What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
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doublebuzzing
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What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNAiX13YZEw" target="_blank" target="_blank
Go to 9:42 for a good look. Hard to tell for sure. Maybe somebody here knows?
Go to 9:42 for a good look. Hard to tell for sure. Maybe somebody here knows?
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Ken Herrick
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
custom Schilke adjustable cup with rim duplicated from his number 1 Conn Helleberg.
Free to tuba: good home
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UDELBR
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
It also looks similar to a mouthpiece I own that supposedly once belonged to AJ:


As Ken says, this is a "dial-a-cup" piece. Aside from a millimeter scale, the only markings are "KINGROSS". No idea what that means.


As Ken says, this is a "dial-a-cup" piece. Aside from a millimeter scale, the only markings are "KINGROSS". No idea what that means.
- imperialbari
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
Interesting that the CSO at all employs a tuba in the performance of a score, which has parts for neither tuba nor for ophicleide.
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DHMTuba
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
Yes, Rossini didn't write a tuba part when he composed La Gazza Ladra in 1817. The Breitkopf and Hartel edition on IMSLP (edited by Gustav Kogel) does have a tuba part, and I think that's the edition the CSO is playing. Maybe we have Mr. Kogel to thank?imperialbari wrote:Interesting that the CSO at all employs a tuba in the performance of a score, which has parts for neither tuba nor for ophicleide.
That's a great shot of Mr. Jacobs and Mr. Kleinhammer!
- k001k47
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
bloke wrote:...
Yup. . .
It's a mouthpiece
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kathott
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
Great. Now I want one.
Schmenge Kaiser EEb, 3 valve (two rotors, one piston), with a Kosicup mouthpiece (9.2 mm)
MESSAGES are checked Sundays
MESSAGES are checked Sundays
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Chuck Jackson
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
+1the elephant wrote:I cannot remember who arranged it, but the version they are playing is done more commonly over here than the original overture with its single trombone part. I have never seen the original instrumentation performed here in the US as a concert overture by a symphony orchestra. I have only seen the much thinner (and less interesting, IMHO) original done in a pit at performances of the full opera.I cannot remember who arranged it, but the version they are playing is done more commonly over here than the original overture with its single trombone part. I have never seen the original instrumentation performed here in the US as a concert overture by a symphony orchestra. I have only seen the much thinner (and less interesting, IMHO) original done in a pit at performances of the full opera.
Interestingly enough, if my memory serves me correctly, Von Karajan recorded this version on an all Rossini Overture disk I had as a kid. I later performed it with the Syracuse Symphony Youth Orchestra. Great fun, kinda like the Hungarian March on steroids.
Chuck
I drank WHAT?!!-Socrates
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UDELBR
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
I've been told by many European conductors that different versions were made of many works merely in order to subvert copyright laws; add some instruments and you've got an "original work".DHMTuba wrote: Yes, Rossini didn't write a tuba part when he composed La Gazza Ladra in 1817.
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doublebuzzing
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
That's what it looked like to me at first too.hrender wrote:In that picture it looks remarkably like one of the R&S heavyweight (a.k.a. beer can) mouthpieces. Is that what the Schilke adjustable looked like? I know in one of the "Portrait of an Artist" recordings Mr. Jacobs mentions using the adjustable cup mouthpiece before playing a solo.
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eupher61
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
Ever wonder why there are so many "editions" of Sousa, King, Fillmore, et al, marches? Exactly this reason.UncleBeer wrote:I've been told by many European conductors that different versions were made of many works merely in order to subvert copyright laws; add some instruments and you've got an "original work".DHMTuba wrote: Yes, Rossini didn't write a tuba part when he composed La Gazza Ladra in 1817.
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daytontuba
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Re: What mouthpiece is A. Jacobs using here?
As luck would have it, presently playing the overture, titled in German "Ouverture zur Oper,,Die diebische Elster", published by Edwin F. Kalmus & Co. The part is printed for tuba, though someone has penciled in "Ala Cimbaso" (their spelling - not the way I spell it).
Retired Tooter