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{{Short description|Brass instrument}}
{{Short description|Brass instrument}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Other uses}}
{{more citations needed|date=October 2019}}
{{Infobox instrument
{{Infobox instrument
| name          = Tuba
| name          = Tuba
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}}
}}
| hornbostel_sachs = 423.232
| hornbostel_sachs = 423.232
| hornbostel_sachs_desc = Valved [[aerophone]] sounded by lip vibration
| hornbostel_sachs_desc = [[brass instrument valves|Valved]] [[brass instrument|lip-reed]] [[aerophone]] with wide [[conical bore]]
| inventors      = [[Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht]] and [[Johann Gottfried Moritz]]
| inventors      = [[Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht]] and [[Johann Gottfried Moritz]]
| developed      = 1835 in [[Prussia]]
| developed      = 1835 in [[Prussia]]
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}}
}}
| articles      =  
| articles      =  
| musicians = [[List of tubists]]
| sound sample =  
| sound sample =  
   {{listen | filename=Tuba-range-C-low.ogg | title = low register | embed = yes}}
   {{listen|filename=Tuba-range-C-low.ogg |title=low register |embed=yes}}
   {{listen | filename=Tuba-range-C-high.ogg | title = high register | embed = yes}}
   {{listen|filename=Tuba-range-C-high.ogg |title=high register |embed=yes}}
}}
}}
{{Brass}}


The '''tuba''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|tj|uː|b|ə}};<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/pronunciation/english/tuba|title=tuba noun - Pronunciation &#124; Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at Oxford Learner's Dictionaries|website=Oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com|access-date=18 April 2021}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|US|ˈ|t|uː|b|ə}}) is the largest and lowest-pitched musical instrument in the [[brass instrument|brass family]]. As with all brass instruments, the sound is produced by lip vibration{{snd}}a buzz{{snd}}into a [[mouthpiece (brass)|mouthpiece]]. It first appeared in the mid-19th&nbsp;century, making it one of the newer instruments in the modern [[orchestra]] and [[concert band]], and largely replaced the [[ophicleide]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Forsyth|first=Cecil|title=Orchestration|year=1982|publisher=Dover Publications, Inc|location=New York, NY|isbn=0-486-24383-4|pages=530}}</ref> ''Tuba'' is [[Latin]] for "[[trumpet]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.latin-dictionary.org/tuba|title=tuba definition - Latin Dictionary|website=Latin-Dictionary.org|access-date=4 February 2018|archive-date=22 June 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150622120737/http://www.latin-dictionary.org/tuba|url-status=dead}}</ref>
The '''tuba''' ([[Latin]], "trumpet";<ref>{{cite web |title=tuba definition |work=Latin Dictionary |url= http://www.latin-dictionary.org/tuba |access-date=4 February 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150622120737/http://www.latin-dictionary.org/tuba |archive-date=22 June 2015 |url-status=dead}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|tj|uː|b|ə}};<ref>{{Cite web |title=tuba (noun): Pronunciation |work=Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary |publisher=Oxford Learner's Dictionaries |url= https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/pronunciation/english/tuba|access-date=18 April 2021}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|US|ˈ|t|uː|b|ə}}) is a large [[brass instrument]] in the [[bass (sound)|bass]]-to-[[contrabass]] range with a wide, [[bugle]]-like [[conical bore]] and between three and six (usually four or five) [[brass instrument valve|valves]]. It first appeared in 1835 in [[Prussia]] as the {{lang|de|Baß-Tuba}}, an application of five valves to a bugle scaled up to [[Eight-foot pitch|12-foot ({{prime|12}})]] F, providing a fully [[Chromatic scale|chromatic]] contrabass range with a deep, full ''[[timbre]]''.{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=1–3}}{{sfn|Forsyth|1914|p=530}} Subsequently, the Paris maker [[Adolphe Sax]] developed the E♭ and B♭ band tubas with piston valves as members of his saxhorn family by the 1850s, and [[Václav František Červený]] in [[Austria-Hungary]] developed contrabass tubas in {{prime|16}} C and {{prime|18}} B♭ with rotary valves in the 1870s.


A person who plays the tuba is called a tubaist, a tubist,<ref>{{cite dictionary| url= http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tuba?show=0&t=1338078328|title=Tuba|dictionary=Merriam-Webster|access-date=2012-05-26}}</ref> or simply a tuba player. In a British [[Brass band (British style)|brass band]] or [[military band]], they are known as bass players.
As with any brass instrument, sound is produced with a lip vibration or "buzz" in the [[mouthpiece (brass)|mouthpiece]]. A person who plays the tuba is called a ''tubaist'' or ''tubist'',<ref>{{cite dictionary| url= http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tuba?show=0&t=1338078328|title=Tuba|dictionary=Merriam-Webster|access-date=2012-05-26}}</ref> or simply a ''tuba player''. In [[British brass band]]s and [[military band]]s, they are known as a ''bass player''.


==History==
==History==
[[Prussia]]n Patent No. 19 was granted to [[Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht]] and [[Johann Gottfried Moritz]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vsl.co.at/en/Contrabass_tuba/History|title=Vienna Symphonic Library|website=Vsl.co.at|language=en|access-date=2017-09-22|archive-date=2021-12-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211207084532/https://www.vsl.co.at/en/Contrabass_tuba/History|url-status=dead}}</ref> on 12 September 1835 for a "bass tuba" in F1. The original Wieprecht and Moritz instrument used five valves of the [[Brass instrument valve#Double-piston valve|Berlinerpumpen type]] that was the forerunner of the modern [[piston valve]]. The first tenor tuba was invented in 1838 by Moritz's son [[Carl Wilhelm Moritz]].
<!-- TODO: Červený, rotary valves, ''Kaiser'' contrabass in B♭; tuba-making in Germany; bombardons, generale pellitone, valved ophicleides, etc.; In America: Sousa, William Bell; York company, rotary vs. front-action pistons; Arnold Jacobs and the CSO Yorks; Britain: band E♭ and B♭ basses, Boosey & Hawkes (from Distin & Co.) and Besson, Blaikley compensating valves -->


