BopEuph wrote: Thu Mar 19, 2026 1:11 pm
What model euph would you play?
Out of curiosity, do you ever get the opportunity to play your rotary tenor tuba?
The kaiser bariton was sold a few years ago. Before selling it, I finally realized that it played BEST with SMALL mouthpieces (staying in the 6-1/2AL to 5G range max.)
My compensating euphonium is very large. It's a stencil brand Meinl-Weston (sorta rare) and is extremely large (referring to the bore of the bell and bottom bow). The bell is so VERY large, that (with
UN-TRIMMED corks) the Wick metal euphonium mute NEARLY bottoms out. These instruments (made in the B&S factory) were dismissed years ago as "playing out of tune", but - truth be told - I discovered these things:
- the #3 compensating slide (on the back) was comically short (only affects double-low F-sharp, F and E, but still...and I lengthened it)
- unlike most euphoniums, the (front-side/regular) valve slides all require a SIGNIFICANT pull for pitch. Likely (decades ago), when people tried these out, they didn't understand that and ALL of the tuning was (quite understandably) wonky during their testing.
All I have to do (for decent tuning, and with all of the slides optimized for best compromises) is to play two of the G's with third valve.
HOWEVER, being so freakin' huge, I have to PRACTICE to easily play it in the high range (which is why I use my 321 for that sort of playing).
ALTHOUGH (also from being so freakin' huge), it does REMARKABLY well with a (regular trombone-length mouthpiece) a Doug Elliott contrabass trombone mouthpiece (only for covering bass trombone parts or -
obviously not a commercially viable use - playing "1st tuba" parts in tuba quartet music).
It's
THIS (except a store brand is engraved on the bell, it's lacquered, and the bell is gold brass).
I don't particularly like the Mead line of euphonium mouthpieces, but one of those (the 2...?? I can't remember...) actually works pretty well with this particular instrument.
Previously, I owned a Willson 2900 (whereby I had to tune the "tuning notes" - top-of-staff A and B-flat - FLAT, in order for most everything else to play close to in-tune).
Being a "bottom feeder", I didn't pay any sort of "real" money for any of my euphoniums.
What I'm playing (other than the name engraved on the bell)
https://poppasmusic.com/products/meinl-weston-bb-euphonium-phoenix-model-nickel-silver-751-s