The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
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The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Hello TubeNet,
I am wondering what the most important types of tubas are, and what their descendants are, if they don't exist anymore. It could be a Kaiser BBb, a York CC, British F, Vienna F, French C, stuff like that.
Side Note: I'd be very interested in hearing what tubas Bloke uses - he seems to have decently high standards (In a good way), so I'm wondering what lives up to his standards.
I am wondering what the most important types of tubas are, and what their descendants are, if they don't exist anymore. It could be a Kaiser BBb, a York CC, British F, Vienna F, French C, stuff like that.
Side Note: I'd be very interested in hearing what tubas Bloke uses - he seems to have decently high standards (In a good way), so I'm wondering what lives up to his standards.
Toby Simard
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
The one in my head sounds like Chuck Daellenbach, but the one in my hands does not.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
The one that makes me sound like Warren Deck (I'm still looking!).
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
The ancestor of sousaphones would sure be important, and I suppose somewhere in the archives here we've sorted out to our collective satisfaction what exactly that was - I guess J W Pepper made it, anyway. That was recent enough that such things can be tentatively nailed down. Was it Sousa's idea? Might as well be, it's a story anyway. And the mighty echoes reverberate unto this day - imagine if all the football half time band tuba players had to leave space clear to their left to avoid collisions with their helicons!
Really though, every tuba is important.
Really though, every tuba is important.
- tobysima`
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
By most important I guess I mean the types of tubas, or even makes and models, that have made the biggest impact on how tubas are expected to sound today.lost wrote:Welcome to the forum Toby. Maybe you could help a little by defining what you think is "most important."
Toby Simard
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- tobysima`
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
I definitely do prefer sousaphones to contras, and I'm assuming that helicons are awkward as well. Contras are way too one sided, and I can't keep it up well.Donn wrote:The ancestor of sousaphones would sure be important, and I suppose somewhere in the archives here we've sorted out to our collective satisfaction what exactly that was - I guess J W Pepper made it, anyway. That was recent enough that such things can be tentatively nailed down. Was it Sousa's idea? Might as well be, it's a story anyway. And the mighty echoes reverberate unto this day - imagine if all the football half time band tuba players had to leave space clear to their left to avoid collisions with their helicons!
Really though, every tuba is important.
Toby Simard
Current Stable:
M&M 5V CC Tuba - Conn Helleberg 120S
Current Stable:
M&M 5V CC Tuba - Conn Helleberg 120S
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
The sousaphone is an improvement in some ways, but not by that much. They're about equally manageable, and between two instruments that differ only in the bell, the helicon is just more directional and in a potentially inconvenient direction. They don't really have to stick out to the side so much, that's mainly what happens when they were making sousaphones and helicons that differed only in the bell.<*> The sousaphone is directional, but thanks to the huge flare, more in a fore/aft sense. For the player, in my opinion anyway the helicon is more playable because you aren't in the shadow of that big bell flare and you can hear yourself better. And with European designs you aren't playing through a bit assembly, though that has its down side too if you aren't shaped right.
<*> (By my theory, somewhat similar to Reynolds' ill advised idea to use a sousaphone bell for a forward-facing lap tuba bell, so the upright bell is absurdly tall, but I have no confirmation that's really how it happened.)
<*> (By my theory, somewhat similar to Reynolds' ill advised idea to use a sousaphone bell for a forward-facing lap tuba bell, so the upright bell is absurdly tall, but I have no confirmation that's really how it happened.)
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
I'll definitely have to do a side by side comparison if I can get lucky enough to nab both a sousaphone and a helicon. Sadly my high school only has crappy convertible horns (and Yamahas), and lots of band money laying around, but that's beyond me.Donn wrote:The sousaphone is an improvement in some ways, but not by that much. They're about equally manageable, and between two instruments that differ only in the bell, the helicon is just more directional and in a potentially inconvenient direction. They don't really have to stick out to the side so much, that's mainly what happens when they were making sousaphones and helicons that differed only in the bell.<*> The sousaphone is directional, but thanks to the huge flare, more in a fore/aft sense. For the player, in my opinion anyway the helicon is more playable because you aren't in the shadow of that big bell flare and you can hear yourself better. And with European designs you aren't playing through a bit assembly, though that has its down side too if you aren't shaped right.
