Every pro I have talked to says this: "If you aren't required to use one for your job, don't buy one."lost wrote:Many tubists think you should buy one only if you need one.
I still wish I had the cash to buy a Siegfried.
Every pro I have talked to says this: "If you aren't required to use one for your job, don't buy one."lost wrote:Many tubists think you should buy one only if you need one.



Just one more! It can't hurt anything.Stryk wrote:The last thing I *NEED* is another tuba, but I want one - at least I think I doMark wrote:Every pro I have talked to says this: "If you aren't required to use one for your job, don't buy one."lost wrote:Many tubists think you should buy one only if you need one.
I still wish I had the cash to buy a Siegfried.
$7,501!Curmudgeon wrote:Ignore him. $7500 ready and waiting.bloke wrote:IF you own one of these that is in new condition - and are needing a quick $7000 - you might want to contact me.![]()




CC or BBb?southtubist wrote:In the past I spent a lot of time playing an old Miraphone 190.

CC, with the 2-step 5th valve. Great horn, and I found my Sellmansberger Symphony to be a good match for it.Donn wrote:CC or BBb?southtubist wrote:In the past I spent a lot of time playing an old Miraphone 190.


I guessed it might be CC, based on your enthusiasm. I had the BBb ... think I did anyway, it's long gone. If I had it back, I think maybe I could play it better today, but I'm not dying to find out. From my vague memory of what it was like, I have a hunch it may not have fit the 6/4 ideal that people are thinking of. Are the Rudolf Meinl 5/4 and 6/4 models like that - yes very large, but no not really so much like the York-inspired models in terms of tone and other auditory phenomena?southtubist wrote:CC, with the 2-step 5th valve. Great horn, and I found my Sellmansberger Symphony to be a good match for it.Donn wrote:CC or BBb?southtubist wrote:In the past I spent a lot of time playing an old Miraphone 190.

I guessed it might be CC, based on your enthusiasm. I had the BBb ... think I did anyway, it's long gone. If I had it back, I think maybe I could play it better today, but I'm not dying to find out. From my vague memory of what it was like, I have a hunch it may not have fit the 6/4 ideal that people are thinking of. Are the Rudolf Meinl 5/4 and 6/4 models like that - yes very large, but no not really so much like the York-inspired models in terms of tone and other auditory phenomena?[/quote]Donn wrote:


My guess? Because he was an old man, and it was his horn.Steve Marcus wrote:Then why did Arnold Jacobs refer to the 6/4 York as "an old man's horn?"


