Your top 5 Tuba CD

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eupher61
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by eupher61 »

UncleBeer wrote:I've always liked those "Howard Johnson & Gravity" CDs. No accounting for taste though. :lol:
You mean 'that', not those, right? Or do you have some in your closet?
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by UDELBR »

eupher61 wrote:
UncleBeer wrote:I've always liked those "Howard Johnson & Gravity" CDs. No accounting for taste though. :lol:
You mean 'that', not those, right? Or do you have some in your closet?
There's two of 'em:

- http://tinyurl.com/c23wjl8" target="_blank" target="_blank

and

- http://tinyurl.com/cel7ozy" target="_blank" target="_blank
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by eupher61 »

oops..forgot about Taj Mahal...sorry!
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by Trumgottist »

luke_hollis wrote:It just doesn't sound like the right timbre/register for solo instrument. The piano seems not to blend with the big tuba.

I do appreciate that people like Tuba solo CDs and the performers are stellar. I don't mean to take anything from them, it's just not for my ears.
I think I understand what you're getting at. Have you listening to lighter (in timbre, I mean) tuba music? I keep returning to Baadsvik's Ferry Tales (the link goes to the album on Spotify, where you can listen to it for free) that I've already mentioned in this thread - he plays mostly in cello register, so I wonder if that may be more to your liking.

I can agree with your comment on tuba+piano btw. It's a tricky combination, and a big part of why I don't like Danzas as much.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by T. J. Ricer »

I'm going to take a different approach on this one and list the CDs that were the most influential to me when I was young, rather than what I think are the 5 very best today. In many cases, it was just that these were the CDs that local record stores stocked or that I was given as gifts along the way. . .

Kevin Morgan - Virtuoso Tuba - my very first tuba solo CD, given to me in high school by my parents. It was one of the first CDs of any kind that I owned and I listened countless times. . .

The Essential Canadian Brass - that one, I think, had both "Tuba Tiger Rag" and "Flight of the Tuba Bee" - one of the very first tuba sounds I tried to model.

Besses o' th' Barn - Concertos for Brass (Fletcher doing the Gregson) - played a movement from the Gregson for High School solo and ensemble contest and Mike Thornton pointed me toward this recording. This was my first exposure to Fletcher, who is now one of my very favorites.

Harvey Phillips - In Recital for Family and Friends (loaned to me by my very first private teacher, Gary Langhorst, an Indiana grad). I remember him telling me he would listen to it and get depressed because he couldn't play like that. . . I was definitely impressed, but not depressed!

Patrick Sheridan - Lollipops! I was a little bit older when I found this one, but I ended up performing several of the works on recitals and still think of this as my model for the use of tuba vibrato and expression.


Don't know if that is of any value to anyone, but I enjoyed thinking on those recordings. . . now if I can only find my record collection. . . :tuba:

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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by tclements »

Bobo's "Gravity is Light Today"
Pokorney "Big Boy"
Sheridan "Lollipops" Pick one, really.....
Baer "Song & Dance"
Self "Friends at Play"

Also,
Cooley "Romantic Tuba"
Ms Jantsch's "Cascades"
The Pan Metropolitan Trio "Isolation"
Toby Hanks "Sampler"
Michael Lind "Tuba Virtuoso"

Sorry, that's more than 5, but I couldn't leave the other 5 out.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by jwjeffrey »

Here's my top 5 Tuba C.D.'s
Dave Bargeron/Michel Godard-Tuba,Tuba
Howard Johnson and Gravity
Andre Previn-LondonSymphony-Symphonies Of Vaughv Williams
John Fletcher-Le Tuba Enchantee
Roger Bobo-1st Album
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by David Richoux »

eupher61 wrote:oops..forgot about Taj Mahal...sorry!
That Taj Mahal album probably sold more records than all tuba solo or ensemble recordings put together!
( I don't have any facts to back that up, but #84 on the Billboard Blues Top 200 of 1971 is not too shabby!)

