Didn't you used to have one listed FS? I assume it found a good home ....
BTW -- if you did have one once, could you post your impressions of the horn?
Cheers,

Jonathon, thanks for posting that picture. That's a wonderful picture that I had not seen before. Where did you find it?Neptune wrote:Here is the picture of Catelinet with Vaughan Williams in 1954. I guess that is the F tuba he used for the premiere. Anyone recognize what make it is? It certainly looks small!



In his world you did not desperately need (psychologically) to be heard. You played your part and let it add to the orchestral colour. If the timps and bones drowned you - that was the composer's problem.

Doc, I don't know if it is just the "ME" attitude, but our perception of what is the "RIGHT" balance. Music has become much more bass heavy in the last 50 years and that has no doubt, consciously, or unconsciously changed our perception. Also, what we hear on recordings has also changed our perception of how the tuba should balance.Doc wrote:The "I WILL be heard" attitude has been prevalent much longer than many of us have been around, as has the arms race that was the inevitable result. Most of us have participated/do participate in this arms race, as well as retain this attitude of "ME" to some degree. How many are selfless enough to be content simply blending with the ensemble without being a discernible voice in the ensemble?

A recording I would recommend is Elgar Symphony No.1/Cockaigne Overture with Barbirolli conducting played by the Philharmonia in 1962 which would be before the arms race started in Britain, so no doubt an F tuba (don't know the tubist?)Doc wrote:Well, if everyone is playing pea shooters, you may have balance, albeit balance on a smaller overall scale, hence my query about recordings.


I'm sure if you asked Wagner, he would say that he was peerless, so whatever anyone else was doing, has no relevance to HIS work!Doc wrote: I'm sure we could argue endlessly until Wagner's intentions are definitively known. What was the common school of thought among Wagner and his contemporaries?
We are deluding ourselves if we feel that the tuba is the main show, any more than 5% of the time (mileage may vary by composer/individual work).Doc wrote: If we tubists approach all types and forms of music with that "I will be heard/ME/I'm the soloist-prima donna/look at me" attitude, we do a great disservice to the music, the ensemble, the composer, and the listener, and most of all, to ourselves.


I believe the Romanza middle movement is sometimes played on euphonium by euphoniumists (similarly with bassoon and cello), but not the whole concerto.Bob1062 wrote:Is there any tradition in England of playing it on the euphonium? Whether by tuba players or euphoniumists. After all, it IS the land of the euphonium.

the euphoniun doesn't have enough low notes to play itNeptune wrote:I believe the Romanza middle movement is sometimes played on euphonium by euphoniumists (similarly with bassoon and cello), but not the whole concerto.Bob1062 wrote:Is there any tradition in England of playing it on the euphonium? Whether by tuba players or euphoniumists. After all, it IS the land of the euphonium.
If I am wrong, I am sure a euphonium player will put me right!


