the elephant wrote:And I played a BBb 186 the San Antonio Youth Orchestra for a while as well as in the TMEA region orchestra and had to knock out the Hungarian March on it with one and a half day's rehearsal. That requires a pretty solid high E. So my experiences must not have been normal. (Bear in mind that your favorite pachyderm never made the TMEA All-State Band… )
(And I still have a recording of that performance of the Hungarian March on a BBb 186, too. It is on a very hissy old cassette tape.)
When I was a senior in high school, we played the popular band arrangement of
Carmina Burana at contest. That has a high D and a high E in it. I played that on a Miraphone 186 (that I did not own, and had the use of for only one semester) and was able to play it.
I just wish I could play it now.
And all my solo contest music went up above the staff, one piece going has high as D. I played nearly all those solos on a plastic sousaphone.
In Houston, we usually didn't compete in UIL contests, and few of us ever attempted to try out for region band. I didn't, though I did play in All-City Band, which was a creation of the Houston school district. Of course, HISD at the time had 40 or 50 high schools, all of which were AAAA (the largest class at the time). The suburban districts always tried to stack the deck against the big-city districts (what were they afraid of, fer cryin' out loud?), and Houston was one that just went its own way in those days.
Rick "who uses F tuba for that sort of thing now, and enjoys it a lot more" Denney