KiltieTuba wrote: a couple of buttloads of cash (something like ~64 gallons of cash or so).
I had no idea buttloads were measured in gallons. I thought it was liters?
eupher61 wrote:It makes absolutely no difference in the long run. Germans start students on F. British on Eb. I own BBb, Eb, and F.I am well able to play CC. I've played all of them in jazz, bands, quintets, orchestra (well, not the Eb in quintet or orchestra, the specific instrument isn't that good, but I'd be comfortable doing so). I also play and play euphonium, baritone, and trombone.
In the long run, it makes no difference.
Finish makes no difference at all, except for personal preference and rarely, allergenic situations.
Some teachers will say you MUST have something specific. To me, that is horse hockey.
Thank you for clearing that up. I was and am kind of wary of people who say "Only this type of tuba works" because why would there be other ones?
I naturally play very deeply, and I've heard F tubas don't do well on lower notes, which is why I didn't put them in the running. If I was mistaken, I apologize to F enthusiasts everywhere.
That said, I asked the question because I figured there might be some advantage from one type or the other. If I (again) was mistaken, I'll just buy the one I can.
eupher61 wrote:And, it's always nice to have someone set up this discussion. I love seeing statements that some setting requires a specific tuba. Idiocy.
pineapple-power: Setting up discussions with high chance of debate since 2001.
