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Anthony Burgess, Homage to Hans Keller for 4 Tubas (1982) Johannes Fritsch, Tubæ for 2 Tubas (2000) Per Nørgård, Nu dækker sne den hele jord - Vintersalmer for 8 Tubas (1976) Wolfgang von Schweinitz, Horned Owl Sequence, Op. 53 for 2 Tubas (2010) Gunther Schuller, Five Moods for 4 Tubas (1973) [3] Christian Wolff, Out-take for 2 Tubas (2005)
The "Small Swiss 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 tubas since the Second World War .
Composers for tuba (2 P) ... (4 C, 2 P) Pages in category "Tubas" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. ... Euphonium repertoire; S. Sousaphone;
Eventually manufacturers began increasing the size of the contrabass first to the equivalent size of a 3/4 size concert tuba, then to the equivalent of a 4/4 tuba, and finally to the equivalent of a 5/4 tuba. The original small sized contrabass came in D piston or F piston configurations, with F#, F, or E rotary valve tuning slides.
Tuba repertoire; E. Edel Rhapsody This page was last edited on 1 August 2022, at 22:17 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
This tuba is playable but two players are needed: one to operate the valves, and one to blow into the mouthpiece. Frederick Young plays a King BB♭ tuba that was converted into a double tuba (in BB♭ and EEE♮) by Dietrich Kleine-Horst (of the Herbert Gronitz Brass Instrument Company in Hamburg, Germany) in 1990. [8] (The added EEE side is ...
Bevan's performance career included pianist and arranger for The Temperance Seven in the early 1960s, principal tuba of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic 1964–1972, freelancing with London orchestras and West End theatre musicals and shows, and later moving into publishing and arts administration. [2]
The Concerto in F Minor for Bass Tuba and Orchestra by British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams was written in 1954 for Philip Catelinet, principal tubist of the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO), who together gave the premiere on 13 June 1954 with Sir John Barbirolli conducting. [1] The same musicians made the work’s first recording that same ...