The addition of valves made it possible to play low in the [[Harmonic series (music)|harmonic series]] of the instrument and still have a complete selection of notes. Prior to the invention of valves, brass instruments were limited to notes in the harmonic series, and were thus generally played very high with respect to their [[Fundamental frequency|fundamental pitch]]. Harmonics starting three octaves above the fundamental pitch are about a whole step apart, making a useful variety of notes possible.
The early history of the tuba was the search for a practical valved brass instrument with a bass and contrabass voice, suitable for use in bands and the orchestra [[brass section]].{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=1}} Before the emergence of the first [[brass instrument valve|valves]] in the 1820s, brass instruments were either restricted to a single [[harmonic series (music)|harmonic series]] like the [[natural trumpet]] or [[bugle]], or used a [[slide (wind instrument)|slide]] like the [[trombone]], or used keys and [[tone hole]]s like the [[keyed bugle]] or [[serpent (instrument)|serpent]].


The [[ophicleide]]<ref>{{Cite book |last=SOLOMONSON |first=GLEN TERRANCE. |title=THE HISTORY OF THE TUBA TO 1860: A STUDY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE TUBA THROUGH ITS ANCESTORS. |publisher=University of Louisville Proquest Dissertations & Theses |year=1978 |isbn=979-8-204-79972-1 |pages=21-27}}</ref> used a bowl-shaped brass instrument mouthpiece but had keys and tone holes similar to those of a modern [[saxophone]]. Another forerunner to the tuba, the [[Serpent (instrument)|serpent]], was a bass instrument shaped in a wavy form to make the tone holes accessible to the player. Tone holes change the pitch by providing an intentional leak in the bugle of the instrument, but this system has a pronounced effect on the timbre. By using valves instead, the tuba could produce a smoother tone, which led to its popularity. Tubas were mostly used by French composers, especially [[Hector Berlioz]], who famously used the ophicleide in his compositions ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]'' and ''[[Benvenuto Cellini (opera)|Benvenuto Cellini]]''. These pieces are now normally performed on F or CC tuba.
=== Origins ===


[[Adolphe Sax]], like Wieprecht, was interested in marketing families of instruments ranging from soprano to bass, and developed a series of brass instruments known as [[saxhorn]]s. The instruments developed by Sax were generally pitched in E{{music|flat}} and B{{music|flat}}, while the Wieprecht "basstuba" and the subsequent [[Václav František Červený|Červený]] contrabass tuba were pitched in F and C (see below on pitch systems). Sax's instruments gained dominance in France, and later in Britain and America, as a result of the movements of popular instrument makers such as [[Gustave Auguste Besson]] (who moved from France to Britain) and Henry Distin (who eventually found his way to America).<ref>Clifford Bevan, ''The Tuba Family'', Scriveners, 1978. {{ISBN|9780684154770}}.</ref>
{{see also|Serpent (instrument)|Ophicleide}}
{{Multiple image
  | total_width = 260px | align = right
  | image1 = Manifattura italiana, Serpentone, fine sec. XVIII. Museo Civico di Modena, foto P. Terzi.jpg
  | image2 = MIMEd 4287. Gautrot Ophicleide in C.png
  | alt1 = Photograph of a serpent
  | alt2 = Photograph of an ophicleide
  | footer = Euphonium ancestors: [[serpent (instrument)|serpent]], late 18th century, ''left''; [[ophicleide]] by [[Pierre-Louis Gautrot|Gautrot]], mid-19th century, ''right''. Museo Civico di Modena; [[University of Edinburgh]] | footer_align = left
}}
For the earliest low-pitched brass instruments, none of these solutions were ideal. Natural instruments can only approach [[Diatonic scale|diatonic]] or [[Chromatic scale|chromatic]] scales in their high register, [[bass trombone]]s had long slides with handles which were unwieldy for rapid passages, and the ''[[timbre]]'' of the serpent was often criticized.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|pp=128-31|loc="serpent"}}
 
To replace the serpent and its various [[upright serpent|upright derivatives]], the Paris-based maker [[Jean Hilaire Asté]] invented the [[ophicleide]] in 1817, extending the [[keyed bugle]] into the bass register with a folded, [[bassoon]]-like form.{{sfn|Herbert|Myers|Wallace|2019|page=303|loc="Ophicleide"}} It was a sufficient improvement, in both intonation and ''timbre'', that it was widely adopted in brass and military bands. It was also used in the orchestra particularly by French composers, most notably [[Hector Berlioz]].{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=2}} Although the ophicleide was initially successful, and serpents were still being used in bands and church ensembles, neither instrument could play much below [[Scientific pitch notation|C₂]] into the contrabass range.{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=2}}
 
=== The first tubas ===
 
In [[Prussia]], the military bandmaster [[Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht]] required an instrument capable of a secure contrabass compass for his bands, and with the Berlin-based instrument maker [[Johann Gottfried Moritz]] invented the {{Visible anchor|Baß-Tuba|text={{lang|de|Baß-Tuba}}}} in F (Prussian patent 9121, granted 12 September 1835). It used five {{lang|de|[[Berlin valve|Berlinerpumpen]]}} valves (forerunners of the modern Périnet [[piston valve]]s) to provide a [[chromatic scale|chromatic]] compass down to F₁, its first fundamental or ''[[pedal tone|pedal]]'' tone.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=202–207}} Berlin valves, invented by Wieprecht two years earlier, were capable of operating on the wider bore tubing of larger instruments than the earlier Stölzel and Vienna valve designs. This contributed to the ''Baß-Tuba'' being the first successful contrabass valved brass instrument.{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=3}} The first tenor tuba was invented in 1838 by Moritz's son, [[Carl Wilhelm Moritz]], which was a forerunner of the [[euphonium]].{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=7}}
 
