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Tuba
The
tuba is the largest of the low-brass
instruments and is one of the most recent additions to the modern
symphony orchestra, first appearing in the mid-19th
century, when it largely replaced the
ophicleide.
An
orchestra usually has a single tuba (though having 2 or 3 is not
uncommon), serving as the bass of the
brass section, though its versatility means it can double as
reinforcement for the
strings and
woodwinds, or increasingly as a solo instrument.
Symphonie Fantastique by
Hector Berlioz was the first major work orchestrated for tuba. It
was originally scored for two
ophicleides, but Berlioz changed it after hearing the newly invented
tuba. Other composers such as
Richard Strauss (Also
sprach Zarathustra,
Eine Alpensinfonie),
Shostakovich (Fourth
symphony),
Stravinsky (The
Rite of Spring), and
Edgard Varèse (Déserts)
also composed influential parts for the tuba.
Various
concertos have been written for the tuba by numerous notable
composers, including
Ralph Vaughan Williams,
Edward Gregson,
John Williams, and
Bruce Broughton. Tubas are also used in wind and concert bands and
in
British style
brass bands; in the latter instance both E ♭ and BB ♭ tubas are used
and are normally referred to as basses.
Types and Construction
Tubas are found in various pitches, most commonly in F, E ♭, C, or
B ♭ in "brass band" pitching. The main bugle of B ♭ tubas is
approximately 18 feet long, while C tubas are 16 feet, E ♭ tubas
13 feet, and F tubas 12 feet in tubing length without adding any valve
branches. Tubas are considered to be
conical in shape as from their tapered bores, they steadily increase
in diameter along their lengths.
A tuba with its tubing wrapped for placing the instrument on the
player's lap is usually called a tuba or concert tuba. Some have a bell
pointing forward as opposed to upward, which are often called
recording tubas because of their popularity in the early days of
recorded music, as their sound could more easily be directed at the
recording instrument. When wrapped to surround the body for marching, it
is traditionally known as a
hélicon.
The modern
sousaphone is a helicon with a bell pointed up, and then curved to
point forward.
Bass clef music for tuba is usually in concert pitch, therefore
tubists must know the correct fingerings for their specific instrument.
However, traditional
brass band parts for the tuba are in the treble clef, usually a
ninth above[citation
needed] the sounded note, to facilitate fingering
interchangeability with other brass band instruments. Consequently, the
tuba is generally treated as a
transposing instrument when it is written for in the treble clef,
but not in the bass clef.
The C tuba is the common professional instrument in the United States
and is used as the default instrument in American orchestras. In the
United Kingdom, the E ♭ tuba is the default professional instrument,
though many will supplement it with the C tuba in orchestral
applications for big works. In Europe, the F tuba is the common default
instrument in orchestras, though American practice is taking hold in
some European orchestras. In Germany, Austria and Russia in particular,
orchestral tuba players will use a B ♭ tuba when extra weight is
desired. In military or concert bands and brass bands, the BB ♭ tuba is
preferred because its intonation better matches that of other wind
instruments in B ♭ or E ♭. Players of the E ♭ tuba often find themselves
in demand from brass bands, where they read treble clef music pitched in
E ♭, as well as orchestras where they read music in the bass clef at
concert pitch (C).
The lowest pitched tubas are the contrabass tubas, pitched in C or
B ♭; (referred to as CC and BB ♭ tubas respectively, based on a
traditional distortion of a now-obsolete octave naming convention). The
BB ♭ is almost exclusively used in brass bands because the other
instruments are usually based on B ♭. The CC tuba is used as an
orchestral instrument in the U.S. because they are perceived to tune
more easily with other orchestral instruments, but BB ♭ tubas are the
contrabass tuba of choice in German, Austrian, and Russian orchestras.
Many younger players start out with an E ♭ tuba, and the BB ♭ tuba is
still the standard adult amateur instrument in the United States. Most
professionals (and those trained or training to be professionals) in the
U.S. play C tubas, but most also are trained in proficiency of all four
pitches of tubas.
