King Altonium... with C slide?
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This is for posting links to off site deals that you are not personally selling,but wanting to pass along good deals
This is for posting links to off site deals that you are not personally selling,but wanting to pass along good deals
- J.c. Sherman
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King Altonium... with C slide?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Super-Rare-Reco ... 3a898db067" target="_blank
I know he says Eb slide, but the math don't add up. I'm thinking C.
I know he says Eb slide, but the math don't add up. I'm thinking C.
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
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Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
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http://www.jcsherman.net
- Donn
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Early in the morning and slightly hung over, but to me it looks like it would lower the pitch by a 5th. That would add up, if they really did come as F/Eb. Looks nice, awful skinny though. And there might be some tuning troubles with the valves, if you actually used the alternate slide.
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
I'm thinking whoever put this price on this horn thinks there is a fool born every minute.
- Donn
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
It isn't a fire sale, that's for sure. As mentioned in a previous post - it really is HN White, several generations later. Not making anything these days, but they have a collection of premium condition King instruments for sale, and I bet they don't care how long it takes to sell them.
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Nope. They were made in F with Eb slides of some kind. I've not seen one with just one big slide like that, the Conns and Kings that were used in my home town band had extensions for all the slides. Usually they were played in Eb, and pretty badly
That said, C would make no sense whatsoever. Horn parts in classic band music of that era were printed in both F and Eb, thus the changeable pitch.

That said, C would make no sense whatsoever. Horn parts in classic band music of that era were printed in both F and Eb, thus the changeable pitch.
- Donn
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Sorry, I don't entirely follow -- you're saying this is an Eb slide, or not?eupher61 wrote:Nope. They were made in F with Eb slides of some kind. I've not seen one with just one big slide like that, the Conns and Kings that were used in my home town band had extensions for all the slides. Usually they were played in Eb, and pretty badly![]()
That said, C would make no sense whatsoever. Horn parts in classic band music of that era were printed in both F and Eb, thus the changeable pitch.
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
He's saying eb not C...Donn wrote:Sorry, I don't entirely follow -- you're saying this is an Eb slide, or not?eupher61 wrote:Nope. They were made in F with Eb slides of some kind. I've not seen one with just one big slide like that, the Conns and Kings that were used in my home town band had extensions for all the slides. Usually they were played in Eb, and pretty badly![]()
That said, C would make no sense whatsoever. Horn parts in classic band music of that era were printed in both F and Eb, thus the changeable pitch.
____
I agree with J.c.S, the math seems odd. Could this be a one-off custom slide?
Yamaha YEP-642s
Boosey & Hawkes 19" Bell Imperial EEb
Boosey & Hawkes 19" Bell Imperial EEb
- Donn
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- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Having seen dozens of these with F and Eb slides, the second slide is invariably straight and roughly as long as the first valve tube, for obvious reasons.eupher61 wrote:Nope. They were made in F with Eb slides of some kind. I've not seen one with just one big slide like that, the Conns and Kings that were used in my home town band had extensions for all the slides. Usually they were played in Eb, and pretty badly![]()
That said, C would make no sense whatsoever. Horn parts in classic band music of that era were printed in both F and Eb, thus the changeable pitch.
C doesn't make sense? There're thousands of mellophones and other saxhorn variants that would like you to explain that to them

J.c.S.
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
- Donn
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
So your Buescher has enough slack in the valve slides, for acceptable intonation in C?
- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
With the aforementioned auxiliary second slide, yes, absolutely. As did my Conn Wonder with terminal crooks. And the Holtons, and...Donn wrote:So your Buescher has enough slack in the valve slides, for acceptable intonation in C?
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
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- Dan Schultz
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Here's a picture of a REAL Eb/F Conn alto horn.
Dan Schultz
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Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Yikes! Never liked that model >: P
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Me neither. That's why it's full of dents, filthy dirty, and spends it's miserable life hanging from the ceiling on my shop! I posted the pic mainly to show that the length difference between the Eb and F slides looks out of whack compared to the King version. I KNOW what key the Conn plays is. Not so sure about the King just by looking at the picture.J.c. Sherman wrote:Yikes! Never liked that model >: P
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Good points, DanTubaTinker wrote:Me neither. That's why it's full of dents, filthy dirty, and spends it's miserable life hanging from the ceiling on my shop! I posted the pic mainly to show that the length difference between the Eb and F slides looks out of whack compared to the King version. I KNOW what key the Conn plays is. Not so sure about the King just by looking at the picture.J.c. Sherman wrote:Yikes! Never liked that model >: P

Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
Don't rule out the possibility that it is a C slide, although something about this King Altonium slide looks aftermarket. I have a Buescher circular alto horn (mellophone) that has a case chock full of slides: F, Eb, D and C. Sometimes two of them work as a pair, and you can see the letters stamped next to lines indicating how far to push it in.
- J.c. Sherman
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Re: King Altonium... with C slide?
I would not rule out a factory piece. There were awesome custom instruments from the factory on Superior Avenue, from the Bill Bell instruments, to my Bell-front small Eb... and the earlier Cleveland Musical Instrument Company they acquired manufactured a lovely mellophone similar to the advertisement earlier with a lovely curvaceous Eb crook instead of a straight one. The talent and ability were there... but I despair that there is probably a missing 2nd valve slide extension (which could be easily replaced)Walter Webb wrote:Don't rule out the possibility that it is a C slide, although something about this King Altonium slide looks aftermarket. I have a Buescher circular alto horn (mellophone) that has a case chock full of slides: F, Eb, D and C. Sometimes two of them work as a pair, and you can see the letters stamped next to lines indicating how far to push it in.
Instructor of Tuba & Euphonium, Cleveland State University
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net
Principal Tuba, Firelands Symphony Orchestra
President, Variations in Brass
http://www.jcsherman.net