Paris-based instrument maker [[Adolphe Sax]], like Wieprecht, was interested in marketing families of instruments ranging from soprano to bass, and developed his ''[[saxhorn]]'' series of brass instruments, pitched in E♭ and B♭. Sax's instruments gained dominance in French military bands, and later in Britain and America. Their widespread success was a result of the movements of popular instrument makers, notably [[Gustave Auguste Besson]], who moved from Paris to London, and [[Distin family|Henry Distin]], who started manufacturing them in London, and later moved his business to the United States.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=427}}{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=10}} The saxhorns in E♭ and B♭ constitute almost the whole instrumentation of the modern [[British brass band]], with the addition of [[cornet]]s, [[trombone]]s and a [[flugelhorn]].{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=4}} Modern E♭ and B♭ band tubas are not far removed from their contrabass saxhorn ancestors, differing only in having a wider conical bore and often adding a compensating fourth valve.
 
The [[Helicon (instrument)|helicon]] is thought to have first appeared in Russia in the mid-1840s, and first patented in 1848 in Vienna by Stowasser. Like the [[Ancient Rome|Ancient Roman]] [[buccina]], its tubing is wrapped under the right arm with the [[Bell (wind instrument)|bell]] resting on the player's left shoulder. The helicon also became popular throughout Europe and North America, particularly for its suitability for [[marching band|marching]] and [[mounted band]]s.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=450–451}}
 
=== Early American tubas ===
 
{{Multiple image
  | total_width = 260px | align = left
  | image1 = Over-the-Shoulder bass saxhorn in E-flat MET DP-12679-056.jpg
  | image2 = Musikinstrumenten-Museum Berlin - Sousaphon in B - 1107434 (rot1).jpg
  | alt1 = Photograph of an over-the-shoulder bass saxhorn
  | alt2 = Photograph of a sousaphone
  | footer = Early American tubas: Over-the-shoulder bass saxhorn in E♭ built {{circa|1870s}}, ''left''; [[sousaphone]] in low B♭ built {{circa|1925}}, ''right''. [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]; [[Berlin Musical Instrument Museum|Musikinstrumenten-Museum Berlin]] | footer_align = left
}}
In the United States saxhorns had become popular by the mid-19th century, particularly in military and brass bands. In 1838, the New York maker Allen Dodworth patented his "over-the-shoulder" (OTS) instruments, with bells pointing backwards over the player's left shoulder, that included an E♭ bass model.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=427–429}} This design allowed soldiers, usually marching behind the band, to better hear the music.<ref name="villanueva">{{Cite web |title=Brass Bands of the Civil War |first=Jari |last=Villanueva |url=https://www.jvmusic.net/brass-bands-of-the-civil-war/ |access-date=2025-05-05 |website=JV Music - Musical Arrangements |language=en-US |archive-date=2025-05-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250505231000/https://www.jvmusic.net/brass-bands-of-the-civil-war/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Demand for bugles and OTS saxhorns grew, particularly in the early 1860s during the [[American Civil War]], and tens of thousands were made in the United States or imported from Europe. After the war, the bands and their music remained popular, and manufacturing demand remained strong.{{sfn|Pirtle|2002|p=70–71}} From these ensembles and musicians emerged the American [[Drum and bugle corps (classic)|drum and bugle corps]] tradition,{{sfn|Pirtle|2002|p=71}} and the mixed-winds concert bands popularised by [[Patrick Gilmore]] and [[John Philip Sousa]].{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=429–30}}
 
In 1893, Sousa, unhappy with the sound from his BB♭ contrabass helicon tubas, had the Philadelphia instrument maker [[J. W. Pepper & Son|J. W. Pepper]] build a helicon with an upward-pointing bell, to better diffuse the sound. This ''sousaphone'' model was later made by the American manufacturers [[Holton (Leblanc)|Holton]] and [[C. G. Conn]], who some time in the early 20th century turned the bell forward to create the iconic modern form.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=456–457}}
 
=== The tuba in Italy ===
 
{{see also|Cimbasso}}
 
The Italian word {{lang|it|cimbasso}}, thought to be a contraction of the term {{lang|it|corno basso}} ({{lit.|bass horn}}), first appeared in scores as ''c. basso'' or ''c. in basso'' in the 1820s.
Initially the [[cimbasso]] was a form of [[upright serpent]] or bass horn, but over the course of the 19th century the term was used loosely to refer to the lowest bass instrument available in the brass family, including the ophicleide and early Italian valved instruments such as the ''pelittone'' and ''bombardone''.{{sfn|Meucci|1996|p=144–5}} The [[Italian opera]] composer [[Giuseppe Verdi]], dissatisfied with the sound of these instruments, commissioned a valved [[contrabass trombone]], built in the 1880s for his late operas.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=414}} By the early 20th century this instrument, which he and [[Giacomo Puccini]] called simply the ''trombone basso'' in their scores, had disappeared from Italian orchestras, replaced by the tuba. The modern cimbasso, commonly called for in [[film score|film]] and [[video game music|video game]] [[soundtrack]]s, was revived from Verdi's instrument, via the German contrabass trombone in F, in the early 1980s.{{sfn|Bevan|1997|p=297–298}}
 