It sure was the first time I ever heard an ensemble of tubas playing jazz/blues!
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by UDELBR »

David Richoux wrote:That Taj Mahal album probably sold more records than all tuba solo or ensemble recordings put together!
You're confusing this:

Image

...with this:

Image
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by David Richoux »

UncleBeer wrote:
David Richoux wrote:That Taj Mahal album probably sold more records than all tuba solo or ensemble recordings put together!
You're confusing this:

Image

...with this:

Image
No, I have both albums - no confusion. "The Real Thing" had many of the early members of Gravity playing as an ensemble (and I think they were listed in the liner notes as Gravity as well. My copy is in deep storage right now so I cannot confirm.)
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by UDELBR »

David Richoux wrote: I think they were listed in the liner notes as Gravity as well. My copy is in deep storage right now so I cannot confirm.
Mine's right here. :wink: No mention of "Gravity" whatsoever, and it's clearly a Taj Mahal album, not a Gravity album.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by David Richoux »

UncleBeer wrote:
David Richoux wrote: I think they were listed in the liner notes as Gravity as well. My copy is in deep storage right now so I cannot confirm.
Mine's right here. :wink: No mention of "Gravity" whatsoever, and it's clearly a Taj Mahal album, not a Gravity album.
Some of the same tubists, anyway. I just checked HJ's bio - the Quartet was called "Substructure" in those days.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by SFA Tubajack »

One I forgot to mention on my earlier posting:

Tubas from Hell - Dave Gannett


This was the first tuba CD that I owned, and really what got me hooked on playing tuba.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by bububassboner »

I'm surprised no one has mentioned Rex Martin's Live in Japan CD. Just amazing stuff. That first breath on the first track, now that's a good breath.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by rusty »

lollipops (played for me at my first tuba lesson, wait a tuba can go that fast?)
bobissimo (wow that is a very low note)
portrait of an artist (its like i'm sitting with aj in the practice room)
romantic tuba (i have the lp, front cover is almost as beautiful as the playing)
pokorny orchestral excerpts (first time i heard that low E in fountains...)
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by MartyNeilan »

ztuba wrote: Melton tuba sextet with warren deck et al.
Most tuba recordings are great for listening to from an academic standpoint.
A very few other tuba recordings are "fun" to listen to.
This is one of the rare discs that is both - a "who's who" of tuba players in 1992 performing impeccably in a wide variety of styles. This is becoming harder to find, and I would strongly recommend any serious tuba player to acquire one.
http://www.amazon.com/Tuba-Six-Musical- ... B000002SKB
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by jon112780 »

James Gourlay- Gourlay Plays Tuba
Phil Sinder- Aerodynamics
Gene Pokorney- Tuba Tracks
Dan Perantoni- Daniel in the Lion's Den
Pat Sheridan- Blazing Brass
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by skeath »

Carol Jantsch
Roger Bobo

These are not the kind of things community band players would try to play, but they would open their eyes to the possibilities. Both Roger and Carol are very strong on style, and not just technique (although that is strong as well).

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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by jwjeffrey »

russiantuba wrote:Going to add a couple that are not on CD (but should be).

Robert LeBlanc: Tuba Solos---one of my favorite recordings. This is a rare recording if any of you want it, I posted a link below. I really enjoy listening to this early recording, and is almost a live recording with amazing musicality. Also, it has the complete recording of the Beversdorf Sonata---which I am not sure has been released with all 3 movements (making this a great reference).

http://classicvinyl.com/20th-century/ro ... aker-piano" target="_blank" target="_blank


Michael Thornton: The Sound of a Tuba--another one of my influential recordings done around 1980 by the late Michael Thornton. The Proto 4 seasons is an interesting piece, and the Beethoven and Elgar are exceptional recordings of the pieces. Mike was an amazing performer who recently passed away, and I wish in honor of him that someone would release this great recording on CD.
I was going thru my L.P Collection this morning to see of I had the Tuba Polka on one of my 8 Canadian Brass L.P's which I didn't and found the Robert LeBlanc: Tuba Solos L.P. in my collection,go figure.I'll have to give it a listen when I get home from work,also found Roger Bobo Prunes L.P. I really like the duet he did on the Bass Horn that was made for him with another French Horn Player.
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Re: Your top 5 Tuba CD

Post by MikeMason »

Pat Sheridan -bon bons and lollipops
Gene Pokorny- tuba tracks and orchestral excerpts
Sam Pilafian-any early empire brass and any travelin light
Bobissimo
Bootleg recording of Warren Deck orchestral excerpts w section
Pensacola Symphony
Troy University-adjunct tuba instructor
Yamaha yfb621 with 16’’ bell,with blokepiece symphony
Eastman 6/4 with blokepiece symphony/profundo
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