I need to play a FF pedal E, but somehow this seems impossible
Btw, I use a Miraphone C4....



Trombones use fast air. Tubas use slow air, and much more of it. There's no easy way--you just have to practice until it comes to you. Also, trombones playing a note like that sound like a hammer on a frying pan, while tuba notes have to have substance to go with the edge.Wilco wrote:(btw, I can blast that note on trombone....)


First, let's make sure we're talking about the same note. Given that the "pedal range" (i.e., fundamental range) of a BBb tuba starts on the Bb an octave + a 6th below the bass clef staff (last black key on an 88-key piano) and goes down from there, a "pedal E" would be a 4th off the end of the keyboard (2 octaves + a 3rd below the bass staff -- frequency ca. 20 Hz). To get that note to sound at all (let alone at FF) may require a mouthpiece with a larger inner diameter ... and you may still need to "one-lip it" to get it to come out. If you're talking about the E an octave above that one, see the previous posts ...Wilco wrote:Sorry, couldn't resist that subject line. I've got a serious question though...
I need to play a FF pedal E, but somehow this seems impossible![]()
. It feels very stuffy and I can't center it. 1+2+3 is very stuffy, 2+4 is better but not quite. It get's a little better with the 2nd valve slide pulled. Are there any other strategies????
Btw, I use a Miraphone C4....

don't sweat it ,, shift happensdtemp wrote:i wish ,, the shift key ,, on ,, my ,, keyboard ,, worked...

A "pedal note" is the lowest note you can play for any given valve combination (i.e., the "fundamental" of that harmonic series). As such, what constitutes a pedal note varies (somewhat) depending on whether you're playing a BBb, CC, Eb, or F tuba (or a Bb or C euph, or a trumpet, etc.). Anything from the last Bb on a standard piano keyboard down (one-and-a-half octaves below the staff) is a pedal note on any of the 4 pitches of tuba. The C & B above that are pedals on a CC, Eb and F. The Eb, D, and Db above those are pedals on an Eb and F. The F and E above those are pedals on an F tuba. As to "double pedal", if I understand it correctly, that would require enough valves to double (or more than double) the "open bugle" length of the instrument ... generally 5 or more valves (assuming the 5th valve is set up as a double-whole-step or more). For a 5- or 6-valve CC tuba, for example, the "double-pedal C" is the 16 Hz C a major 6th off the left end of the piano keyboard, 2-and-a-half octaves below the bass clef staff. I don't know of many pieces that go that low (the Kraft Encounters II is one of them ... anybody know of any others?). Again, "double-pedal" is instrument-pitch-dependant, just as "pedal" is ...iibagod wrote:ok maybe I've been using different terminology....
What constitutes a "Pedal" note? In relation to tuba range I mean...I know I'm playing Pedal Bb two octaves below the staff (the fundamental of the horn)...but when do we stop calling it pedal? When would we label it "double pedal"? I know there are probably better ways to say it but most people stare right through me unless I use terms like that.
So where does pedal start? when would 'double pedal' begin? Should I just shut my mouth and say 'really really low G'? Am I just deluding myself and is the pedal range 3 Bbs below the staff? Am I cursed to play 'normal' notes forever?
I just posted about this in another thread.iibagod wrote:What constitutes a "Pedal" note?


I thought that was the astronomer's dictum...Kevin Hendrick wrote:don't sweat it ,, shift happens

Think I "red" that somewhere too ...jlbreyer wrote:I thought that was the astronomer's dictum...Kevin Hendrick wrote:don't sweat it ,, shift happens