== Construction ==
 
In [[organology]], the tuba is classified as a bass ''[[bugle|valved bugle]]''. The valved bugles are a large family of brass instruments that includes the euphonium, [[flugelhorn]], and the wider-bored members of the [[saxhorn]] family, distinguished by having valves and a wide [[conical bore]].{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=}} The conical bore of bugles is wider than other conical brass instruments, like the horn or cornet, or the [[cylindrical bore|cylindrical-bore]] trumpet and trombone. The bore diameter increases as a function of the tubing distance from the [[mouthpiece (brass)|mouthpiece]]. This causes the instrument to favor lower spectral content, producing a mellow, warm ''timbre''. The wide rate of taper of the last portion of the tubing leading to the bell, combining with the bell's large diameter, amplifies these lower frequencies and produces a deep contrabass sound.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=}}
 
=== Sizes ===


The [[cimbasso]] is also seen instead of a tuba in the orchestral repertoire. The Italian word {{lang|it|cimbasso}}, first appearing in the early 19th century, is thought to be a contraction used by musicians of the term {{lang|it|corno basso}} or {{lang|it|corno di basso}} ({{lit.|bass horn}}), sometimes appearing in scores as ''c. basso'' or ''c. in basso''.{{sfn|Meucci|1996|p=144–5}} The original design was inspired by the ophicleide and the bassoon.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Meucci|first=Renato|title=Historical Account on the Cimbasso|journal=ITEA Journal|volume=37|pages=44–45|via=ProQuest}}</ref> The cimbasso is sometimes used in historically accurate performances and is commonly called for in [[film score|film]] and [[video game music|video game]] [[soundtrack]]s.
Tubas are made in four pitches. The length of tubing (with no valves engaged) determines the [[Fundamental frequency|fundamental pitch]] of the instrument. The smaller {{Visible anchor|Bass tuba|text=''bass tuba''}} is built in [[Eight-foot pitch|12-foot (12′)]] F or 13′ E♭, while the larger {{Visible anchor|Contrabass tuba|text=''contrabass tuba''}} is built in 16′ C or 18′ B♭. Often the contrabass tubas are called "CC" or "BB♭" tubas, based on an English variant of the [[Helmholtz pitch notation]] no longer in use, and the ''bass''''contrabass'' distinction is not always used by composers or musicians.


==Role==
[[File:MIMEd 2131. Higham tuba in F.png|thumb|"Barlow" model British F tuba ([[University of Edinburgh]])]]  
An [[orchestra]] usually has a single tuba, though an additional tuba may be requested. It serves as the bass of the orchestral [[Brass instrument|brass]] section<ref>{{Cite web |title=Tuba |url=https://philharmonia.co.uk/resources/instruments/tuba/ |access-date=2023-12-08 |website=Philharmonia |language=en-GB}}</ref> and it can reinforce the bass voices of the [[String instrument|strings]] and [[woodwind]]s. It provides the bass of brass quintets and choirs (though many small brass ensembles will use the [[euphonium]] or [[bass trombone]] as the lowest voice). It is the principal bass instrument in [[concert band]]s, [[Brass band (British style)|brass bands]] and [[military band]]s, and those ensembles generally have two to four tubas. It is also a solo instrument.
The original 1835 {{lang|de|Baß-Tuba}} in F survives as various much-modified models of F tuba. It is commonly used by professional players as a solo instrument and, in America, to play higher parts in the classical repertoire, often parts originally written for F tuba. In most of Europe, the F tuba is the standard orchestral instrument, supplemented by the C or B♭ tuba only when the extra weight is desired. [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], for example, specifically notated the low tuba parts for ''Kontrabasstuba'', which are played on C or B♭ tubas in most regions. The traditional tuba in Vienna is in F with six rotary valves, in two groups of three for each hand. In Britain from the late 19th century until the 1960s, the standard orchestral tuba was in F, with four or five piston valves, and a narrower bore profile closer to the euphonium.{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=8}}


Tubas are used in [[marching band]]s, [[Drum and bugle corps (modern)|drum and bugle corps]] and in many [[jazz band]]s (see below). In [[Brass band (British style)|British style brass bands]],<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Sisk |first=Robin A. |title=Three 21st Century Tuba Concertos for British-Style Brass Band: Performance Considerations for the Solo Tubist |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-369-81288-6 |pages=3-20}}</ref> two E{{music|flat}} and two B{{music|flat}} tubas are used and are referred to as ''basses''.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=ODELLO |first=DENISE |title=“British Brass Band Periodicals and the Construction of a Movement.” |journal=Victorian Periodicals Review |volume=47 |issue=3}}</ref>
The E♭ tuba often plays an octave above the B♭ tubas in brass bands, where it is commonly built with three top-mounted piston valves and a fourth compensating valve on the side. In the United Kingdom, the E♭ tuba began to displace the old British F tuba in the 1960s, and is still found in British orchestras today, although some players are favouring larger C instruments since the 1990s.{{sfn|Bevan|1996|p=8}}


Well known and influential parts for the tuba include:
The C tuba is used as an orchestral and concert band instrument in the US, but B♭ tubas with rotary valves are the contrabass tuba of choice in German, Austrian, and Russian orchestras. In the United States, the B♭ tuba is the most common in schools, largely due to the use of B♭ sousaphones in [[High school (North America)|high school]] marching bands. Many professionals in the US play C tubas, with B♭ also common, and many train in the use of all four pitches of tubas.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Trombone and Tuba |url=https://www.uv.es/clil/ePortfolio/html/jorapra/brass/trombonetuba.html |access-date=2024-09-08 |website=www.uv.es}}</ref><!-- proficiency in all 4 is rare - usually F, CC, and either E♭ or BB♭; c.f. Adler-McKean --> The B♭ saxhorn-style tuba, with three top-mounted piston valves and usually a fourth compensating valve on the side, is standard in British brass bands.
* [[Modest Mussorgsky]] (orch. [[Maurice Ravel|Ravel]]): ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'' – ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition|Bydło]]'', ''[[Night on Bald Mountain]]''
 
