With all due respect, these claims come without a hint of any sort of controlled perception testing, and are so subject to unintended bias that one must be careful about drawing conclusions. The player knows whether the instrument was stripped, and can't help but be biased by that, even if the listeners are behind a screen. And the distance of time between lacquered and stripped defies any plain aural comparison. Our aural memory for tonal subtleties lasts only a few seconds. Also, removing lacquer is usually related to repairs, so it's hard to know what caused a perception, even if it's repeatable.KingTuba1241X wrote: ↑Mon Sep 27, 2021 11:40 pm My King plays MUCH different without Lacquer than it did with the Eastlake Orange on it. Had 3-4 people say the same thing without asking. If it's the darker sound someone is looking for or after, then they should..otherwise leave it alone.
Of course, you wrote that it "plays" differently, rather than sounding different, and that is even more subject to unconscious bias.
When I see the famed European artists come over to venues like the Army Workshop and play whatever they pick up out of the booth of the company sponsoring them, and then absolutely kicking butt with it, I think, well, maybe we make too much out of all this. I compare that with some fine college faculty soloists whose instruments have a lot of tweaks like these, and I often think that the difference between them and those European artists playing stock Miraphones and Meinl-Westons isn't the lacquer. Or even the tuba, beyond basic type, size, and design/construction competence.
But even if an effect is a placebo, if it changes the way we approach the instrument for the better, it counts.
Rick "been a long time since engaging this particular rant" Denney