Thanks! A little larger than mine, I'm at 18.5 circumference, like 5.88 inches or something. You bell *looks* bigger, but perspective be damned, in isolation they all look perfectly normal sized.bloke wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 9:09 am The bell circumference at the insertion point is 19 inches, so the diameter is going to be 6 inches.
Since this tuba is about 40 1/2 inches tall – and many of the typical 6/4 tubas are 37 inches tall,
adjusting somewhat for that consideration would define a circumference of at least (if not more) 19 3/4 inches with a diameter of about 6 1/4 inches.
Miraphone model 98 B-flat playing characteristics and learning curve - VIDEO added on PAGE 10
Forum rules
This section is for posts that are directly related to performance, performers, or equipment. Social issues are allowed, as long as they are directly related to those categories. If you see a post that you cannot respond to with respect and courtesy, we ask that you do not respond at all.
This section is for posts that are directly related to performance, performers, or equipment. Social issues are allowed, as long as they are directly related to those categories. If you see a post that you cannot respond to with respect and courtesy, we ask that you do not respond at all.
- bort2.0
- Posts: 5253
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:13 am
- Location: Minneapolis
- Has thanked: 336 times
- Been thanked: 999 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
- cjk
- Posts: 695
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 11:46 am
- Location: Atlanta, GA
- Has thanked: 264 times
- Been thanked: 147 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII
I missed the "J S" in the tuning slide of the Holton until just now. nice!bloke wrote: ↑Wed Apr 20, 2022 4:15 pmyeah...I'm not sure that (factoring in inflation) it's the most I've ever paid for a tuba, but it's just about there...and I'm glad that (after a few days of review) I'm feeling no "buyer's remorse" whatsoever.
fwiw...Here's a 4/4 - 5/4 - 6/4 picture:
- Rick Denney
- Resident Genius
- Posts: 1032
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:24 am
- Has thanked: 57 times
- Been thanked: 335 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
I don't recall there being an aesthetic value judgment--nobody said it looked bad. But it does look weird. Weirdness is simply a matter of not fitting what we normally expect, or what we think it needs to look like to work well.YorkNumber3 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 9:12 am I don’t get the aesthetic criticism of the 4th wrap (or the rest of it either). Looks good, sturdy, and functional to me.
But reputation notwithstanding, I'm no theorist--if it works, it's right.
Rick "who could tell this was an awesome tube in 10 seconds of actually playing it" Denney
- Rick Denney
- Resident Genius
- Posts: 1032
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:24 am
- Has thanked: 57 times
- Been thanked: 335 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
The Rudi 5/4 isn't quite as large in diameter as a typical 6/4 grand orchestral tuba, but it's damn close, and within the range where other differences will dominate.bort2.0 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 10:29 amThanks! A little larger than mine, I'm at 18.5 circumference, like 5.88 inches or something. You bell *looks* bigger, but perspective be damned, in isolation they all look perfectly normal sized.bloke wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 9:09 am The bell circumference at the insertion point is 19 inches, so the diameter is going to be 6 inches.
Since this tuba is about 40 1/2 inches tall – and many of the typical 6/4 tubas are 37 inches tall,
adjusting somewhat for that consideration would define a circumference of at least (if not more) 19 3/4 inches with a diameter of about 6 1/4 inches.
The Siegfried also didn't seem to me quite as large as a traditional "orchestra grand bass" design like the York--Joe could measure it and know. It seems to me it's a hybrid design--a lot of grand orchestral BAT influence in a traditional large-bore rotary design. But bore size is misleading--this tuba resonates so easily it feels like the lips are working into an moderate and consistent impedance, which is what is lacking in a lot of instruments with a really large bore. A lot of instruments seem to have such low impedance that it sucks the power out of the player. Impedance is resistance, sure, but resistance at a relevant frequency, not just friction, and a low-friction system can still have the correct impedance at the frequency in question. That usually means the energy goes into the signal and not into friction. This tuba seems to have little friction, but an appropriately matched impedance so that the buzz establishes the resonances easily. Grand orchestral tubas are in no way consistent on this issue, and players of all calibers are in no way consistent on what instrument impedance they prefer.
But then that's the kind of stuff I say that gives me a reputation for being a theorist. :)
Rick "no clue" Denney
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
I've always thought of the Rudy 5/4 tubas SOUND (not their FEEL nor their BORE) as being a lot like the SOUND of a (fixed upright bell) Conn 36J...
...except lacking the uselessness of the Conn's 3rd partial pitches.