<*> (By my theory, somewhat similar to Reynolds' ill advised idea to use a sousaphone bell for a forward-facing lap tuba bell, so the upright bell is absurdly tall, but I have no confirmation that's really how it happened.)
Toby Simard
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
I might restate the question as "which tubas became the archetypes for later generations?"
The problem is that the archetypes became so because of who played them. One might say that the archetype for a large C rotary tubas was the Sander played by August Helleberg. But is it much different from the Cerveny that Bevan pictured from the 1870's? Or the Cerveny of 1850? We don't now when the first C rotary tuba came out, but we surely know about Helleberg.
And we don't know the exact history of the American grand orchestral tuba. There are examples that predate the one played by Arnold Jacobs, but it's certainly true that the York he played became an archetype, because he played it. Such was his influence.
Would Miraphone have been the IT tuba of the 70's, for much of the country, without Roger Bobo and his 188? The 1960's was a BIG decade for Miraphone.
And what about the Besson Sovereign Eb, without John Fletcher?
Some tubas don't have a specific progenitor that everyone recognizes as such. Certainly the Alexander 163 became a standard instrument for orchestra players simply because it was the way it was. I think the B&S Symphonie F tuba was likewise.
There are instruments that are historically important without being particularly important as tubas. Probably most of the tubas played by Bill Bell would fall into that category--those who have played those instrument have not thought to sell everything else and get one JUST LIKE it. I've even played one, and came away with greater admiration for Bill Bell and what he could do with equipment even more limited that the current stuff.
In terms of categories of instruments, there are rotary tubas, the largest of which are called kaisers. There are piston tubas of the Sax type, including all top-action instruments, that trace their way back to Adolphe Sax. And there are piston tubas of the front-action or side-valve type, which to my thinking are piston modifications of rotary tubas, with the advantage in many examples of being able to use a Sousaphone valve set. And there are helicons, of which Sousaphones were originally the bell-up version, which morphed into a bell-forward version. Which are the important examples of each? The one (whatever its qualities) played by the most influential performer.
So, the parent of top-action tubas is the saxhorn; the parent of rotary tubas is as much the Wieprecht tuba (with Berlinerpumpen, which are more like rotary valves than piston valves, despite the buttons) as modified by Cerveny with his valves that turned. Front-action piston tubas have a mixed parentage--Perinet valves from Sax and general architecture from Wieprecht/Cerveny. The parent of the sousaphone is the helicon.
Rick "taking a stab at it" Denney
The problem is that the archetypes became so because of who played them. One might say that the archetype for a large C rotary tubas was the Sander played by August Helleberg. But is it much different from the Cerveny that Bevan pictured from the 1870's? Or the Cerveny of 1850? We don't now when the first C rotary tuba came out, but we surely know about Helleberg.
And we don't know the exact history of the American grand orchestral tuba. There are examples that predate the one played by Arnold Jacobs, but it's certainly true that the York he played became an archetype, because he played it. Such was his influence.
Would Miraphone have been the IT tuba of the 70's, for much of the country, without Roger Bobo and his 188? The 1960's was a BIG decade for Miraphone.
And what about the Besson Sovereign Eb, without John Fletcher?
Some tubas don't have a specific progenitor that everyone recognizes as such. Certainly the Alexander 163 became a standard instrument for orchestra players simply because it was the way it was. I think the B&S Symphonie F tuba was likewise.
