I had a good older model 621F I later sold to Sam Pilafian who used it as his main horn when he joined Boston Brass.bloke wrote: ↑Sun Oct 29, 2023 10:27 pm Enough people have figured out that I'm not a particular fan of Yamaha to realize that I'm not shooting the breeze when I state that the YCB-826S 6/4 C is clearly the best of all of the York 6/4 knockoffs. If something's the best, it's the best... the playing position is bizarre (as with all of those), but it's the best.
The only other tubas of theirs that I might mess with would be the 621 F tuba - as an emergency F tuba to play one gig out of town where someone had one to loan me...
...as well as the discontinued model 631 compensating E-flat which is/was a very nice instrument. The 321 E-flat blows well, but - as I've said before - I don't see much use for four non-compensating valves on a tuba (as there's so little advantage - compared to three valves, that the 4th valve might as well be left off, and let the advantage be less weight to carry around) and particularly on a bass tuba, the lowest sort of usable pitch being a quite sharp a natural with 2-4 and then (hit-and-miss) the 2-3-4 G-natural and then - finally - the fundamental E-flat.
I’ve played a yamayork. It played better than all the other 6/4 huge horns, albeit 12 years ago, but it still sounded like a foghorn. If I were going the 6/4 CC route, I’d prefer an Alexander 164, Cerveny 6/4 rotor, and if it HAD to be a piston and I had one of those jobs that would require it because a conductor hears with their eyes, I would do a Gronitz PCK.