...except lacking the uselessness of the Conn's 3rd partial pitches.
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
Another thing (that I continue to forget to mention about this bizarre Miraphone instrument) is this “luxurious anomaly” - whereby it does not require the player to “lip”/favor the low range at either end of the dynamic spectrum.
Just “play with the ‘best’ quiet/moderate/loud embouchure - for the ‘best’ resonance”, and the pitch level remains the same throughout the low range’s dynamic range.
Just “play with the ‘best’ quiet/moderate/loud embouchure - for the ‘best’ resonance”, and the pitch level remains the same throughout the low range’s dynamic range.
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
sorry for the redundant gushing...
I just spent at least a couple of hours playing (not scales/arpeggios trying to "learn" this instrument, but) SONGS...vocalises...
In the past - when I've owned "gigantic" tubas, I've NEVER enjoyed playing "songs"...too much work...too athletic...
...just now: It was difficult to stop !!!
I haven't (really) "practiced" in MANY months...just shown up for gigs and played (as - sorry for truth, but...) it really doesn't require that a tuba player be at the very top of their game in order to cover "tuba parts". That having been said, I believe I'm ALREADY back on a "practicing kick".
I already know where all of the individual pitches are, and (again, luxuriously) they aren't squirrelly; if I put the slide HERE, "X" pitch will ALSO be HERE.
I just spent at least a couple of hours playing (not scales/arpeggios trying to "learn" this instrument, but) SONGS...vocalises...
In the past - when I've owned "gigantic" tubas, I've NEVER enjoyed playing "songs"...too much work...too athletic...
...just now: It was difficult to stop !!!
I haven't (really) "practiced" in MANY months...just shown up for gigs and played (as - sorry for truth, but...) it really doesn't require that a tuba player be at the very top of their game in order to cover "tuba parts". That having been said, I believe I'm ALREADY back on a "practicing kick".
I already know where all of the individual pitches are, and (again, luxuriously) they aren't squirrelly; if I put the slide HERE, "X" pitch will ALSO be HERE.
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
Exactly that.
Those rare moments in my life when I picked up a tuba and got lost having fun, forgetting that I was trying out the horn; that's when I knew I had a winner in my hands.
Those rare moments in my life when I picked up a tuba and got lost having fun, forgetting that I was trying out the horn; that's when I knew I had a winner in my hands.
- These users thanked the author pjv for the post (total 2):
- York-aholic (Sat Apr 23, 2022 8:24 am) • bloke (Sat Apr 23, 2022 8:59 am)
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
NON-problematic anomaly:
The 1st valve pitches (G♯/A♭ overtone series) are positioned FARTHER OUT - on the #1 slide, than are the 1st-and-2nd valve pitches (G♮ overtone series) with this instrument.
Mathematically/physically, that's bass-ackwards.
The 1st valve pitches (G♯/A♭ overtone series) are positioned FARTHER OUT - on the #1 slide, than are the 1st-and-2nd valve pitches (G♮ overtone series) with this instrument.
Mathematically/physically, that's bass-ackwards.
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
Tuba players don’t generally think of Rhapsody in Blue as an important excerpt - and this piece, frankly, I was given short shrift this week in the rehearsal schedule, but I noticed some things about this huge B-flat and what it does.
This is a very old school piece, and asks the tuba to do with the tuba does.
Every size of tuba in various lengths has its strengths, but a big old really resonant (remarkably resonant) B-flat tuba does something for down beats that no other tuba does.
A 4/4 tuba sounds like “baah”, a 5/4 like “bahh”, a 6/4 C (3/4” bore) like bow” (long O), but this thing – with just the right slide setting and just the right embouchure frequency - can do “WHUMP!!!”, and I’m not sure that any of the others can quite do that… (and without the bass drum or timpani covering it up, btw).
…and it IS the instrument, and NOT the player.
It’s really easy to recite “It’s the player and not the instrument“, but that’s not always the truth.
This is a very old school piece, and asks the tuba to do with the tuba does.
Every size of tuba in various lengths has its strengths, but a big old really resonant (remarkably resonant) B-flat tuba does something for down beats that no other tuba does.
A 4/4 tuba sounds like “baah”, a 5/4 like “bahh”, a 6/4 C (3/4” bore) like bow” (long O), but this thing – with just the right slide setting and just the right embouchure frequency - can do “WHUMP!!!”, and I’m not sure that any of the others can quite do that… (and without the bass drum or timpani covering it up, btw).
