Playing a Titanic Tuba
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bobd0
- bugler

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Playing a Titanic Tuba
I hope everyone can access the links below to the NY Times video and article on what could be the world's largest bugle.
Video:
Playing a Titanic Tuba
http://www.nytimes.com/video/nyregion/1 ... d=46928198
Story:
It’s a Giant. It’s a Novelty. It’s a Tuba Named Big Carl
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/27/nyreg ... .html?_r=0
Video:
Playing a Titanic Tuba
http://www.nytimes.com/video/nyregion/1 ... d=46928198
Story:
It’s a Giant. It’s a Novelty. It’s a Tuba Named Big Carl
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/27/nyreg ... .html?_r=0
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bighonkintuba
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
That was a great store and it was always neat to see the big tuba. I'm glad to know that it's still around.
I guess the valves and associated tubing are just for show...
I guess the valves and associated tubing are just for show...
Last edited by bighonkintuba on Sat Sep 27, 2014 9:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
- bort
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?

- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Are you saying that all they did was put it in a tanning booth!...bort wrote:Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?![]()
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
- roweenie
- pro musician

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
I was wondering where that horn went after the Carl Fisher retail store went under and the building became "luxury condos".
It used to be displayed in a place of prominence, on a ledge right over the front door of the store.
It's interesting to know that the valves are just for show - - -
It used to be displayed in a place of prominence, on a ledge right over the front door of the store.
It's interesting to know that the valves are just for show - - -
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- Paul Scott
- pro musician

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
I remember that tuba well and I miss the Carl Fischer, Cooper Square, NYC store since it was in such close proximity to McSorely's Ale House!
I believe that this tuba was built as a functional chromatic instrument. An article by Gary Stewart in the Fall, 1988 T.U.B.A Journal states that this instrument is a sister to "The Tuba" at Harvard. The engraving on this tuba also reads Besson & Co., Carl Fischer U.S. Agent and I recall the NYC tuba having this same marking. The Harvard tuba hung in the Carl Fischer store in Boston until the early 1950s, according to this same article. Photos show that the two tubas are indeed different with the Harvard instrument being left-facing while still a top action.
Before the Cooper Square, NY store closed the tuba sat on the floor and I was able to push one of the pistons up and down. At that time two of the enormous finger buttons were there but now it seems that only one is left.
My favorite detail: a lyre holder just in case you wanted to march with this beast!!
I believe that this tuba was built as a functional chromatic instrument. An article by Gary Stewart in the Fall, 1988 T.U.B.A Journal states that this instrument is a sister to "The Tuba" at Harvard. The engraving on this tuba also reads Besson & Co., Carl Fischer U.S. Agent and I recall the NYC tuba having this same marking. The Harvard tuba hung in the Carl Fischer store in Boston until the early 1950s, according to this same article. Photos show that the two tubas are indeed different with the Harvard instrument being left-facing while still a top action.
Before the Cooper Square, NY store closed the tuba sat on the floor and I was able to push one of the pistons up and down. At that time two of the enormous finger buttons were there but now it seems that only one is left.
My favorite detail: a lyre holder just in case you wanted to march with this beast!!
Adjunct Tuba Professor
William Paterson University
Wayne, NJ
William Paterson University
Wayne, NJ
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bobd0
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Very interesting, Paul. Thanks for the details.Paul Scott wrote:I remember that tuba well and I miss the Carl Fischer, Cooper Square, NYC store since it was in such close proximity to McSorely's Ale House!
I believe that this tuba was built as a functional chromatic instrument. An article by Gary Stewart in the Fall, 1988 T.U.B.A Journal states that this instrument is a sister to "The Tuba" at Harvard. The engraving on this tuba also reads Besson & Co., Carl Fischer U.S. Agent and I recall the NYC tuba having this same marking. The Harvard tuba hung in the Carl Fischer store in Boston until the early 1950s, according to this same article. Photos show that the two tubas are indeed different with the Harvard instrument being left-facing while still a top action.
Before the Cooper Square, NY store closed the tuba sat on the floor and I was able to push one of the pistons up and down. At that time two of the enormous finger buttons were there but now it seems that only one is left.
My favorite detail: a lyre holder just in case you wanted to march with this beast!!
It all makes perfect sense, really: We're the tanning booth capitol and we now have more than enough experience dealing with over-sized blowhards.windshieldbug wrote:Are you saying that all they did was put it in a tanning booth!...bort wrote:Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?![]()
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bighonkintuba
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Mmmmmm.... Cheese and crackers.
Paul Scott wrote: in such close proximity to McSorely's Ale House!
- roweenie
- pro musician

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Ah yes, Paul - McSorley's Ale House! I spent many evenings (and afternoons) there, back when I used to drink. As a young man while still in school, I almost took a job at Carl Fisher up on the second floor (balcony) in the band and choral music department. In retrospect, considering the proximity of McSorely's, it's probably for the best that I didn't end up working there, after all......bobd0 wrote:Paul Scott wrote:I remember that tuba well and I miss the Carl Fischer, Cooper Square, NYC store since it was in such close proximity to McSorely's Ale House!
Bill Bell still holds the ale drinking record there, if I am not mistaken (I don't know if he preferred light or dark).
Bob
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- Matt Walters
- The Tuba Whisperer

