Those are fine tubas...within the minor limitations that five valves on short tubas offer (and I sell five-valve F tubas, so this is not a criticism).Rick Denney wrote: ↑Tue Dec 15, 2020 1:21 pm Yamahas weren't always that expensive. I bought my 621 F tuba (which, I don't care a whit what anyone says, is an excellent little F tuba) for $3000 in 1991. It's still the only tuba I ever owned that made more money than it cost.
Of course, the same tuba is more than twice that now. But that isn't the only tuba that costs more than twice what it cost in 1991.
Rick "thinking that lifecycle cost analysis isn't in the wheelhouse of most band directors, but should be in their administrations" Denney
In 2020 dollars, you paid around $6000, which is about how some price the best-made Chinese F tubas (those which equal European fit/finish) today...so I agree that you paid a low price.
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Back to the band director topic, though...
Another criticism that I have of so many (after all, it's not their money...) is that their mindset is here:
Whereas (in my view), their mindset should be here: (as individual kids come, and they go)I've got this really good kid [often a junior or even a senior], who needs a really good horn.
I've got this really good horn, and I need to continually develop really good kid{S} to play it to its potential.
bloke "no arguments...and my other point being that many band directors are willing to shell out HUGE dough - at taxpayer expense - in the HOPES of slightly increasing the likelihood of some SINGLE-year 'all-state glory'. "