…and it IS the instrument, and NOT the player.
It’s really easy to recite “It’s the player and not the instrument“, but that’s not always the truth.
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
(sidebar: hail storm, right now - no power…one bar of cell service, and no Wi-Fi)
———————
topic: the last B-flat “stinger” of the Gershwin
My bass trombone buddy turned to the 2nd player and asked, “Wow! Did you hear that chord?”
My many-decades buddy (the 2nd bassoonist - who was playing tenor sax on the Gershwin) knew exactly what made it ring like that, and turned around and winked at me.
Put a pretty-good player (who’s beginning to learn the ropes on “God’s B-Flat Tuba”), and ask the tuba (and it’s pretty-good player) to pop out a perfect fortissimo “open” B-flat (after sustaining the same pitch for two full measures), stick it underneath a really fine orchestra, and something borderline-magical is likely to occur.
———————
topic: the last B-flat “stinger” of the Gershwin
My bass trombone buddy turned to the 2nd player and asked, “Wow! Did you hear that chord?”
My many-decades buddy (the 2nd bassoonist - who was playing tenor sax on the Gershwin) knew exactly what made it ring like that, and turned around and winked at me.
Put a pretty-good player (who’s beginning to learn the ropes on “God’s B-Flat Tuba”), and ask the tuba (and it’s pretty-good player) to pop out a perfect fortissimo “open” B-flat (after sustaining the same pitch for two full measures), stick it underneath a really fine orchestra, and something borderline-magical is likely to occur.
- Doc
- Posts: 2472
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:48 am
- Location: Downtown Browntown
- Has thanked: 846 times
- Been thanked: 766 times
- Contact:
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
^^^This^^^ is THE STUFF... THE THING...bloke wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 6:12 pm (sidebar: hail storm, right now - no power…one bar of cell service, and no Wi-Fi)
———————
topic: the last B-flat “stinger” of the Gershwin
My bass trombone buddy turned to the 2nd player and asked, “Wow! Did you hear that chord?”
My many-decades buddy (the 2nd bassoonist - who was playing tenor sax on the Gershwin) knew exactly what made it ring like that, and turned around and winked at me.
Put a pretty-good player (who’s beginning to learn the ropes on “God’s B-Flat Tuba”), and ask the tuba (and it’s pretty-good player) to pop out a perfect fortissimo “open” B-flat (after sustaining the same pitch for two full measures), stick it underneath a really fine orchestra, and something borderline-magical is likely to occur.
It's also one of the many examples of why a 6/4 CC is NOT always the best-and-only choice for every stinkin' damned thing that exists in tubadom.
Welcome to Browntown!
Home of the Brown Note!
Home of the Brown Note!
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
People are tired of me expressing the same opinions about the same things over-and-over, but – again – if someone actually required/coerced me into using a 6/4 C tuba at some full-time or semi-full-time job (ie. a job that pays at least more per year than one of those tubas costs), it would be the Yamaha 826. I believe it’s a little smaller than most of the others, the intonation is more accessible, and everything about it is easier than any of the others…also, the workmanship and the clever porting that Yamaha incorporated into the pistons.
I just believe that for the size, the 16 foot bugle is just a little too short to make an instrument that large really work and resonate like one would hope, and that may be why they tend to be fitted with a conservative three-quarter inch bore size.
Even some of the first (which were more than one -off instruments – the Holton ones) were challenging to play (if C), whereas the B-flat ones tend to be the ones that might play quite well in tune – though inconsistent – and offered a truly resonant type of sonority.
I guess I’m saying that when a tuba is built to those proportions, I believe they work out better when they are longer.
This particular rotary model:
- odd looking
- unconventional
- sort of a hybrid cross between central European orchester-Kaiser and American band tuba
…looks like it should be a disaster, but I have never encountered anything as good, including the more normal-looking model that followed it - a few years later.
I just believe that for the size, the 16 foot bugle is just a little too short to make an instrument that large really work and resonate like one would hope, and that may be why they tend to be fitted with a conservative three-quarter inch bore size.
Even some of the first (which were more than one -off instruments – the Holton ones) were challenging to play (if C), whereas the B-flat ones tend to be the ones that might play quite well in tune – though inconsistent – and offered a truly resonant type of sonority.
I guess I’m saying that when a tuba is built to those proportions, I believe they work out better when they are longer.
This particular rotary model:
- odd looking
- unconventional
- sort of a hybrid cross between central European orchester-Kaiser and American band tuba
…looks like it should be a disaster, but I have never encountered anything as good, including the more normal-looking model that followed it - a few years later.
