thevillagetuba wrote:Steve Marcus wrote:Cerveny 601 BBb
Melton 197/198
Nirschl 6/4 BBb--both the "American/Martin/York" style and the modified B&F Kaiser style
6/4 Rudi Meinl BBb
--All preferably with 5 factory installed valves
Steve, is there something specific you like about the 197/8 compared to the Fafner? I have no experience with the former but it does seem like a larger version (with a smaller bell) of the 195.
I've only played the Fafner briefly at displays; it certainly does have a beautiful, large tone. American tubists such as Gene Pokorny, Craig Knox, and others have really done justice to this fine instrument (as they have with other 6/4 BBb horns such as the Miraphone Siegfried, the BMB 765, etc.).
But the YouTubes and other recordings of European orchestras in which tubists such as Alexander von Puttkamer have chosen the Melton 197/8 present a tuba sound that has as much warmth and presence as the 6/4 York and models fashioned after it, but with a definition and precision of pitch and sound that would seem to blend well with trombones, rotary trumpets, etc. -- possessing a very audible and pleasant stentorian voice.
It's not that there is any disdain for the more "fluffy American" tuba sound; I like listening to that sound very much and enjoy producing that gratifying sound even more. But the thought is that if one went in to an audition or a performance with a 197/8 or similar "Kaiser-style" tuba with its taller bell, it might make auditors', conductors', fellow players', and audiences' ears "stand up" in a very positive way to a supportive, colorful, yet precise sound that would be currently unique in a North American orchestra.