Mystery straight F bass trombone
- Finetales
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Mystery straight F bass trombone
I recently snagged a genuine F bass trombone on eBay. (NEVER thought that would happen!) While the maker (Jul. Rudolph-Gotha) and year (1937) are not a mystery as they're stamped on the bell, everything else about this is. I'm wondering if any historians on here know a little bit more about this instrument.
The specs are as follows: full-length F slide (missing the handle), .510-.590" (13-15mm) slide bore, 10" bell, receiver that swallows bass shank mouthpieces and is big enough to take a tuba mouthpiece, and a weight of about 658 tons. (Seriously, this horn is SO heavy! Even without adding any valves you'd need an Ergobone to play it for long periods.)
The slide works well and the horn is very playable - moreso than most F contras that I've played. It also has an enormous sound with seemingly infinite core. Using my bass trombone mouthpiece (which barely fits), it sounds as big and powerful as a contra to me. Pedal notes are explosive and eat my modern bass trombone for lunch. But it also has a usable high register and doesn't feel like trying to turn a container ship. I think I love it.
But, what was it made for? Military use? 1937 seems pretty late to be making an F bass trombone.
The specs are as follows: full-length F slide (missing the handle), .510-.590" (13-15mm) slide bore, 10" bell, receiver that swallows bass shank mouthpieces and is big enough to take a tuba mouthpiece, and a weight of about 658 tons. (Seriously, this horn is SO heavy! Even without adding any valves you'd need an Ergobone to play it for long periods.)
The slide works well and the horn is very playable - moreso than most F contras that I've played. It also has an enormous sound with seemingly infinite core. Using my bass trombone mouthpiece (which barely fits), it sounds as big and powerful as a contra to me. Pedal notes are explosive and eat my modern bass trombone for lunch. But it also has a usable high register and doesn't feel like trying to turn a container ship. I think I love it.
But, what was it made for? Military use? 1937 seems pretty late to be making an F bass trombone.
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
What a cool horn, lucky you! and it seems to be in a pretty good state!
My best guess is that is was intended for military use or use in a protestant Posaunenchor (basically a church trombone and/or other brass choir).
Pretty sure that it was not intended for opera or symphony Orchestra. At that time people were using B flat basses and F contras I think, but not F bass trombones anymore.
My best guess is that is was intended for military use or use in a protestant Posaunenchor (basically a church trombone and/or other brass choir).
Pretty sure that it was not intended for opera or symphony Orchestra. At that time people were using B flat basses and F contras I think, but not F bass trombones anymore.
Markus Starke
https://www.mst-studio-mouthpieces.com/
Alto: Conn 35h, Kanstul, Weril
Tenor: 2x Conn 6h, Blessing medium, Elkhart 88H, 88HT, Greenhoe 88HT, Heckel, Piering replica
Bass: Conn 112h/62h, Greenhoe TIS, Conn 60h/"62h"
https://www.mst-studio-mouthpieces.com/
Alto: Conn 35h, Kanstul, Weril
Tenor: 2x Conn 6h, Blessing medium, Elkhart 88H, 88HT, Greenhoe 88HT, Heckel, Piering replica
Bass: Conn 112h/62h, Greenhoe TIS, Conn 60h/"62h"
- Doug Elliott
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Interesting info on the company here, but you probably already found it:
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/Reference/ ... hisrec=643
Very cool horn.
I should get back to learning my F alto.
So is that actually the same length as an F horn?
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/Reference/ ... hisrec=643
Very cool horn.
I should get back to learning my F alto.
So is that actually the same length as an F horn?
"I know a thing or two because I've seen a thing or two."
- bitbckt
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Piling on: wow, that is cool. I'm looking forward to hearing it featured in your next multitrack!
- EdwardSolomon
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
It is undoubtedly a Kirchenposaune. I have one from around a decade later, made in the German Democratic Republic. The Kirchenposaune (lit. "church trombone") was a 19th century development, in which the various sizes of trombone continued to be manufactured for the Protestant Posaunenchor in smaller bore sizes compared to orchestral and military band instruments. The bore of my instrument is 0.525".
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Looks nickel plated ..Which would explain some of the heavy weight ..
- elmsandr
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Oh, I am insanely jealous now.
Beautiful horn, I look forward to hearing it do something fun in one of your arrangements.
Cheers,
Andy
Beautiful horn, I look forward to hearing it do something fun in one of your arrangements.
Cheers,
Andy
- jonathanharker
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Did (bass in F) Kirchenposaunen ever have valve attachments, or was Dehmel's design for opera pits the first?EdwardSolomon wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2024 3:02 am The Kirchenposaune (lit. "church trombone") was a 19th century development, in which the various sizes of trombone continued to be manufactured for the Protestant Posaunenchor in smaller bore sizes compared to orchestral and military band instruments. The bore of my instrument is 0.525".
- EdwardSolomon
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
No, Dehmel based his design on the large bore military band F bass trombone.jonathanharker wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2024 3:25 pm Did (bass in F) Kirchenposaunen ever have valve attachments, or was Dehmel's design for opera pits the first?
The Kirchenposaune was a narrower bore instrument than the orchestral instrument, which was narrower in turn than the military band instrument.
The first iteration of the military band F bass trombone as a contrabass trombone was the application of a B flat valve, so Dehmel was adapting an existing design, much as did Sattler before him with the B flat Tenorbaßposaune. The F/BB flat contrabass trombone existed as a Kruspe model around the turn of the 20th century, but clearly didn't really catch on. The instrument that Dehmel designed was played by him in the Bayreuther Festspielorchester and left to the orchestra when he left in 1924.
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
The bell section diameter and expansion almost looks like the bugle of a euphonium!
Kenneth Biggs
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- Finetales
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
Yep! Same as F tuba or F contrabass trombone.
Great info, thanks!EdwardSolomon wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2024 3:02 am It is undoubtedly a Kirchenposaune. I have one from around a decade later, made in the German Democratic Republic. The Kirchenposaune (lit. "church trombone") was a 19th century development, in which the various sizes of trombone continued to be manufactured for the Protestant Posaunenchor in smaller bore sizes compared to orchestral and military band instruments. The bore of my instrument is 0.525".
I will say, even though it starts at .510", the lower tube being .590" seems exceptionally large. A .08" difference is big even for German dual bore standards. (For reference, there is also a .08" difference between .467" and .547", which would be an absurd combination!) A .590" slide tube is comfortably in contra bore territory. And since the receiver is so large (I suspect there is no leadpipe), the whole instrument feels huge.
Yes, the throat is massive! I'd love to compare measurements with a contra throat.
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Re: Mystery straight F bass trombone
That's another really cool instrument you've got. Those slide measurements are insane, 0.510 to 0.590? I wonder what the valve register would be like if it had them. Especially with how you describe the pedal register.