I had an absolute blast (pun intended) at the Tuba Euphonium Workshop. Just want to share some of my fun!
***DISCLAIMER***
***THE INFORMATION THAT FOLLOWS IS MY PERSONAL OPINION*** (we all know what opinions are like.)
I started my visit looking for a new mouthpiece. I tested several different options, but I felt like the standouts were the Mike Finn MF 3 and MF 3B as they were not as easy to overblow as most others I tried. Mr. Finn was great to talk to and extremely knowledgable. Even with that being the case, the winner in my mouthpiece trials was the Blokepiece! Mr. Sellmansberger was kind enough to hand me the hand-full of bits and pieces on my list to go and test-out. He was a pleasure to spend some time with and you’d be hard pressed to find a nicer more honest guy. Oh, and his mouthpieces are good too. I tried all kinds of combinations and the winner was: #2 medium narrow rim, on an Orchesteral Grand cup, with an American Symphony shank. There was another tubist who wound up getting the same combination after playing mine!
I love my Getzen G-50 and have to say the Stofer Custom CC was a real treat. I found it to blow freely throughout my range and resonate sweetly at any volume. Feeling very familiar probably contributed to my affection for this tuba. Amazing horn, period. I can’t wait for the 5 valve version!
I also tried out the schlipf mute with the Stofer Custom. Although Mr. Stofer had already sold the correct size for the horn, the one available felt so much better (very free blowing and light weight!) than my Silent Brass, I think I need to go ahead and order one
Hard to see from this picture but there is some beautiful engraving on the bell.
Next up on my list of horns to honk was the Kanstul 4/4 5v CC with the “York alloy bell.” I really like this horn! I thought the resistance (minimal) was very even from top to bottom. Even a little bit easier to pop out those low E’s Eb’s D’s and Db’s than on some other horns. I felt like the warmth of the sound this beautiful tuba put out was absolutely outstanding. My only nit to pick was with reaching the 1st valve slide. I couldn’t reach over the top bow and under the bell like I do on my horn, and going under the top bow and up to the slide bent my wrist weird. I felt like the best way for me to work around this would be to put a ring inside the 1st valve slide crook. Again, that’s just my opinion. The way the bottom was wrapped made this tuba extremely comfortable and stable to hold in my lap. The outside of both tubes on the bottom outside of the tuba were in the perfect spot and both rested on my left leg to produce a rock solid perch.
Pretty pretty…
...next post = more horns!!!