* [[Richard Strauss]]: ''[[Also sprach Zarathustra (Strauss)|Also sprach Zarathustra]]'', ''[[Eine Alpensinfonie]]'', ''[[Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks|Till Eulenspiegel]]'', ''[[Ein Heldenleben]]''
==== Quarter designation ====
* [[Dmitri Shostakovich|Shostakovich]]: All symphonies, except the [[Symphony No. 14 (Shostakovich)|Fourteenth]]
 
* [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]]: ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'', ''[[Petrushka (ballet)|Petroushka]]''
Even within instruments of the same pitch, tubas also vary in size: the overall width of the tubing sections, the bell diameter, and rate of bell taper. The size is usually denoted in quarters, with 4/4 designating a normal, full-size tuba.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=36}} Smaller instruments, often student or intermediate models, may be described as 3/4 instruments. Often with only three valves, these are common in schools for use by young players where a full-size tuba may be too large. Larger instruments are denoted as 5/4, or 6/4 for the largest tubas, sometimes known as ''grand orchestral tubas''. These include the [[C. G. Conn|Conn]] 36J "Orchestra Grand Bass" from the 1930s, and the replicas by several manuacturers of the large [[York Band Instrument Company|York]] tubas owned by the [[Chicago Symphony Orchestra]].
* [[Edgard Varèse]]: ''[[Déserts]]''
 
* [[Richard Wagner]]: ''[[Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg]]'', ''[[Lohengrin (opera)#Act 3|Lohengrin]]'', ''[[Ride of the Valkyries]]'', ''[[Faust Overture]]''
The designations have no standardised measurements. Between manufacturers, they do not correlate to tubing bore diameters or bell diameters reported in instrument specifications, so they are only useful for making comparisons between models within a single manufacturer's catalog.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=36}}
* [[Sergei Prokofiev]]: [[Symphony No. 5 (Prokofiev)|Fifth Symphony]], [[Romeo and Juliet (Prokofiev)|''Romeo and Juliet'']]
 
* [[George Gershwin]]: ''[[An American in Paris]]''
==== Other sizes ====
* [[Silvestre Revueltas]]: ''[[Sensemayá]], [[La noche de los mayas (suite)|La noche de los mayas]], [[Homenaje a Federico García Lorca]]
 
* [[Gustav Holst]]: ''[[The Planets]]''
{{See also|Euphonium|Subcontrabass tuba}}
* [[Gustav Mahler]]: Symphonies Nos. [[Symphony No. 1 (Mahler)#Movement 3|1]], [[Symphony No. 2 (Mahler)|2]], [[Symphony No. 5 (Mahler)|5]], [[Symphony No. 6 (Mahler)|6]], and [[Symphony No. 8 (Mahler)|8]]
 
* [[Ottorino Respighi]]:  ''[[Fountains of Rome (symphonic poem)|Fountains of Rome]]'', ''[[Pines of Rome]]''
The [[euphonium]], pitched in 9′ B♭ a fourth above the bass tuba in F, is sometimes referred to as a {{Visible anchor|Tenor tuba|text=''tenor tuba''}}, particularly by British composers.<ref name="Grove">{{Cite Grove |last=Bevan |first=Clifford |author-link=Clifford Bevan |title=Euphonium |id=09077}}</ref> This term can also refer more specifically to the German {{lang|de|Baryton}}, a similar instrument in B♭ with rotary valves.{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=10–11}} These instruments are used to play tenor tuba parts, and often ophicleide parts and the high tuba parts written for the small French tuba.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=232}}{{sfn|Bowman|2007|p=251}}
* [[Hector Berlioz]]: ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]'', ''[[La damnation de Faust|Hungarian March]]''
* [[Paul Hindemith]]: ''[[Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber|Symphonic Metamorphosis]]''
*[[Johannes Brahms]]: [[Symphony No. 2 (Brahms)|Symphony No. 2]]
*[[Anton Bruckner]]: Symphonies Nos. [[Symphony No. 4 (Bruckner)|4]], [[Symphony No. 7 (Bruckner)|7]], and [[Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)|8]]


[[Concerto]]s have been written for the tuba by many notable composers, including [[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] ([[Tuba Concerto (Vaughan Williams)|Tuba Concerto]]), [[Edward Gregson]], [[John Williams]], [[Alexander Arutiunian]], [[Eric Ewazen]], [[James Barnes (composer)|James Barnes]], [[Joseph Hallman]], [[Martin Ellerby]], [[Philip Sparke]],<ref name=":0" /> [[Kalevi Aho]], [[Josef Tal]], [[Bruce Broughton]] (Tuba Concerto), [[John Golland]], [[Roger Steptoe]], [[David Carlson]], [[Jennifer Higdon]] ([[Tuba Concerto (Higdon)|Tuba Concerto]]), and [[Marcus Paus]] ([[Tuba Mirum (Paus)|''Tuba Mirum'']]).
The small French tuba is based on the bass saxhorn, built in 8′ C with six piston valves. This instrument, standard in French orchestras in the late 19th century until at least the 1950s, was expected by French composers of that time.<ref name="kleinsteuber-2017">{{Cite thesis|title=An Argument in Favor of the Saxhorn Basse (French Tuba) in the Modern Symphony Orchestra |last=Kleinsteuber |first=Carl |date=2017 |institution=University of North Texas |degree=DMA |url= https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc984120/ |access-date=9 May 2019 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20221005191453/https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc984120/ |archive-date=5 October 2022 |url-status=live}}</ref> A notable high exerpt from the orchestral repertoire is the tuba solo in the "Bydło" movement in [[Maurice Ravel]]'s orchestration of [[Modest Mussorgsky|Mussorgsky]]'s ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'', though the part also descends into the low register in other movements, to low F♯{{sub|1}}.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=347-348}}


