In another thread, bloke suggested that even for advanced students it's important to work with good instruments:
I started playing F tuba a year ago, and I'm now on my third tuba. The first was a tease: lovely sound and fun to play, but difficult enough to play in tune that intonation was a distraction. The second solved lots of problems, and I've been happy to learn and perform with it. I like it. It's fun, and I could probably keep doing my amateur stuff for years with it. The third is better in ways that I didn't even realize I was missing: tone, tuning, agility, and just plain easiness. I can do even better amateur stuff now!bloke wrote: ↑Fri Sep 22, 2023 8:18 am As I balked at buying a crappy (intonation) F tuba in the 1970's (as I believe I played well enough to release that the intonation offered by all of those which were imported into the USA - at that time - were crappy), I put off buying one until I discovered one that was actually good. At that time, only a couple of small places were importing a few of them, and (again) mine was brought to me by a German resident acquaintance who was scheduled to visit the USA. (They marked up their cost - INCLUDING "pre"-transportation ACROSS GERMANY AND BACK to fetch the tuba for me, to finance their trip to the USA...still defining a very reasonable price for me...$2400, which - adjusted for inflation - is around $7600...for a handmade 6-rotor F tuba (better than any imported to the USA at that time, and - arguably - better than any others made before or since).
...
Am I able to pick up any/all of the crappy out-of-tune rotary F tubas and easily play in the "low C" range?
absolutely, but they're still crappy and out-of-tune.
...and crappy/out-of-tune is why I don't believe its a good idea or "rite of initiation into a studio" to coerce (particularly not freshman) students into working on ANY passages of ANY pieces with some mascot/known-to-be-crappy instrument.
So, was it important to make this journey of learning as a player with progressively less bad tubas? I appreciate the difference between tubas in a way that I couldn't have if I'd started with the best, but am I a better player for it? Or would I be better now if I'd started with the best?
Related: are there other normal musical instruments -- trumpets, trombones, clarinets, saxophones -- with as much variation in playability as CC or F tubas? Do beginners on those things get seriously set back by starting with low quality equipment?