Switch to CC
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- 3 valves
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I own a mirafone 186, and the reason that I want to possiblely start using a CC tuba as well is because I really enjoy playing in orchestra's and even mroe so in brass quintets/quartets. And from knowledge that I have acquired, CC tubas are more common in those groups. Even though I want to study music ed, I still want to do my fair share of performing
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue
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Lots of people play in orchestras with a Bb trumpet as their primary... Given your interests, though, if I was buying another horn, I'd look for a CC. That being said, the MOST important thing (rather than key) is that the horn play comfortably for you and sound good.
Last edited by windshieldbug on Sun Jun 26, 2005 12:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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I'm a sophmore @ the Univ. of Central Arkansas and a music ed. major too. I personally prefer the CC tuba to the Bb (except in marching band). Most of the orchestral excerpts and solos are easier on CC that Bb. I have also noticed that my sound and tone are much bigger and darker since I made the switch (but that could be that I spent more hours practicing on CC in the past year than I ever did on Bb). Plus...there are some high schoolers who play on CC (I know one personally, I beat him out for 1st chair at All-State). I still know my way around the Bb since I play it in marching band and next spring I'll play one in Dixie Land Band.
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- bugler
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- porkchopsisgood
- pro musician
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James Jenkins of the Jacksonville Symphony plays on a B-flat.
He's the only professional tubist who exclusively plays BBb....just never made the switch. And more importantly: he wasn't forced to by his conductor.
If you're going to a respectable college with a respectable teacher, he/she will most likely want you to play CC. If it's a large studio and you aren't a performance major the teacher won't care UNLESS you are looking to buy a horn, in which case they'll want you to play CC.
Buy a CC. It won't hurt ya.
Nuff Said......
Allen V. Carter
Eastman 836
MW 2145
MW 45SLZ
XO Bass Bone
Eastman 836
MW 2145
MW 45SLZ
XO Bass Bone
- Keith Sanders
- bugler
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I am a junior music ed major @ Louisiana Tech Univ., and I play a Mira 186 1970s model CC tuba that I bought. I did play BBflat for the majority of my freshman year though, I still play, just in marching band. The main thing with switching is that you find an instrument that you sound good on and that you are comfortable with. BBflat-CC doesnt really matter, most band directors, unless they play tuba, have no idea between the differences of the different keyed tubas. Nor do they care, mine said it was a "personal" problem, I tried explaining it and it didnt work. Many people will sound better on CC, and others on BBflat, just what do you sound best on is the most important thing. Plus learning the different keyed tubas makes you a better all around player. I play BBflat, CC and a little Eb for tuba ensemble, It all depends on what ya sound good playing.
- Leland
- pro musician
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One of the other guys in my group is borrowing my BBb (we play on GG contrabasses) for additional practice in anticipation of going back to college this fall, and he recently had a lesson with one of the local pro tubists.
They started talking about what key of tuba to buy, and the pro started making these points (some of which have already been mentioned) --
- You're already used to BBb, so why switch now?
- There's no reason anymore to play CC just because of the quality of the horn -- there are a lot of really, really nice-playing BBb's out there.
- 50% of music you'll play will be easier on BBb, and 50% will be easier on CC.
- Almost always, performance majors don't spend most of their time on CC or BBb. They spend it on F tuba.
I think I'm forgetting a couple, but those are the ones I can think of right now.
They started talking about what key of tuba to buy, and the pro started making these points (some of which have already been mentioned) --
- You're already used to BBb, so why switch now?
- There's no reason anymore to play CC just because of the quality of the horn -- there are a lot of really, really nice-playing BBb's out there.
- 50% of music you'll play will be easier on BBb, and 50% will be easier on CC.
- Almost always, performance majors don't spend most of their time on CC or BBb. They spend it on F tuba.
I think I'm forgetting a couple, but those are the ones I can think of right now.
- Uncle Buck
- 5 valves
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Wow - you must have done an amazing amount of research to come up with that conclusion. I'd love to see it. How in the world were you able to come up with a list of ALL professional tuba players on the planet, and then determine the exclusive horn used by each of them?porkchopsisgood wrote: He's the only professional tubist who exclusively plays BBb....just never made the switch.
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue
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- rascaljim
- pro musician
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What about switching to C because you love playing the tuba and would like to increase your abilities as a tuba player. You won't forget fingerings, but it does open up a ton of tubas that you can choose from when you make purchases down the road (hopefully based on sound). That and learning a bass tuba is a breaze after the swich.
I am a big C tuba fan and I play C in orchestra and happen to like the way the fingerings line up as well as the response of the tuba. There is a slightly quicker response on C tubas and I would expect this is from the shorter tubing length for the fundamental pitch. I know many people on the board yell that people should only do what they think is enough(ie you don't need to play C because you can do just fine on Bb), but when I was in undergrad I did know quite a few students who made the switch to C just to become a better MUSICIAN. Besides even if C's are only slightly better than Bb's that should be a good enough reason, as artists, to go that way because the higher level you reach as a player the bigger the difference the little things make.
Just twisting up the Bb C arguement
Jim Langenberg
I am a big C tuba fan and I play C in orchestra and happen to like the way the fingerings line up as well as the response of the tuba. There is a slightly quicker response on C tubas and I would expect this is from the shorter tubing length for the fundamental pitch. I know many people on the board yell that people should only do what they think is enough(ie you don't need to play C because you can do just fine on Bb), but when I was in undergrad I did know quite a few students who made the switch to C just to become a better MUSICIAN. Besides even if C's are only slightly better than Bb's that should be a good enough reason, as artists, to go that way because the higher level you reach as a player the bigger the difference the little things make.
Just twisting up the Bb C arguement
Jim Langenberg
Principal Tuba, Dubuque Symphony Orchestra
Owner/brass repair tech, Brazen Bandworks
Sousaphone, Mucca Pazza
Owner/brass repair tech, Brazen Bandworks
Sousaphone, Mucca Pazza
- Leland
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It enables more properly-fingered notes, allowing them to be played chromatically all the way down to the pedal. Depending on how the 5th is set up, it can also play certain notes more in tune and with a cleaner sound (B and low Eb on a BBb tuba, or Db and low F on a CC, for example).mTaUrBkA wrote:what exactly are the pluses of a 5th valve? Does it help playing in tune?
That being said, a 4-valve compensating system can play at least as well in tune as a 5-valve horn, or even better.
- Leland
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