==Types and construction==
A small number of very large novelty ''[[subcontrabass tuba]]s'' have been built, and five playable instruments with functioning valves survive, mostly in museums.<ref name="Detwiler-known-subcontras">{{Cite web |title=Gallery: Known Subcontrabass Tubas |last=Detwiler |first=Dave |work=Strictly Oompah |date=6 February 2021 |url= https://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2021/01/gallery-known-subcontrabass-tubas.html |access-date=18 December 2025 }}</ref> Two in 36′ B♭, an octave below the B♭ contrabass, were built by Gustave Besson on the suggestion of [[Patrick Gilmore]], and one survives in the [[Harvard University Band]] where it was restored and features occasionally in concerts.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=141-2|loc=subcontrabass tuba}} Another with four valves now owned by [[Amati Kraslice]] was originally exhibited by the Czech maker Bohland & Fuchs in 1928.<ref name="MTR-1928">{{Cite journal|title=Bohland & Fuchs Show Largest Brass Bass Horn |journal=[[The Music Trade Review]] |volume=87 |number=8 |date=25 August 1928 |page=16 |url= https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com/classic/Music-Trade-Review/1928-87-8/16 |access-date=23 December 2025}}</ref> In 1956, one of two 32′ C tubas built {{circa|1899}} by the German maker Rudolf Sander featured in the first comedy [[Hoffnung Music Festival]].{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=141-2|loc=subcontrabass tuba}} In 2010, a fully playable ''Riesentuba'' in 36′ B♭ with four rotary valves was built and resides in Germany at the Markneukirchen Musical Instrument Museum.<ref name="Detwiler-2019">{{Cite web |title=The wonderful world of Giant Tubas! |last=Detwiler |first=Dave |work=Strictly Oompah |date=31 May 2019 |access-date=13 September 2024 |url= https://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-wonderful-world-of-giant-tubas.html }}</ref>
[[File:BrassBandTubas.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Tuba section (known as "bass section") in a [[Brass band (British style)|British style brass band]], consisting of two E{{music|flat}} and two BB{{music|flat}} tubas]]


Tubas are found in various pitches, most commonly in F, E{{music|flat}}, C, or B{{music|flat}}. The key of a tuba depends on the fundamental pitch of the instrument, or fundamental note in the series of [[overtone]]s (also called ''partials'') available without any [[Piston valve|valves]] being pressed. Tubas in different keys use different lengths of tubing. The main tube of a B{{music|flat}} tuba is approximately {{convert|18|ft|m}} long, while that of a C tuba is {{convert|16|ft|m}}, of an E{{music|flat}} tuba {{convert|13|ft|m}}, and of an F tuba {{convert|12|ft|m}}. The instrument has a [[Bore (wind instruments)|conical bore]], meaning the bore diameter increases as a function of the tubing length from the mouthpiece to the bell. The conical bore causes the instrument to produce a preponderance of even-order [[harmonic]]s.
=== Variations ===


A tuba with its tubing wrapped for placing the instrument on the player's lap is usually called a ''concert tuba'' or simply a ''tuba''. Tubas with the [[Bell (wind instrument)|bell]] pointing forward (''pavillon tournant'') instead of upward are often called ''recording tubas'' because of their popularity in the early days of recorded music, as their sound could more easily be directed at the recording microphone. When wrapped to surround the body for cavalry bands on horseback or marching, it is traditionally known as a [[Helicon (instrument)|helicon]]. The modern [[sousaphone]], named after American bandmaster [[John Philip Sousa]], resembles a helicon with the bell pointed up (in the original models as the J. W. Pepper prototype and Sousa's concert instruments) and then curved to point forward (as developed by Conn and others). Some ancestors of the tuba, such as the military ''bombardon'', had unusual valve and bore arrangements compared to modern tubas.
{{Multiple image
  | total_width = 260px | align = left
  | image1 = Yamaha Contrabass tuba YBB-321.tif
  | image2 = Yamaha Contrabass tuba YBB-641.tif
  | alt1 = Photograph of a Yamaha tuba
  | alt2 = Photograph of a Yamaha tuba
  | footer = Main styles of tuba. The saxhorn-style (''left'') has "top action" valves left of the bell; the German-style (''right'') has "front action" valves right of the bell. [[Yamaha Corporation]] | footer_align = left
}}
The development of tubas took place in several regions throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, which has resulted in many different forms with different bores, bell tapers and sizes, and different types and number of valves.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|pp=31–33}} Broadly, tubas can be divided into two main groups.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=212|loc=Fig. 4.9}}


During the American Civil War, most brass bands used a branch of the brass family known as ''[[Saxhorn|saxhorns]]'', which, by today's standards, have a narrower bore taper than tuba—the same as true [[Cornet|cornets]] and [[Baritone horn|baritones]] but distinct from [[Trumpet|trumpets]], [[Euphonium|euphoniums]], and others with different tapers or no taper. Around the start of the Civil War, saxhorns manufactured for military use in the USA were commonly wrapped with the bell pointing backwards over the player's shoulder, and these were known as ''over-the-shoulder saxhorns'', and came in sizes from cornets down to E{{music|flat}} basses. However, the E{{music|flat}} bass, even though it shared the same tube length as a modern E{{music|flat}} tuba, has a narrower bore and as such cannot be called by the name ''tuba'' except as a convenience when comparing it to other sizes of the saxhorn.
The saxhorn-derived, "French style" tubas have piston valves mounted vertically and operated from the top of the instrument ("top action"), and from the player's viewpoint the leadpipe from the mouthpiece is attached to the left side of the bell, with the valves and tubing positioned to the right of the bell. These are common in France, Britain, and throughout the [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]], particularly in brass and military bands. The "German style" tubas, derived from the ''Baß-Tuba'' and later Červený ''Kaiser'' tubas, have the leadpipe attached to the right side of the bell, and the tubing and valves to the left, with the valves mounted in the middle and operated from the front ("front action").{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=49}} German style tubas usually have rotary valves, although American models based on early 20th century [[York Band Instrument Company|York]] tubas use piston valves, oriented horizontally so the finger buttons are operated in the same position.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|p=198}} In either group the valves are operated by the right hand, although saxhorn-style instruments with a fourth compensating valve often place the fourth valve on the side, operated by the left hand.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=49}}


