Recently I saw in the yahoo-group archives the pictures of a 'monster 4 valve Bb King' Sousaphone.
I can't find anything else about it on the internet. I assume they wheren't build for long time and are very rare aren't they ?
regards
Michael
Monster King
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For reference:
The Monsters seen by Tubamike were these:
Thumbnails of a 1920 King Monster BBb sousaphone 4P:
http://photos.groups.yahoo.com/group/yo ... usa+4P.jpg
Thumbnail of a King Monster 4 valve Sousaphone:
http://photos.groups.yahoo.com/group/yo ... +sousa.jpg
Especially the older one illustrates the concept of sousaphones preferably being just "differently wrapped" tubas mentioned in a recent posting of mine.
Klaus
Thumbnails of a 1920 King Monster BBb sousaphone 4P:
http://photos.groups.yahoo.com/group/yo ... usa+4P.jpg
Thumbnail of a King Monster 4 valve Sousaphone:
http://photos.groups.yahoo.com/group/yo ... +sousa.jpg
Especially the older one illustrates the concept of sousaphones preferably being just "differently wrapped" tubas mentioned in a recent posting of mine.
Klaus
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Sousas on steroids?
Hello, Michael.......
Of the "plus-sized" production-model BBb sousaphones,
King dubbed theirs the "Giant",
Conn's was the "Jumbo" (bell collar measures 9.5-inches diameter....29 7/8-inch circumference!),
Martin's "Mammoth" sousa bell collar diameter measures 7 7/8-inches (same as their Mammoth tubas).
Martin called their large Eb sousaphone the "Monster", but it was smaller than the Martin Mammoth.
AndyL
Of the "plus-sized" production-model BBb sousaphones,
King dubbed theirs the "Giant",
Conn's was the "Jumbo" (bell collar measures 9.5-inches diameter....29 7/8-inch circumference!),
Martin's "Mammoth" sousa bell collar diameter measures 7 7/8-inches (same as their Mammoth tubas).
Martin called their large Eb sousaphone the "Monster", but it was smaller than the Martin Mammoth.
AndyL
Last edited by AndyL on Wed Mar 15, 2006 10:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I just went and checked the Martin "Mammoth" here. It does indeed have a 7 7/8" bell collar, but it was not the largest made. I also just pulled the bell off the Conn Jumbo, and the inside measurement of the bell socket is 9 1/2". This Conn jumbo is also the only sousaphone I've encountered that has 4 bell retaining screws.
Lee A. Stofer, Jr.
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Re: Monster King
Some alternate sites:tubamike wrote:Recently I saw in the yahoo-group archives the pictures of a 'monster 4 valve Bb King' Sousaphone.
I can't find anything else about it on the internet.
You can see one pic (same as the first link in Klaus' post) after registering for the TubaEuph forum:
http://www.smartgroups.com/pictures/ope ... um&Dir=ASC
Also, another 3-valve giant King Sousa is at Dale Hale's site:
http://dalehale.com/CoolTubas/GiantKing.htm
Dale's other pics are available starting here:
http://dalehale.com/CoolTubas/CoolTubas.htm
My shoulder hurts just looking at those photos.

Dean E
[S]tudy politics and war, that our sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. Our sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy . . . in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry [and] music. . . . John Adams (1780)
[S]tudy politics and war, that our sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. Our sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy . . . in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry [and] music. . . . John Adams (1780)
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The Monster King and Martin Mammoth sousaphones are great and manly instruments. But nothing should strike fear into a tuba player's heart like the thought of being handed a Conn Jumbo at the beginning of even a short parade! Something to bring a player to his or her knees, literally. A Conn 4 valve Jumbo from the late 20's weighs 54 pounds. It makes quite an impression when you put it on the first time. But it is a huge and amazing sound once you get used to it.
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BTW King made at least one sousaphone with a 9 1/4" bell collar (receiving section). None of the King catalogs I have picture anything like it. For the size of the bell joint, it has a relatively modest bell size of 25", giving it comparatively little bell flare. It's not nearly as heavy as the Conn Jumbo mentioned above, though no lightweight either.