B-flat tuba-wise...marccromme wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 8:57 ambloke wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 8:42 am @Rick Denney
With FatBastard, the vast majority of the time when I'm using the fifth valve it is to play low E with 5-2-3 (to remedy the literal shortcomings of 2-4).
It is nice, because I can just punch buttons and cut loose without reaching desperately for either the fourth slide or some second valve slide trigger.
With an amazing instrument with five valves, the commonly written low range is more accessible - and jumps out more readily - with a B flat amazing instrument versus a C amazing instrument with the same number of valves, in my opinion... Less cylindrical plumbing and less valve porting may well be the reason...(??)
That is exactly the reason why I miss the 5th valve on my Amati 681 Bb. Plus the shift from 23 to 24 is really akward, but 23 to 235 easy peasy ...
Here is a good argument for a Bb 5 valved, thanks.
Commonly, 4th valve C is considerably flatter than 4th valve "low" F, so (with the very same tendency a half step lower) I produce B-natural with 2-4 (with the flatness of the overtone nearly meeting the inadequate tubing length in the middle - ie. serendipity) and produce C with 1-3 (unless I'm playing through a frantic passage). Of course I've got my hand on the first valve slide, and offer enough of that tubing for 1-3 to produce a true C...
An in tune tuba - when the scoring includes it - can make an entire symphony orchestra ring, harmonically. An out of tune tuba - by more than a hundredth of a semitone or so (or maybe even only by a hundredth of a semitone) is not going to be able to accomplish that... Of course, the overwhelming majority of the other players are going to have to be locked in as well, but there's no chance of it happening without the tuba being where it's supposed to be.
There are two primary ways that an audience can be wowed by an instrumental performance. One of them is via phrasing, which means going beyond the instructions on a page and utilizing endless subtleties to add tremendous meaning to the music. Another way is through remarkably fine intonation - which allows things mentioned in the previous paragraph to occur, and nothing in this paragraph has anything to do with the tuba necessarily, but with music in general. This paragraph applies to all styles of instrumental music, and (of course) to vocal music.