bloke wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2023 9:41 am I don't dislike RM tubas, but I've owned all three sizes with five valves in C length, and I'm personally sort of over them.
I believe - as people get older, they get over a lot of stuff. They figure out what they like more and what they like less. Younger people will judge them as grumpy and set in their ways, but what they don't realize is that the older people have looked into most of the things that the younger people are looking at, and have already made their personal decisions based on experience. It's not that all old people make the same decisions about the same things, but they all make their own decisions and - at a certain point - pretty much stick with them, typically.
I'm not stuck on certain brands and models, but I'm unstuck on certain ones. I am stuck on a couple of requirements for tubas (which have nothing to do with size or length, and not even - within pretty wide parameters - sonic characteristics). I just made a really wild change later in my life, but what some people realize is that I've been thinking (and openly talking) about it for a decade.
It's just that desire and pricing never met, until recently.
New models of tubas are introduced from time to time, but - for quite a while - most all of the newer models seem to be based on a theme. The theme is to put together something that will very easily produce (not a wonderful, but) marketable sound - whether or not the player has a nice sounding embouchure buzz, a very short learning curve to achieve this (such as three minutes in an elephant room, etc.), and the trade-off typically being a requirement of extra physical work to play most of the newer models. The idea seems to be that all tubas need to be set up for a uni-approach to playing, rather than each tuba requiring less work but - rather - a particular type of work from its player. This seems true with most newer models, and particularly true with newer models built in F length.
This is a very interesting take to me. II'm not new but I'm new back to the tuba search. These things have been on my mind. My current tuba is a circumstance of what I could afford but it has served me well. But at the same time I don't have access to test any tubas so it was a sight unseen purchase. I'm sure if I was in a shop or connection with a ton of tubas the one I wasted with could have been different. Ever since playing my teachers 3/4 Rudy I've been interested in them. They are just so few and far in-between that It's hard to get to one to test them for any period of time. Would you know, does Rudolf Meinl send tubas to NAMM or any of these other events ?
I'm interested on your take on F tubas as well, as I will start looking for one soon/have been. Although I think this could lead us down a wormhole of German v, Japanese v, Chinese manufactures.