No endorsement, but this kind of instrument sometimes is of interest for low brass players without slide skills:
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=160721176359
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4RV tromboneNo endorsement, but this kind of instrument sometimes is of interest for low brass players without slide skills:
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=160721176359 Free music: http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterBBb/files/%20%20Index/
Brass galleries - 8350 entries - 45.000 photos & scans: http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterPublicPhotosIII/files/%20%20Index%20in%20.htm%20format/
Re: 4RV tromboneDarn! Already have to many horns. This might make a great start on a cimbasso!
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker" Band Instrument Repair Newburgh, Indiana http://thevillagetinker.com danschultz@wowway.com Current 'stable'... Marzan slant-rotor BBb, Marzan piston BBb, Miraphone 1291 5V, Conn 48K sousa
Re: 4RV tromboneI think the seller errs in calling it a bass valve trombone.
Cerveny's bass valve trombone - in F, .560 in. bore: ![]() I would also take mild issue with `brass players without slide skills.' If that were the sole merit of the instrument, I doubt even Cerveny would still be making them. Last edited by Donn on Tue Jan 24, 2012 1:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: 4RV tromboneI will not split hair over terms. I just know that in some of my ensemble teaching in smaller schools such instrument would have been a good doubling for a euph player. I would like it myself, but I have 4 valve trombones and a contrabass trumpet already.
Klaus Free music: http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterBBb/files/%20%20Index/
Brass galleries - 8350 entries - 45.000 photos & scans: http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterPublicPhotosIII/files/%20%20Index%20in%20.htm%20format/
Re: 4RV trombone
(To me,) those .560" bore things are too stuffy (' have owned one). (To me,) those with the bore size of a large sousaphone (c. 18.5mm) are too open (have tried to play one). I suspect (??) that something around 17 - 17.5mm bore is "just right" for these. ![]()
Re: 4RV trombone
Could be. Coincidentally, Cerveny's 18.2mm F cimbasso has the same bore as their F helicon. While my remark above appears to make a case that the bass valve trombone is useful for something, honestly I'm not sure what it is. If I had to come up with an idea for a viable but missing bass trombone, I'd say an F double slide, in a bass bore - probably less than .600 in.
Re: 4RV tromboneThis link is about a bass tbn in Bb, not in F. The bore size isn't mentioned.
A Bb bass tbn with a .560 bore is reasonable. My gut feeling says for one with valves it'd help if it were larger. Personally I think an F bass tbn (or call it an F contra-bass or a cimbasso) needs a larger bore so as to get an open enough sound to play comfortably. -Pat
Re: 4RV trombone
Bloke, rather than that bass superbone you mention occasionally, I bet you could put together a rather nice upright valved Bb bass trombone. 5 valves, 4+2 (with a usable main slide for exposed in the staff playing when your left hand would be off the 2 valves anyway?), whatever. Maybe even a recording bell? Detailed rant ahead- I had one of those F contrabass trumpets a while back (fun and I want another one!). It had a very small valve bore. I never measured it but it reminded me of some sort of alto/tenor marching instrument. Here is the exact horn- http://www.contrabass.com/pages/cbtp.html I purged a bunch of instruments and sold it and my Chinese rotary bass trumpet to some guy in Boston, I think. Anyway, even with that small bore it played just fine on low C/B. Read on for the point. As for the use of a valved bass trombone (NOT a cimbasso), I love playing slide bass trombone but have never been the fastest slide guy and have some left elbow issues from playing it. I wanted a similar sound in a valve format on the cheap so I could not only play faster stuff more naturally but also get that low bass/light contra sound. I've played a Kanstul contrabone (oddly enough, backheavy enough to make it easier to hold up), a Chinese "Thein" contrabone, and a one-off F/Bb/D made out of a bass slide, 2 .562 valves, and a G baritone bell section. The Kansul was a bit in the middle for me- neither light nor heavy enough for me. The Chinese horn was just wanted I sound wise. Clear sound, great low range, lean and aggressive,... I still might get one one day. So I started talking to a guy who builds horns (builder of the one-off), I picked up a .562 front valve section from an American baritone for cheap, and we figured out a plan. The horn is going to be about the same height as one of those baritones as I didn't want a travel tuba nor a physically very large instrument. It will have a 10" bell from a Getzen G baritone and a lot of .562 tubing. A 3 valve Eb will cover the vast majority of the regular bass trombone range and all the classic low bass trombone parts (G, F, and valved F horns). It's really not meant to be a cimbasso though we have discussed possibly adding a 4th valve later on. Right now it's only meant to be a valved BASS trombone for some fun, quintet, jazz stuff, and whatever orchestral stuff I can sneak it into. The builder is making the 3rd slide long enough to pull for a low Ab with all 3 valves and there will also be a long main slide on top for fine tuning notes. That may get it down to a low G but that would surely need to be prepped well in advance of playing it. I should have it in a few weeks or so. Can't wait! Anyway, my experiences with valve sizes and cylindrical low F instruments- -very small bore F contra trumpet- perfectly fine, not hyper, low C and B -MW travel tuba- the first one I played I hated, the second I rather like (still not going to buy one!!! -.547 F bass with a .594 C valve- nice low C with or without the valve, almost nothing below that -Chinese contrabone, .562 slide, ? valves- HOT low Bb valve! nice clear sound overall -one off F/Bb/D contra with .562 valve and slides- not the hottest low register but certainly usable -Kanstul F/C/Db contra, .562/94 (!!) slide, .620 and .650 valves- a little broad overall for me, good enough around D-Bb, not so hot below there; a better player than me said it did play better there than the Haags -MW F cimbasso- sounded almost exactly like a -bass- trombone from Cish to low Cish, useless above that, don't remember below that To give a similar feel to a slide horn, it seems the valved version is best at about one size larger. My horn is meant to be a bass and not a contrabass so it should still work.
Regarding low trombone sound and ergonomics, if I were lucky enough to be doing consistent brass band bass trombone work (
Re: 4RV trombone
I'm saying that the auction is wrong, it really is not a bass trombone, and further that there is really no such thing as a Bb bass valve trombone. That's my theory anyway. Maybe he's looking at the 4 valves, I don't know. The reason we drifted on to talking about F valve bass trombones is because that's how they make them - bass valve trombones as made by Cerveny, Miraphone if they're still making them, etc., are F.
Re: 4RV tromboneInteresting. A modern bass trb is a beefed up tenor; bigger bore, bell & mpc. We all know why this happened historically and it's the sound we're used to hearing as a bass bone. An F bone has more weight and overtones in its sound.
Theoretically, if a valve trb were also beefed up one would perceive its sound as a bass bone type of instrument. That being said, the chance that this is such a horn seems rather slim and its probably a mistake on the part of the seller. -Pat
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