I had my first orchestra rehearsal with the new tuba on this cold snowy April-in-Minnesota night. We were at a Masonic Lodge, so it was a very large room with a high ceiling, but carpeted and acoustically pretty dull.
These situations are always pretty strange feeling, because even if nobody says anything, YOU know you're waking into the room with a major change in your equipment.
When I first walked in, the gal who plays bass trombone noticed right away "alright! You have a gig bag now!" To which I replied, actually, it's a whole new tuba.
From the first note, I was kinda just overwhelmed by the quality of the sound. Focused, clear, and big, but without being pillowy or woofy. I think of it as having great sound projection, with residual presence. As opposed to a lot of presence, which also has good projection. What a lousy explanation! LOL Can make it edgy if you want. Can be nice and sweet, too. If you want loud, it'll take all you've got and ask for more. But except for some kind of ridiculous FFF sustained note, there was really no sense of it being any kind of an air hog in normal use (except pedal BBb)
About 10 minutes into the rehearsal, 1) I noticed a txt from
@MN_TimTuba asking me how the tuba was and if anyone had noticed or said anything, and at virtually that same time 2) the bass trombone gal.leaned over to me and said "wow, your new tuba sounds
really good."
The conductor seemed to like the sound -- got a good nod here or there. He generally seems to ask the strings to play louder than to ask the winds to play softer. I played appropriately, but didn't hold back especially on some THICK big chords. Never got the hand, but I guess there's always next week. :)
Anyway, a short list of pros and cons:
Pros
* THE SOUND! It's as if I have instantly unlocked the sound that I've hoped would come out of a medium-large CC tuba
* Easy to play. Quick response, great valves, and solid intonation
* Very even across the range. Lee told me that stuck out to him as well... I agree. Low, middle, or high, things just lock in.
* Great ergonomics, not hard to hold such a big horn. This horn is about the same size as my kids. They are way harder to hold on my lap. I did think at one point, holding the outer branch of the tuba was like holding onto a leg. It's just that big around.
* BBb fingerings were not a problem! Came back to me very quickly. A few mental gaps and wrong fingers, but small stuff.
* Overall, if I let the tuba do some work for me, it is glorious and does some work for me. I've never made a better sound by playing more relaxed. It doesn't need much effort to "go."
Cons
* It does take some.effoet to "not go". Meaning, I've got some work to do with softer playing and starting notes. I had some pianissimo anxiety today. Those string players are such showoffs to play so softly, and I felt like an elephant trying to tiptoe. It's all there... I just need to practice playing lightly to lock it in and have more automacity with it.
* It's heavy. It's not hard to hold like my old Willson or Marzan, which made my back and shoulders ache and sore. Back and shoulders are fine, but this tuba made my butt hurt from having an extra 26 pounds sitting on my lap. I think the chairs at the lodge weren't great, but they never are. The keel on the bottom was completely unnoticeable.
* Pedal BBb is not there for me right now. The horn is not an air hog, except for pedal BBb. That's the extra-lung note. It's there, I just need to work it out. Frankly, I think I'm just approaching it wrong.
* As with other rotary tubas I've owned with the "pretzel" tuning slide, I found that the water collects not only where the spot valve is, but also in the tuning immediately behind the spit valve. On my old MW-30, I had a second water key installed back there. Maybe I'll do it here too, only because it's such a big tuba to try and spin to get the water out.
* Alteiri bag... It's gotta go. Believe it or not, the bag is actually even a bit TOO big for my horn. Only thing worse than an Alteiri bag is an Alteiri bag that's too big.
I love this tuba. The only thing right now that I could even potentially see as an issue is the transportability and weight of the tuba years from now (oh, quiet, I know me + years with a tuba is unheard-of!). But this was the point anyway... Get this huge tuba now, while I can handle it, and not when I'm 60 and wished that I'd have had it 20 years earlier.
From my earliest days of playing the tuba, I remember looking up what little tuba information was on the Internet. I remember seeing Rudy Meinl tubas, and -- no lie -- listing over the 5/4 BBb. It just had the physical appearance that caught my eye and stuck with me.
I've been through a lot of horns, and this is the first Rudy 5/4 BBb that I've even seen in person. I'm amazed and humbled that I get to own this tuba. Better yet, it's just as much fun to play as I had hoped.