Most music for the tuba is written in bass clef in concert pitch, so tuba players must know the correct fingerings for their specific instruments. Traditional [[Brass band (British style)|British-style brass band]] parts for the tuba are usually written in treble clef, with the B{{music|flat}} tuba sounding two octaves and one step below and the E{{music|flat}} tuba sounding one octave and a major sixth below the written pitch. This allows musicians to change instruments without learning new fingerings for the same written music. Consequently, when its music is written in treble clef, the tuba is a [[transposing instrument]] but not when the music is in bass clef.
A tuba with its tubing wrapped for placing the instrument on the player's lap is sometimes called a ''concert tuba''. In the early days of recorded music in the 1920s and 30s, ''recording tubas'' were made with the bell pointing forward ({{lang|fr|pavillon tournant}}) so their sound could more easily be directed towards the recording microphone. <!-- TODO: use image File:Tuba 20J Conn BBb.jpg -->


The lowest pitched tubas are the '''contrabass tubas''', pitched in C or B{{music|flat}}, referred to as CC and BB{{music|flat}} tubas respectively, based on a traditional distortion of a now-obsolete octave naming convention. The fundamental pitch of a CC tuba is 32&nbsp;Hz, and for a BB{{music|flat}} tuba, 29&nbsp;Hz. The CC tuba is used as an orchestral and concert band instrument in the U.S., but BB{{music|flat}} tubas are the contrabass tuba of choice in German, Austrian, and Russian orchestras. In the United States, the BB{{music|flat}} tuba is the most common in schools (largely due to the use of BB{{music|flat}} sousaphones in [[High school (North America)|high school]] marching bands) and for adult amateurs. Many professionals in the U.S. play CC tubas, with BB{{music|flat}} also common, and many train in the use of all four pitches of tubas.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Trombone and Tuba |url=https://www.uv.es/clil/ePortfolio/html/jorapra/brass/trombonetuba.html |access-date=2024-09-08 |website=www.uv.es}}</ref>
==== Tubas for marching ====


[[File:EuphoniumAndTuba wb.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Comparison of euphonium (left) and tuba (right)]]
{{Multiple image
  | total_width = 260px | align = right
  | perrow = 2/2
  | image1 = Musikinstrumenten-Museum Berlin - Helikon in Es - 1107081 (crop).jpg
  | image2 = Yamaha Sousaphone YSH-411.jpg
  | image3 = EuphoniumAndTuba wb (crop).jpg
  | image4 = Columbus saints indy 14 03 (crop).jpg
  | alt1 = Photograph of a helicon
  | alt2 = Photograph of a sousaphone
  | alt3 = Photograph of a bandsman playing a tuba
  | alt4 = Photograph of a drum & bugle corps player playing a contrabass bugle
  | footer = [[Helicon (instrument)|Helicon]] in E♭, c. 1900, ''top left''; modern [[sousaphone]] in B♭, ''top right''; E♭ bass with marching harness, ''bottom left''; [[Drum and bugle corps (modern)|drum & bugle corps]] [[contrabass bugle]] player, ''bottom right''
  | footer_align = left
}}


The next smaller tubas are the '''bass tubas''', pitched in F or E{{music|flat}} (a fourth above the contrabass tubas). The E{{music|flat}} tuba often plays an octave above the contrabass tubas in brass bands, and the F tuba is commonly used by professional players as a solo instrument and, in America, to play higher parts in the classical repertoire (or parts that were originally written for the F tuba, as is the case with Berlioz). In most of Europe, the F tuba is the standard orchestral instrument, supplemented by the CC or BB{{music|flat}} only when the extra weight is desired. [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], for example, specifically notates the low tuba parts for ''Kontrabasstuba,'' which are played on CC or BB{{music|flat}} tubas in most regions. In the United Kingdom, the E{{music|flat}} is the standard orchestral tuba.
{{See also| Helicon (instrument) | Sousaphone | Contrabass bugle }}


The euphonium is sometimes referred to as a '''tenor tuba''' and is pitched in B{{music|flat}}, one octave higher than the BB{{music|flat}} contrabass tuba. The term "tenor tuba" is often used more specifically to refer to B{{music|flat}} rotary-valved tubas pitched in the same octave as euphoniums. 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 [[World War II|Second World War]]. One popular example of the use of the French C tuba is the ''Bydło'' movement in [[Maurice Ravel|Ravel]]'s orchestration of [[Modest Mussorgsky|Mussorgsky]]'s ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'', though the rest of the work is scored for this instrument as well.
Standard tubas can be played whilst standing and marching, which is the usual practice in [[British brass band]]s and [[military band]]s. For player comfort and to avoid serious injury, a strap joined to metal rings on the tuba or a leather harness for the bottom bow are used to take the weight, via an over-shoulder strap or waist band.