The next smaller tubas are the bass tubas, pitched in F or E ♭ (a
fourth above the contrabass tubas). The E ♭ tuba often plays an octave
above the contrabass tubas in brass bands, and the F tuba is commonly
used by professional players as a solo instrument and, in America, to
play higher parts in the classical repertoire. In most of Europe, the F
tuba is the standard orchestral instrument, supplemented by the C or B ♭
only when the extra weight is desired. In the United Kingdom, the E ♭ is
the standard orchestral tuba.
Comparison of euphonium (left) and tuba (right)
The
euphonium is sometimes referred to as a tenor tuba, and is pitched
one octave higher than (in B ♭) than the BB ♭ contrabass tuba. The
"Small French Tuba in C" is a tenor tuba pitched in C, and provided with
6 valves to make the lower notes in the orchestral repertoire possible.
The French C tuba was the standard instrument in French orchestras until
overtaken by F and C contrabass tubas since the
Second World War. The term "tenor tuba" is often used more
specifically, in reference to B ♭ rotary-valved tubas pitched in the
same octave as euphoniums. Examples include the Alexander Model 151,
which is a popular instrument among tuba players when the use of the
tenor tuba is appropriate. One much-debated example of such application
for orchestral tuba players in the U.S. is the Bydło movement in
Ravel's orchestration of
Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition.
Though extremely rare, there have been larger BBB ♭ subcontrabass
tubas created. There were at least four known examples created. The
first two were built by the Gustav Besson on the suggestion of American
Bandmaster
John Philip Sousa. The monster instruments were not completed until
just after Sousa's death.
photo Later, in the 1950s, British musician
Gerard Hoffnung commissioned the London firm of Paxman to create a
subcontrabass tuba for use in his comedic music festivals.
photo These three instruments were all pitched in BBB ♭, one octave
below the standard B ♭ tuba. Also, a tuba pitched in FFF was made in
Kraslice by Bohland & Fuchs probably during 1910 or 1911 and was
destined for the World Exhibition in New York in 1913. This tuba is
"playable", but two persons are needed; one to operate the valves and
one to blow into the mouthpiece.
photo
Valves
Tubas come in both piston and rotary valve models. Rotary valves are
based on a design that derived from the Berlinerpumpen used on the very
first bass tuba patented by Wilhelm Wieprecht in 1835. Červeny of
Graslitz was the first to use true rotary valves, starting in the 1840s
or 1850s. Piston valves are based on valves developed by Perinet for the
Saxhorn
family of instruments promoted by
Adolphe Sax around the same time. Pistons may either be oriented to
point to the top of the instrument (top-action, as pictured in the
figure at the top of the article) or out the front of the instrument
(front-action or side-action). Debate abounds as to the advantages and
disadvantages of each piston style, with assertions concerning sound,
speed, and clarity commonly proclaimed but with little or no scientific
measurement. The German tradition prefers rotary valves; the British and
American traditions favor piston valves (top-action in the case of
British; front-action in the case of American), but this is not absolute
and choice of valve types remains up to the performer.
Tubas generally have from three to six valves, though some rare
exceptions exist. Three-valve tubas are generally the least expensive
and are almost exclusively used by beginners and amateurs, and the
sousaphone (a marching instrument which is just a different way to
wrap the tubing of a B ♭ tuba) almost always has three valves. Among
more advanced players, four and five valve tubas are by far the most
common choices, with six valve tubas being relatively rare except for F
tubas intended to be used by European orchestral performers.
The valves add tubing to the bugle of the instrument, thus lowering
its fundamental pitch. The first valve lowers the bugle by a whole step
(two semitones), the second valve by a semitone, and the third valve by
three semitones. Used in the combination, the valves are too short and
the resulting pitch tends to be sharp. For example, a B ♭ bugle becomes
an A ♭ bugle when the first valve is depressed. The third valve is long
enough to lower a B ♭ bugle by three semitones, but it is not long
enough to lower an A ♭ bugle by three semitones. Thus, the first and
third valves used in combination lower the bugle by something just
short of five semitones, and the first three valves used in
combination are nearly a quarter tone sharp.
Tuba with four rotary valves.
The fourth valve is used in place of combinations of the first and
third valves, and the second and fourth used in combination are used in
place of the first three valves in combination. The fourth valve can be
tuned to accurately lower the pitch of the main bugle five semitones,
and thus its use corrects the main problem of combinations being too
sharp. By using the fourth valve by itself to replace the first and
third combination, or the fourth and second valves in place of the
first, second and third valve combinations, the notes requiring these
fingerings are more in tune.
