When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

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T. J. Ricer
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When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by T. J. Ricer »

If you have the luxury of owning multiple contrabass tubas, when/for what reason do you use the smaller horn? For example, I like using my Yamaha 661 for Tchaikovsky as the sound feels "right" to me...

That being said, over time and with the input of my colleagues, I am playing a larger and larger percentage of the time on the 6/4. When I solo or play quintet it is usually on a bass tuba. If I choose not to play bass tuba for solo or quintet, my 6/4 is a larger difference in sound, so I often just play that.

What say you, freak-jury?

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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by T. J. Ricer »

Sidebar: Bloke, did you sell the Rudy?
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by MikeMason »

Enjoyed the conn 2j this morning. Quintet/organ/choir. I was able to just play without worrying about "the hand" . Some different intonation tendencies. Seems like this is one of those horns that 3 valve fingerings work better for on a lot of notes. Need to search old posts on that one...
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by bisontuba »

bloke wrote:
T. J. Ricer wrote:Sidebar: Bloke, did you sell the Rudy?
It has a proud new owner.
Wow! I assume you still have your Thor...
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by hduong »

I use my CC and F tubas whenever I'm playing in an orchestra, and my BBb when doing symphonic band/wind ensembles. I've tried using my C tuba in a symphonic band and didn't really have any issues, just preferred the sound of my Bb with the size of the ensembles.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by tubeast »

The HoJo can expect to receive my undivided attention on following occasions:
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- when I need to emulate a bass guitar in community band
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by Bill Troiano »

I use my Yamaha 621CC for trad. jazz gigs, especially in some bars, where the sousaphone might take up too much room. I've also been using it on and off for brass quintet. It's also the tuba I use when I go out to teach lessons in a couple of high schools.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by Heavy_Metal »

Quintet and any smaller performance. At my age, I don't feel like learning another set of fingerings.

Yes Joe, those Mahillons are real nice!
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by toobagrowl »

Those little "middle school" 3/4 BBb tubas (King 1140, YBB-105, 3/4 Schmidt BBb) are like go-carts - small, fun/easy to play, and very in-tune :tuba:
Even though they are small BBb tubas, they play/sound different in the upper partials and lower register than bass tubas. Been thinking about maybe adding one of those little BBb tubas for certain gigs where a smaller, raspy, yet still punchy type sound is desired. Outdoors, dixieland, some pops music comes to mind. :idea:
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by jeopardymaster »

184 for quintet unless I'm using the Eb. Gnagey for most orchestral work (just did Hanson 2, Dvorak, Copland and Grofe on it in the past month). Used the Neptune for Sibelius 2 and Fountains last spring, and use it on the big blows like Rimski, Hindemith, Stravinsky, Mahler or most Wagner other than Meistersinger. Unless the part screams out for a BBb (Prok 5, Rachmaninoff), and then it's the Alex. Eb for Berlioz, Mendelssohn and the like. Making up for all the years when I had to play everything on the 184.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by Art Hovey »

I use my "Frugalhorn" (11J with added rotary 4th valve) for giving kids lessons because it is easy to carry around and it also blends well with euphonium & trombone as well as student tubas. I also use it for small ensemble rehearsals and general kicking around. Last Friday I used it for a nice trio gig with an excellent guitarist and clarinetist.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by Mark E. Chachich »

My MW 32 for quintet jobs.

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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by Rick Denney »

I use an F tuba for smaller ensembles. The facility in the upper register (and, hobbyist that I am, having partials not quite so close together at the top of the staff is helpful) is a big reason.

Big tubas can work in small ensembles, but I find I struggle to sound like I'm playing loudly without actually burying the ensemble. Loud playing has a different timbre that is sometimes appropriate without the sound actually being all that loud. That's where a smaller tuba helps, but in those situations I use an F.

I have two large Bb contrabass tubas, one that is a kaiser design and the other an American BAT. Each has its preferred applications, but the kaiser punches through our large ensemble better. I play in the Loudoun Symphonic Winds, and we play on a high-school stage that does not have a shell. There are usually two or three of us, and we could be happier with four. (In the rehearsal space, not so much. We can hurt people in that echo chamber.) I played a 4/4-5/4 tuba in that group for a long time, but it's easier with the big tuba. In past epochs, I played 4/4 tubas, but that's what was available and I was usually playing in larger sections or smaller orchestras.

If I played in a small amateur orchestra like I once did, I might use a 4/4 tuba more often. And as I age I begin to sense that playing big, heavy tubas does have an end-point that may occur before I'm ready to stop playing altogether.

So, for now, the 4/4-5/4 contrabasses remain mostly unplayed, while the kaiser and BAT are the go-to contrabasses and the F tubas fill the small-tuba role.

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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by pjv »

I play mostly amplified popular-type music, recordings and brass quintet.

A far as contrabaas tuba's are concerned I'll use a 14K, Arion (small compact model) or a 2341 depending on my needs. I particularly like the Arion for it's deep sound and quick punchy attack. Even though it's an older model with a 14-ish" bell it doesn't get edgy like a 14K kind of edgy, retaining it's throaty bass sound even when I do push it to the edge.
I have a 40K and a 163 Alex if I want to go a tad larger, but my work usually doesn't profit from this (the 40K not being really that much larger, just heavier).
I recently sold my 36J. Absolutely beautiful sound but I never used it.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by PaulMaybery »

Really don't use a smaller 3/4 CC these days. Long time back I had a short affair with a 184, but could not really get it to work for me. Though it was great on Christmas Eve when we did 9 services with a small orchestra at Mount Olivet in Mpls. In general got more umpf from my MW F. Thought about trying the 184 again. My whole take on playing is so much different than 25 years ago. The large 6/4 F tuba (BMB) pretty much works for just about everything, but the CC BAT is the go to horn for Symphonic Band and Orchestra, that is when the BIg Boys are needed. For quintet, the BMB F is my choice.
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by pjv »

Come on, how can you NOT want to own one of these?
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Re: When do YOU use your smaller contrabass tuba?

Post by PaulMaybery »

bloke wrote:
PaulMaybery wrote:Really don't use a smaller 3/4 CC these days. Long time back I had a short affair with a 184, but could not really get it to work for me. Though it was great on Christmas Eve when we did 9 services with a small orchestra at Mount Olivet in Mpls. In general got more umpf from my MW F. Thought about trying the 184 again. My whole take on playing is so much different than 25 years ago. The large 6/4 F tuba (BMB) pretty much works for just about everything, but the CC BAT is the go to horn for Symphonic Band and Orchestra, that is when the BIg Boys are needed. For quintet, the BMB F is my choice.
I believe the explanations for the popularity of the 184 CC in the 1970's were...

- They were available.
- They played better than most of the not-even-widely-available F tubas that were manufactured and found their way to the USA at that time.
- Most of us didn't have any experience with F tubas anyway.
- There was a picture of Roger Bobo holding a 184 in the Sun Valley, California Mirafone brochure.
The 184 was for some a surrogate for the F tuba, for the exact reasons Joe mentioned. There were very few Fs around for any of us to get much experience. They were a mystery. One friend basically called the 184 his F tuba, just pitched in CC.
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