Seeing as I own two Alexanders right now, I should probably post something on here. At one point I had three Alexander tubas, a pair of CC's and an F.
This CC was once owned by Oscar Lagasse, the long time tubist with the Detroit symphony. It was sold to a student of his around 30 years ago, and in turn sold to me about 3-4 years ago. I played it for a while and then sold it to a different former student of Mr. Lagasse. This particular Alex was interesting to me because it also had solid nickel silver valves, bearing plates and all. I think that the tuning rod was added when Oscar had the tuba. I was told this tuba is from the early 1950's. The fifth valve is left hand and is a minor third, or 23 combination.
The next Alexander I still own and play everyday. The scale is great, and that's for any tuba, not just an Alexander! I purchased this tuba from Phil Sinder at Michigan State. He bought this tuba from Dan Perentoni while he was playing with the Houston Symphony a while back. I believe it to be a very early 1970's Alexander. The fifth valve on this tuba is a flat half step (3/4 step valve) and has an extension soldered onto the tuba to make it a minor third, like an old Mirafone set up. All you have to do is re-route the fifth valve tuning slide through the extension on the front of the tuba.
This is the best picture that I have of my Alexander F on my laptop. You can check out my brass quintet website
http://www.sapphirebrass.com and look at a few more photos of me with it. This tuba was owned by John MacEnulty of the St. Louis Symphony for a long time. I was lucky enough to meet one of his former students and purchase it almost 8 years ago. This tuba is everything that an Alexander F is supposed to be, minus the bad intonation. I only use 2 alternate fingerings on this thing. Everything else lines up quite well, only your standard F tuba slide pulls. It also has a flat half step fifth valve. It had a left hand fifth valve when I bought it. And now it has a thumb operated fifth valve and the original left hand mechanism is still on the tuba. Kevin Powers did the work for me a few years ago, and he did a wonderful job.
