The first large bore/bell throat contra that I am aware of is the Rudy Meinl CC. Jim's horn has a slender trombone style bell; the 1950's Mirafone BBb contra is not as large as the new model Miraphone contra. The Rudy CC cimbasso is BIG! Not quite a tuba on a stick but close. It also is fun to play in a really bad way: the easiest loudest most devastating low register of any brass instrument I have encountered. It is the preferred cimbasso of many of the Hollywood film composers and is treated as a percussion instrument. All loud, all low and all short all of the time. If someone really wants to know I'm sure the folks at Rudy Meinl would tell them where they got he inspiration to make such a beast.bloke wrote:I still contend that the upside-down "L" contrabass valved instrument (with a large bore valveset) is a Self-Minick creation, and anything that approximated that shape that anyone made a hundred years ago was smaller than the smallest trombones made today.
The F cimbasso is a different story. It is simply this: a valved (contra) bass trombone in f (or Eb), period. Ether it sounds good in the context of the orchestration or it doesn't. Who cares. We can debate what this or that composer wanted all day long and never agree but what really matters at the end of the day is what sounds the best. Sometimes the tuba is too big and bass trombone is too small. In a modern symphony orchestra everything we do is a compromise unless we are in a period group playing period instruments (gut strings, wooden flutes etc..). Anton Bruckner never would have imagined a Fafner BBb let alone a Yorkophone CC and Verdi most likely never envisioned the modern Cimba$$o (oops). Last year Jim Self played the Petrushka Bear solo on his Fluba. He said it had the best sound on that solo of all of his instruments and the conductor liked it. A college buddy of mine has an Eb sousaphone that has a bullet proof Bydlo (Hmmm, gotta see if I can borrow that one). Play what works. There is even a legend of a southern tubaist who has been known to play a CC Sousaphone in a symphony orchestra on occasion. Blasphemy!
Norm