 trombones and a cimbasso, they hardly should follow the Danish tradition that I saw, where cimbassos are for trombonists only. They rather should let their tenured tubaist play that instrument.
Klaus