The fifth and sixth valves are used to provide alternative fingering
possibilities to improve intonation, and are also used to reach into the
low register of the instrument where all the valves will be used in
combination to fill the first octave between the fundamental pitch and
the next available note on the open bugle. The fifth and sixth valves
also give the musician the ability to trill more smoothly or to use
alternative fingerings for ease of use purposes.
Since the bass tuba in F is pitched a fifth above the BB ♭ tuba and a
fourth above the CC tuba, it needs additional tubing length beyond that
provided by four valves to play securely down to a low F as required in
much tuba music. The fifth valve is commonly tuned to a flat whole step,
so that when used with the fourth valve, it gives an in-tune low B ♭.
The sixth valve is commonly tuned as a flat half step, allowing the F
tuba to play low G as 1-4-5-6 and low G ♭ as 1-2-4-5-6. In CC tubas with
five valves, the fifth valve may be tuned as a flat whole step or as a
minor third depending on the instrument.
Some piston-valved tubas have a compensating system to allow accurate
tuning when using several valves in combination, simplifying fingering
and removing the need to constantly adjust slide positions. Such systems
are used mainly in United Kingdom brass bands.[citation
needed] The most common approach is to plumb the
valves so that if the fourth valve is used, the bugle is sent back
through a second set of branches in the first three valves to compensate
for the combination of valves. This does have the disadvantage of making
the instrument significantly more 'stuffy' or resistant to air flow when
compared to a non-compensating tuba. This is due to the need for the air
to flow through the valve block twice. It also makes the instrument
heavier. But many prefer this approach to additional valves or to
manipulation of tuning slides while playing to achieve perfect
intonation within an ensemble.
Finish
Tubas are generally finished in raw brass, lacquered brass, or
silver-plated brass. Some believe that the external finish of the tuba
can play an important role in the tone production, though this has never
been objectively measured. Performers have individual preferences on the
finish that they select, and will sometimes have horns in more than one
finish for different musical settings. Although tone quality is
subjective and there is no scientific basis for these claims, tuba
players generally agree that silver-plated brass affords a brighter
tone, while raw brass produces a richer tone for lower notes.
Variations
Some tubas are capable of being converted into a
marching style, known as "marching tubas". A leadpipe can be
manually screwed on next to the valves. The tuba is then usually rested
on the left shoulder (although some tubas allow use of the right
shoulder), with the bell facing directly in front of the player. Some
marching Tubas are made only for marching, and cannot be converted into
a concert model. Most marching bands opt for the
sousaphone, an instrument which is easier to carry and almost always
cheaper than a true marching tuba.
Drum and bugle corps players, however, always use marching tubas,
which in this context are referred to as
Contras. Standard tubas can also be played whilst standing, with the
use of a strap which is joined to the tuba using two rings. The strap is
then put over the player's shoulder like a sash, allowing the instrument
to be played in the same position as when sitting.
Jazz
Tubas have been used in
jazz since
the genre's beginning. In the earliest years, bands often used a tuba
for outdoor playing and a
double bass for indoor jobs. In this context, the tuba was sometimes
called "brass bass", as opposed to the double bass, which was called
"string bass"; it was not uncommon for players to double on both
instruments.
In modern jazz, the role of the two bass instruments remains similar.
Tubas are usually featured in a supporting role, although it is not
uncommon for them to take solos. Many jazz bands actually use a
sousaphone, commonly if technically incorrectly called a "tuba" in this
context. New Orleans style Brass Bands like
Dirty Dozen Brass Band,
Rebirth Brass Band, and
Nightcrawlers Brass Band feature a sousaphone as a jazz bass. One of
the most prominent tubists specializing in jazz is the New York
City-based
Marcus Rojas, who has performed frequently with bandleader
Henry Threadgill. Another notable group is the
Modern Jazz Tuba Project - founded by R. Winston Morris, which
consists entirely of tubas and euphoniums with rhythm section.
The tuba has also played a large role in
ragtime
music, and in
big
band music, the tuba (usually bass tuba pitched in E♭) would provide
a walking bass similar to that of a double bass, but with a larger
range.
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