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Big Carl was never made with actual valves. If you take off the top valve cap and remove that spring assembly that pushes the finger buttons back up after you push them down, you will see a brass tube passing in one side of each valve casing and out the other. I was trying to figure out how that spring system would work the valve beneath it until I got a look inside and saw there was no valve. It's a giant bugle made as a prop. Big Carl was most likely made by Bohland & Fuchs and is way bigger than the Harvard Besson BBBb. Even the slides were made non-functional.
Matt Walters
Last chair tubist
Who Cares What Ensemble
Owns old tubas that play better than what you have.
Last chair tubist
Who Cares What Ensemble
Owns old tubas that play better than what you have.
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bigbob
- 4 valves

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Is the one in Europe where it takes two men to play it bigger??.....BB
- hbcrandy
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
They wanted it in the hands of experts. Mark Twain defined an expert as "an ordinary fellow from another town."bort wrote:Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?
Randy Harrison
Proprietor,
Harrison Brass
Baltimore, Maryland USA
http://www.harrisonbrass.com
Instructor of Applied Brass Performance
Maryland Conservatory of Music
Bel Air and Havre de Grace, Maryland USA
http://www.musicismagic.com
Proprietor,
Harrison Brass
Baltimore, Maryland USA
http://www.harrisonbrass.com
Instructor of Applied Brass Performance
Maryland Conservatory of Music
Bel Air and Havre de Grace, Maryland USA
http://www.musicismagic.com
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bighonkintuba
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
re: valves
Thanks Matt.
I agree that's disappointing.
Do we know the fundamental note of the horn? Then we can at least call it a natural tuba in ____.
Thanks Matt.
I agree that's disappointing.
Do we know the fundamental note of the horn? Then we can at least call it a natural tuba in ____.
- Tuboxchef
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
For the record, both the tubists with the Met and NY Phil live in New Jersey. It's a fact of life. NYC is expensive, NJ is less. If a southern boy like me can move to Jersey and not go insane, can't be too bad.bort wrote:Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?
Derek Fenstermacher
I own tubas.
I own tubas.
- bort
- 6 valves

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
I live in Manhattan -- trust me, I know what you mean. It was meant as a rag on the newspaper, certainly not on you or the folks at Dillon Music.Tuboxchef wrote:For the record, both the tubists with the Met and NY Phil live in New Jersey. It's a fact of life. NYC is expensive, NJ is less. If a southern boy like me can move to Jersey and not go insane, can't be too bad.bort wrote:Oh come on, they get guys from Jersey to work on and play on the big tuba?
It's like when people ask me which New York football team I root for... I tell them neither, because they're both in Jersey.
- Gandalfe
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Okay, that makes sense Matt.
- edsel585960
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
I know what I want for Christmas. 
Conn 20-21 J
Conn 10J, Conn 26 K, Martin Mammoth, Mirafone 186, Soviet Helicon, Holton Raincatcher Sousaphone, Yamaha 103, King 1240.
Conn 10J, Conn 26 K, Martin Mammoth, Mirafone 186, Soviet Helicon, Holton Raincatcher Sousaphone, Yamaha 103, King 1240.
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DanPriven
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
I have a couple of questions about that horn: It states in the article that it's 60' long and is BBBb. Since a BBb horn is 18', shouldn't a BBBb horn be 36' long?
Also, Derek, when you played that insane helicopter note, did I see correctly that your bottom lip was BELOW the rim of the mouthpiece? What the heck was that? Is that pro-tuba technique I should explore?
Thanks to all -
Also, Derek, when you played that insane helicopter note, did I see correctly that your bottom lip was BELOW the rim of the mouthpiece? What the heck was that? Is that pro-tuba technique I should explore?
Thanks to all -
- Dan the Dabbler
San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Band
Cerveny 686-4MR BBb
Miraphone 181 F
San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Band
Cerveny 686-4MR BBb
Miraphone 181 F
- Tuboxchef
- bugler

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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Hello, yes...my bottom lip is below the mouthpiece. I don't know what other people call it, but I call it a tongue pedal. Basically you are replacing the bottom lip with the tongue, and now you're flapping the top lip and tongue. Sounds weird, but it allows me to play the super pedals on my tuba, and coincidentally it works GREAT on Big Carl. The highest note I'd use it on is pedal G (below low G) and I can get down to double pedal C# (sorta). Kind of a cool trick that actually sounds like a pitch, and doesn't take a lot of air to do. I also have greater control of it, I can play really soft pedals with it, though I can't play it louder than about forte...DanPriven wrote:Also, Derek, when you played that insane helicopter note, did I see correctly that your bottom lip was BELOW the rim of the mouthpiece? What the heck was that? Is that pro-tuba technique I should explore?
Derek Fenstermacher
I own tubas.
I own tubas.
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DanPriven
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Re: Playing a Titanic Tuba
Thanks! I now have a new experiment with which I can torment my besieged family.
I think "Pelican-ing" is a good term for it, because it looks like you're putting the mouthpiece in a pelican-pouch.
I think "Pelican-ing" is a good term for it, because it looks like you're putting the mouthpiece in a pelican-pouch.
- Dan the Dabbler
San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Band
Cerveny 686-4MR BBb
Miraphone 181 F
San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Band
Cerveny 686-4MR BBb
Miraphone 181 F