TubaSTL wrote:I had heard at some point in my education the following, and I'd love to get some expert validation or debunking as the case may be:
I'd be happy to give it a shot!
1. BBb is for band, CC is for Orch. Due to "fit" with the composers and the tendencies to either use flat or sharp keys. Similar differences could be described in Eb vs. F. (Easier to tune a CC tuba to a concert A than a BBb tuba???)
Actually, it's a little easier to tune a BBb or Eb tuba to A than a CC tuba. (A fingering is 12 (or 3) on a CC); 2 on BBb and Eb (low A is 24).
A C has less open tubing than a BBb, so it can have a somewhat lighter sound than a BBb. It has no particular fingering advantage in sharp keys (C# is the "funky" note, as opposed to B natural on a BBb--and C# is present in every sharp major key signature save G).
2. F Tubas are more "melodic" (given the same player) than C Tubas and thus are used more in solos. Actually from my experience, the style and range of the piece you are playing has more to do with the choice in instruments for soloing.
"Melodic" lies solely in the ear and head of the player. An F tuba has the shortest open bugle of all common tubas and so tends to have a lighter and more nimble sound. Upper partials are spaced a bit wider than a CC or BBb, so there is a bit more security in the high range. However, one pays for this with lots of valves required for in-tune low range playing. Most F players play a 5 or 6 valve instument.
3. The "flat" instruments are more prevalent in professional European ensembles than in professional US ensembles.
While it's true that the CC tuba holds considerable sway in the USA, the most common bass and contrabass tuba combination on the continent is BBb and F.
4. BBb tubas are what students learn first, because mostly they come from playing Trumpet. (Not me, I started playing Alto Sax, then Bari Sax, then Tuba).
Nope--Eb tuba would be far easier for retraining trumpet players as there is a decided similarity in bass clef and treble clef fingerings. Sousa made BBb tubas really popular; I suspect one of the reason that high-school players learn BBb tuba is so that they won't have to relearn fingerings for sousaphone.
What other "myths" are out there???
Dunno.
