Small CC plus large CC

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bisontuba
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by bisontuba »

eupho wrote:Bob: You refering to the 845-16?
The BMB 845 is a CC tuba only available with an 18" bell.

The BMB 445 is a F tuba available with an 18 OR 16" bell
doublebuzzing
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by doublebuzzing »

As someone with not a lot of experience with F or Eb tubas, how different is the sound between, say, a small bore 3/4 BBb/CC tuba like a Conn 2 or 3J and a 4/4 F tuba?
Bob Kolada
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by Bob Kolada »

eupho wrote:Bob: You refering to the 845-16?

No, the "little" 3/4 thing.
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Tubajug
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by Tubajug »

EdFirth wrote:Harvey played everything...Extremely well..... on that Conn C.
Is that what became the Conn 2/3J? I'm reading his autobiography and he only ever calls it his "Conn tuba."
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by MikeMason »

I understand they were "inspired by" but not the same as the Harvey Phillips conn.
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southtubist
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by southtubist »

Some random ramblings-

Here's my old CC tuba being played by a real professional who actually knows what he's doing:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vWR51-4sR4" target="_blank" target="_blank

Sounds great

I regret selling it (small valve MW 2145) as it was extremely user friendly. It'd be a great "audition tuba"- push button tuning, perfectly even response, versatile sound, fast(er) valves, etc. The type of music this group plays is ideally suited to a medium sized CC tuba, also. Lots of walking bass lines and the like. I never used it in quintet as I preferred F tuba- I mostly used it in a very large orchestra and a large wind ensemble. It was plenty loud/big, although my Alex has way more horsepower, and it was certainly not as powerful as the 6/4 Miraphone 190 I used for a while. Actually I prefer a small rotary F tuba for all but the largest stuff, but that's just me.

I guess my point is that it depends on the player. I've played the whole spectrum of instruments, and I've found that I like to use small equipment. I'm probably going to sell my Alex and F tuba in the future, which I will replace with the smallest rotary F tuba I can find. Due to a career change I'll be living out miles from paved roads, so I probably won't even get to play quintet stuff. I'll sure miss my current horns. . . :(

Oh, and, I hope that the current user is doing good!
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by DouglasJB »

When did Mike stop playing? I got the chance to meet them in January of 2015, Paul and Mike were amazing to talk to, Paul even remembered me when I saw him at Midwest and asked how my semester was going. We talked briefly about how we just got a new professor
southtubist
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Re: Small CC plus large CC

Post by southtubist »

DouglasJB wrote:When did Mike stop playing? I got the chance to meet them in January of 2015, Paul and Mike were amazing to talk to, Paul even remembered me when I saw him at Midwest and asked how my semester was going. We talked briefly about how we just got a new professor
I'm not sure. I sold it to Paul back in late 2013. I've kinda been out of the loop since that time.

Oh, speaking of CC tubas in chamber groups, I played a septet gig this morning on my Alex. It wasn't by choice- my F tuba had mechanical issues. It still worked fine (big choir and loud organ), and the previous owners did everything on it. One of my friends used my Alex for Bydlo :shock: in an audition and won, but he's a monster player, so. . .

I think it ultimately comes down to the sound in your head. I'm not very bright, so I try to simplify things like that.
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