Carl owned and ran the Tuba-Euph mail list, which was a typical listserve mail list that was therefore difficult to anonymize. I don’t know when it started, though I suppose I could ask Carl or Jim. The moderators of that list were called List Moms, and I remember Carl, Dan Masi, Steve Hoog, and Jim McIntyre. Glenn Call was the Official List Curmudgeon, and there were other such honorifics. Ken Sloan was active on that list and would print name tags for those of us attending the Army Conference. He printed one for Roger Bobo when he was the headliner (in 2000), and presented it to him in the men’s room at Brucker Hall. Roger proudly wore that name tag for the whole weekend.graybach wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2026 6:25 pmI don’t remember that one, but I do remember one around the same time that a man named Carl Webster ran. I don’t remember the title.the elephant wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2026 6:09 pm Who remembers Waldo's Tuba World? That predated TubeNet, going live in 1995, I think.
He does something very “higher up there” with computers, Cisco and/or Citrix, I forget which, certifications out the wazoo, and was an amateur tuba player.
The professional (at least in the incident I’m thinking about) that that jerk know-it-all kid took to task was
Roger Bobo(!)
After that, he, and several other “big names” in the tuba/euphonium world, never posted again. And what a shame, because that was truly a wealth of collective knowledge they had, and it was cool that they interacted with everybody else.
My first posts on TN were in December of ‘99, a year after Sean established the bulletin board forum. Many here go back further than that. Everybody was on Tubenet in those years—many orchestra pros from Gene on down, college professors, all the best repair guys posted regularly, famous soloists like Pat Sheridan, military pros, jazz pros, and on and on. Fewer college kids in those days, though Aubrey Foard and Andy Smith were among them. Mary Ann showed up around 2001, I think. dp was A Guy in California on the old BBS, though he used several names. That started a whole “A Guy in ___” thing for when people wanted to say something anonymously (at least to outside searches).
The online tuba community was a lot more egalitarian in those days. Everyone was equal as a person no matter their status as tuba players. I recall (how could I forget?) when Gene Pokorny showed up to be the headliner at the Army Conference, and told Sean his weekend would not be complete until he met me, of all people. He had already met me years before when a bunch of us went out to dinner in Austin after a Summit Brass concert, but that was a lot less memorable (for him) than extended conversations on the internet.
That’s not to say there were no disagreements. I still remember a post (topic forgotten) by Mike Sanders that started out “where’s your humanity, man?” I remember mixing it up with Carl Kleinstuber when I impudently thought an assertion he was making (about Berlioz, I think) wasn’t sufficiently evidenced. And Joe S. was as willing to speak TRVTH then as now. A certain someone called me on the phone to vigorously upbraid me for offending him in a post or maybe a TubaEuph email, though we have been good friends ever since. But it was all interesting and serious and most were committed to discussions in good faith and good humor.
It was all so new to us at the time. Lots of people were able, for the first time, to enjoy an arcane topic together on a continuous basis.
Then trolls started appearing, and it wasn’t the same after that. Tubenet ultimately fell to the trolls, and Tubaforum became the refuge. Now it’s mostly old friends who hardly need to even say anything out loud to know what each other is thinking, and to appreciate the long friendships. Those just coming up will never experience what the internet was like in the late 90’s and early aughts.
Rick “real friendships” Denney