- Doc
- Posts: 2472
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:48 am
- Location: Downtown Browntown
- Has thanked: 846 times
- Been thanked: 766 times
- Contact:
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
I played the 98 when it first showed up on the show circuit. It was quite a while back, but I remember having a really good impression. I'd like to try one again. I recently played the more normal-looking cousin, and I really liked it. It caused me to wonder (and I still do occasionally) if I shouldn't have purchased the normal-looking cousin or the one like yours that was for sale in Europe for about the same asking price as yours. Playing one again will ease my mind, whether I ever buy one or not.bloke wrote: ↑Mon May 16, 2022 9:15 am People are tired of me expressing the same opinions about the same things over-and-over, but – again – if someone actually required/coerced me into using a 6/4 C tuba at some full-time or semi-full-time job (ie. a job that pays at least more per year than one of those tubas costs), it would be the Yamaha 826. I believe it’s a little smaller than most of the others, the intonation is more accessible, and everything about it is easier than any of the others…also, the workmanship and the clever porting that Yamaha incorporated into the pistons.
I just believe that for the size, the 16 foot bugle is just a little too short to make an instrument that large really work and resonate like one would hope, and that may be why they tend to be fitted with a conservative three-quarter inch bore size.
Even some of the first (which were more than one -off instruments – the Holton ones) were challenging to play (if C), whereas the B-flat ones tend to be the ones that might play quite well in tune – though inconsistent – and offered a truly resonant type of sonority.
I guess I’m saying that when a tuba is built to those proportions, I believe they work out better when they are longer.
This particular rotary model:
- odd looking
- unconventional
- sort of a hybrid cross between central European orchester-Kaiser and American band tuba
…looks like it should be a disaster, but I have never encountered anything as good, including the more normal-looking model that followed it - a few years later.
It's unfortunate that this model hasn't gained more attraction. I'm quite sure that the looks deter many players here and in Europe, and the sticker price doesn't help. It seems as though the Fafner usually gets the nod in Europe, Germany in particular. You just don't hear of Miraphone BBb's occupying too many back rows of orchestras. Of course, the Fafner is not really 6/4, but it is a really fine large BBb tuba nonetheless. To be certain, I am not dissatisfied with my normal-looking's little brother, but I occasionally yearn for a bigger, wider presence, although all other large BBb attributes are spot-on with very nice intonation.
Welcome to Browntown!
Home of the Brown Note!
Home of the Brown Note!
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (best pics: page 4)
fb just showed me this picture of (possibly...??) the first time I ever play-tested a model 98.
(8 years ago: Bloomington, Indiana)
I recall that - rather than my typical 15 to 30 seconds - I actually play-tested that instrument for two or three minutes.
I also recall that I thought,
- "How can something this huge, weird-looking, and long (ie. B-flat), and with such a large bore size play so easily and so well?"
- "I wonder if I should consider one of these?"
I have no idea who took the picture...I believe I stole it from someone's else fb timeline.
Notice the TWO small arrows that had drawn from the label:
(8 years ago: Bloomington, Indiana)
I recall that - rather than my typical 15 to 30 seconds - I actually play-tested that instrument for two or three minutes.
I also recall that I thought,
- "How can something this huge, weird-looking, and long (ie. B-flat), and with such a large bore size play so easily and so well?"
- "I wonder if I should consider one of these?"
I have no idea who took the picture...I believe I stole it from someone's else fb timeline.
Notice the TWO small arrows that had drawn from the label:
- bort2.0
- Posts: 5253
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:13 am
- Location: Minneapolis
- Has thanked: 336 times
- Been thanked: 999 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (added on p.5 [5-23-22] a picture from 2014)
Well that's settled -- Behemoth no more!
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (added on p.5 [5-23-22] a picture from 2014)
poll edited, and vote-changing allowed
-
- Posts: 2048
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 11:25 am
- Has thanked: 218 times
- Been thanked: 165 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (added on p.5 [5-23-22] a picture from 2014)
You can edit polls? And change your vote?
Dogs and cats, living together?
(and none of my name suggestions were added? What were they again? I'll take a page from Granny Weatherwax, and suggest you name it "Tuba")
"All art is one." -Hal
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19285
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3841 times
- Been thanked: 4086 times
Re: POLL !! - XCVIII (added on p.5 [5-23-22] a picture from 2014)
When it's played, you should see how they run like pigs from a gun.