- Does a Conn 10J have usable false tones? Is it possible to play the occasional low E-flat, D or C with a decent sound?
- How's the high register on a 10J? Does it center and respond well above the bass clef staff?
However, a couple of years ago I acquired a three-valve compensating B-flat Besson for cheap, and I've built my B-flat chops. I really like the Besson in a number of ways, but I'm beginning to feel that it's too big to be a small tuba, and too small to be a big tuba. So I'm thinking about replacing it with a 6/4 B-flat and a second tuba for smaller/lighter stuff (chamber music, solos, lighter rep, etc.).
It could be logical to get another E-flat as that second tuba. However...recently I subbed in a very good British-style brass band on E-flat tuba. The band lent me a big compensating Besson, and everything went great. After playing nothing but B-flat tuba for a couple of years, coming back to E-flat was super "easy"--great clarity, accuracy, ease of response, etc. Nevertheless, despite enjoying myself and playing well at the gig, I also realized that for better or worse B-flat just "feels" better and more natural for me. Maybe it's because of so many years playing euph and trombone and training my ear that way. I don't know.
(As a side note, I made a similar discovery recently with alto trombone. I owned a great playing E-flat alto trombone for a while, and I got pretty good at playing it. However, I eventually realized that anything I could play on an E-flat alto trombone I could play just as well, and more comfortably, on a small-bore B-flat tenor. So I sold my alto trombone.)
Which brings me to the Conn 10J. I'm wondering if I could find a smaller B-flat tuba that would allow me to play the same sorts of things that I've played on an E-flat in the past. From what I've read online, the 10J has a reputation for:
- Being nimble to play, yet having a full sound
- Having excellent intonation
- Being easy to find and pretty inexpensive to purchase
