This Tuba Tuesday the Museum features a Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919.
“CONICAL BORE / PATD / E.A. Couturier Co. / LA PORTE / IND.” on bell.
16.5” bell, bore from .600-.665....
https://simonettitubacollection.com/ins ... ousaphone/
Tuba Tuesday: Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919
- bisontuba
- Posts: 938
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:08 am
- Location: Bottom of Lake Erie
- Has thanked: 148 times
- Been thanked: 697 times
Tuba Tuesday: Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919
- These users thanked the author bisontuba for the post:
- Mark E. Chachich (Sun Jul 24, 2022 9:47 am)
- bort2.0
- Posts: 5254
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:13 am
- Location: Minneapolis
- Has thanked: 336 times
- Been thanked: 999 times
Re: Tuba Tuesday: Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919
@humBell -- Hey Rob, in all your travels, make sure you get down to NC to see the tuba museum, if you haven't already. I think you'd really enjoy it. Anyway, this horn reminded me of your Couturier Curiosity thread.
-
- Posts: 2050
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 11:25 am
- Has thanked: 218 times
- Been thanked: 165 times
Re: Tuba Tuesday: Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919
I am absolutely certain i would.
How much ahead planning is involved with such a trip?
It just occurred to me i might be rolling through that way in August, and could start thinking about it now...
"All art is one." -Hal
- bort2.0
- Posts: 5254
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 9:13 am
- Location: Minneapolis
- Has thanked: 336 times
- Been thanked: 999 times
Re: Tuba Tuesday: Couturier, E flat helicon, 3 piston, c.1919
If you go to the website, there's an email address for Vince. Send him a message and tell him when you're thinking about coming down, and he'll let you know if that works for him.
It doesn't seem like the building is in a great neighborhood, so I'm guessing he doesn't spend a lot of time there except for when he's giving tours.
He's not a very young guy, probably early 80s, but he has a lot of energy and enthusiasm towards his collection. And not to sound morbid, but there may not be so many years left to have a proper visit like this. We hope for as many as possible, but life takes it's course.
I would suggest bringing plenty of your own stories and information to share with him, and you would get a lot of it that way. He seems eager to learn, too. I think there's a lot of potential for one-sided conversation, because he may not always be showing the collections to people who know a lot about tubas. And it's a different level of conversation that he can have with a person who knows a lot about these things. Particularly with the older and more obscure things that you seem to gravitate towards.