![Facepalm2 :facepalm2:](./images/smilies/facepalm32.gif)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbP6024 ... rass-Topic
John (Rojak) is a musician. You should experience sitting next to him while the orchestra is playing (EVEN SOMETHING AS "PEDESTRIAN: AS) a Strauss waltz. ...so much stuff that's not on the paper. Some some who tend to be sheet music literalists would probably drop their jaw, but what he does with music is perfect, and he never gets called out for the extra things he does, because they contribute instead of distract.
Yeah, I do think the interest in cimbasso comes at least partially due to the desire to remove some of the edge and give a bass trombone tuba-like qualities. And partially because tuba players have a hard time dealing with the side. The more valves you put on a trombone, the harder the slide is to manage. You're doing all that compensation manually.bloke wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 11:28 am In particular, a GOOD cimbasso played by a TASTEFUL/NOT-OVER-THE-TOP (making the best of the "forte" type of resonance available from such an instrument, rather than a "big-band"-ish "fortississimo" type of resonance) player might sound OK on that piece (vs. a bass trombonist poking overly-hard at the notes...again: referring to "great musicianship" - referring back to John Rojak's likely take on this same piece).
That having been said (re: valved F cimbasso), that particular range (on a valved F instrument played at high velocity) is just a bit confounding.