That's what I could have used my freshman year in college - two Tubas with different valve setups. The Band Director (a Saxophonist) insisted I continue to play Bb Tuba in Band while learning CC Tuba for everything else. According to him, having a CC Tuba on the bottom of a Bb band would "wreck" the group's intonation. Since both of the school horns I used were four rotor horns of comparable size, what his erroneous "notion" wrecked was my nerves - I regularly got confused about fingerings and had to stop to think which horn I had in my hands at the time. After a quarter (it was a quarters college) of that hassle, I finally disobeyed him and started playing the CC Tuba in Band. It took almost a month before he caught on. Since he'd never complained about my intonation during that month, so much for his notion....bububassboner wrote:For me it depends. Back when both my Eb and F tubas were 4 piston 1 rotor horns I had a very hard time. Now my Eb is a 3+1 and my F is 4 in the right hand and 5th in the left and I have no problems going back and forth. I play all four normal keys and they all have different valves set ups (BBb 3 piston, CC 5 all in right hand, Eb 3+1, and F 4+1). Now that they all have different valve set ups each key is like its own setting in my mind. It works for me.
For those that play both Eb and F...
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Re: For those that play both Eb and F...
Dave
Low Brass musician and Bass Guitarist
Low Brass musician and Bass Guitarist