There are instruments that are historically important without being particularly important as tubas. Probably most of the tubas played by Bill Bell would fall into that category--those who have played those instrument have not thought to sell everything else and get one JUST LIKE it. I've even played one, and came away with greater admiration for Bill Bell and what he could do with equipment even more limited that the current stuff.
In terms of categories of instruments, there are rotary tubas, the largest of which are called kaisers. There are piston tubas of the Sax type, including all top-action instruments, that trace their way back to Adolphe Sax. And there are piston tubas of the front-action or side-valve type, which to my thinking are piston modifications of rotary tubas, with the advantage in many examples of being able to use a Sousaphone valve set. And there are helicons, of which Sousaphones were originally the bell-up version, which morphed into a bell-forward version. Which are the important examples of each? The one (whatever its qualities) played by the most influential performer.
So, the parent of top-action tubas is the saxhorn; the parent of rotary tubas is as much the Wieprecht tuba (with Berlinerpumpen, which are more like rotary valves than piston valves, despite the buttons) as modified by Cerveny with his valves that turned. Front-action piston tubas have a mixed parentage--Perinet valves from Sax and general architecture from Wieprecht/Cerveny. The parent of the sousaphone is the helicon.
Rick "taking a stab at it" Denney
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
I'd suggest to the original poster to locate and read Clifford Bevan's The Tuba Family and Donald Stauffer's A Treatise on the Tuba.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Yup.cjk wrote:I'd suggest to the original poster to locate and read Clifford Bevan's The Tuba Family and Donald Stauffer's A Treatise on the Tuba.
Those are a really good place to start from.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Start with the serpent, the ophicleide, and the Wieprecht-Moritz tuba of @ 1835. Everything else tuba related descends from these three instruments.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Even the ophicleide descends from the English bass horn--a pre-key version of same, in the bassoon configuration.iiipopes wrote:Start with the serpent, the ophicleide, and the Wieprecht-Moritz tuba of @ 1835. Everything else tuba related descends from these three instruments.
Rick "but the family tree is too jumbled to draw straight lines" Denney
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Link to article regarding the English Bass Horn. I was unaware of this instrument. Thanks, Rick.Rick Denney wrote:Even the ophicleide descends from the English bass horn--a pre-key version of same, in the bassoon configuration.iiipopes wrote:Start with the serpent, the ophicleide, and the Wieprecht-Moritz tuba of @ 1835. Everything else tuba related descends from these three instruments.
Rick "but the family tree is too jumbled to draw straight lines" Denney
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
...talking 'bout an evolution?
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
I keep it in the family!
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
For me it is the current I fell in love with: A old 'Cerveny Opera' B tuba with 5 valves and remonteur springs.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Or workhorses: King 1240, Miraphone 186, Conn 2XJ.Rick Denney wrote:I might restate the question as "which tubas became the archetypes for later generations?"
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
That’s a good analog, Doc.
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Re: The "Most Important" Tubas - With Side Note
Doc wrote:I liken the 186 to the Fender Precision Bass - The industry standard, a workhorse, and can nearly do it all, and does most everything incredibly well. Cuts through the mix well, sits in the mix well, and sounds great live or recorded. Those classic King 1240/1241/2341 tubas are in that same workhorse category for sure. Neither are the progenitor of modern tubas (nod to the OP), but they have evolved into something head-and-shoulders above the rest when it comes to general/do-it-all/one-tool-to-do-them-all applications.iiipopes wrote:Or workhorses: King 1240, Miraphone 186, Conn 2XJ.Rick Denney wrote:I might restate the question as "which tubas became the archetypes for later generations?"
If someone is going to spout a bunch of nonsense about how 6/4 CC's or F tubas (you know... those specialty tubas, much like how 6 string basses and fretless basses are specialty basses?) are the Fender P Bass standard workhorses of the tuba world, stop typing.
Well I suppose on that topic, I minds well inquire i there are any "smaller" York style tubas, be they 4/4 or 5/4. I know of the Mack Brass Little Thunderbird, but that's about it.
Toby Simard
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