LargeTuba wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 9:01 am
If I'm paying $9,000 for a euphonium it better last my lifetime and my child's lifetime.
There are plenty of NOT-rotten high-zinc (ie. "yellow" brass) instruments that are over a century old.
Today (in our "disposable goods" society), people are much more prone to (mistreating expensive equipment, as if mistreating a horse) "ride hard, and put away wet".
Yellow brass instruments can be made to last several lifetimes.
Bach "Stradivarius" instruments are - nearly all (unless special order) - yellow brass.
Some are allowed to rot to pieces, and many are not.
Just as with Willson euphoniums, they are/were not cheaply-made.
Yellow brass is the most commonly-used metal in brass instrument manufacturing, and is not a "cheap out".
I can't be completely certain that yellow brass instruments sound much different than high-copper (80:20 / 90:20 / etc.) brass instruments, but - when I've had two or three of the same model of instrument sitting out to compare (with one or more of them being yellow brass), I've always been drawn - sonically - to the yellow brass ones...and
this may well be a coincidence.