A very small number of larger '''[[subcontrabass tuba]]s''' exist as novelty instruments. Two in 36′ B♭, an octave below the B♭ contrabass, were built by Gustave Besson on the suggestion of [[Patrick Gilmore]], but were not completed until after his death in 1892. One survives in the [[Harvard University Band]], where it was restored and features occasionally in concerts.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=141-2|loc=subcontrabass tuba}} Another with four valves was exhibited by maker Bohland & Fuchs in 1928, {{convert|110|in|cm|order=flip}} in height with a {{convert|50|in|cm|order=flip|adj=on}} bell, weighing {{convert|200|lb|order=flip}}.<ref>"Bohland & Fuchs Show Largest Brass Bass Horn." Music Trade Review, 87:8 (25 August 1928), 16.</ref> In 1956, British musician [[Gerard Hoffnung]] used a 32′ C subcontrabass tuba, built {{circa|1899}} by German maker Rudolf Sander, in the first of his comedy [[Hoffnung Music Festival]]s.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=141-2|loc=subcontrabass tuba}} In 2010, a fully playable ''Riesentuba'' in 36′ B♭ with four rotary valves was built and resides in the Markneukirchen Musical Instrument Museum, Germany.<ref name="Detwiler-2019">{{Cite web |title=The wonderful world of Giant Tubas! |last=Detwiler |first=Dave |work=Strictly Oompah |date=31 May 2019 |access-date=13 September 2024 |url= https://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-wonderful-world-of-giant-tubas.html }}</ref>
In North America, most marching bands use the [[sousaphone]], which is designed to be easier to hold and play while marching.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Detwiler |first=Dave |title=Heritage: Marching Through the Early History of the Sousaphone |journal=ITEA Journal |date=2015|volume=42 |number=2 |pages=27–29}}</ref> The earlier [[Helicon (instrument)|helicon]], on which the sousaphone is based, is still used by bands in Europe and other parts of the world.


===Size vs. pitch===
Some tubas, known as ''marching tubas'', are capable of being converted into a [[marching band|marching]] configuration, where it rests on the left (or occasionally, right) shoulder with the bell facing directly in front of the player. The [[leadpipe]] can be manually screwed on next to the valves, or can swivel between the marching position and a normal upright "concert" position. Some marching tubas, the ''contrabass bugles'', are made only for marching. These were invented in the 1960s for use in modern [[Drum and bugle corps (modern)|drum and bugle corps]]. Originally built in {{prime|21}} G with only two valves, since 2000 they are built with three or four, in {{prime|16}} C or {{prime|18}} B♭.<!-- cite Pirtle, page no. -->
In addition to the length of the instrument, which dictates the fundamental pitch, tubas also vary in the overall width of the tubing sections. Tuba sizes are usually denoted by a quarter system, with {{frac|4|4}} designating a normal, full-size tuba. Larger rotary instruments are known as ''kaiser tubas'' and are often denoted {{frac|5|4}}. Larger piston tubas, particularly those with front action, are sometimes known as ''grand orchestral tubas'' (examples: the Conn 36J Orchestra Grand Bass from the 1930s, and the current model Hirsbrunner HB-50 ''Grand Orchestral'', which is a replica of the large York tubas owned by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra). Grand orchestral tubas are generally described as {{frac|6|4}} tubas. Smaller instruments may be described as {{frac|3|4}} instruments.
[[File:230128-N-DK722-1001 - NAVEUR-NAVAF Band play live on Channels News.jpg|thumb|Nolan Derrick plays the tuba/sousaphone, showing a different series/model of tuba/sousaphone]]
No standards exist for these designations, and their use is up to manufacturers, who usually use them to distinguish among the instruments in their own product line. The size designation is related to the larger outer branches and not to the bore of the tubing at the valves, though the bore is usually reported in instrument specifications. The quarter system is also not directly related to bell size, though there is typically a correlation. {{frac|3|4}} tubas are common in American grade schools for use by young tuba players for whom a full-size instrument might be too cumbersome. Though smaller and lighter, they are tuned and keyed identically to full-size tubas of the same pitch, although they usually have 3 rather than 4 or 5 valves.


===Valves===
=== Valves ===
Tubas are made with either [[piston valve|piston]] or [[rotary valve|rotary]] valves. Rotary valves, invented by Joseph Riedl, are based on a design included in the original valve patents by [[Friedrich Blühmel]] and [[Heinrich Stölzel]] in 1818. [[Václav František Červený|Červený]] of [[Kraslice|Graslitz]] was the first to use true rotary valves, starting in the 1840s or 1850s. Modern piston valves were developed by [[François Périnet]] for the [[saxhorn]] family of instruments promoted by [[Adolphe Sax]] around the same time. Pistons may either be oriented to point to the top of the instrument (top-action) or out the front of the instrument (front-action or side-action).


Piston valves require more maintenance than rotary valves – they require regular oiling to keep them freely operating, while rotary valves are sealed and seldom require oiling. Piston valves are easy to disassemble and re-assemble, while rotary valve disassembly and re-assembly is much more difficult and is generally left to qualified instrument repair persons.
{{Main|Brass instrument valves}}


Tubas generally have from three to six valves, though some rare exceptions exist. Three-valve tubas are generally the least expensive and are almost exclusively used by amateurs, and the [[sousaphone]] (a marching version of a BB{{music|flat}} tuba) usually has three valves. Among advanced players, four and five valve tubas are by far the most common choices, with six-valve tubas being relatively rare except among F tubas, which mostly have five or six valves.
Tubas are made with either [[piston valve|piston]] or [[rotary valve|rotary]] valves.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=49}} Rotary valves, patented in Prussia by Joseph Riedl in 1835, were first used on tubas in the 1850s by the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian]] maker [[Václav František Červený]]. The modern piston valve, developed by [[François Périnet]] in 1839, had by the 1850s replaced the [[Berlin valve]]s used on early [[saxhorn]] instruments.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=47}}


[[File:Tuba.JPG|thumb|left|250px|Tuba with four rotary valves]]
Pistons can be ''top-action'', oriented vertically so the buttons are operated from the top of the instrument, or ''front-action'' or ''side-action'', oriented horizontally so the buttons are at the front of the instrument, operated from the side.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=49}} Piston valves require regular oiling to keep them freely operating, while rotary valves are sealed, and seldom require oiling. Piston valves are easy to dismantle and reassemble, while rotary valves disassembly and reassembly generally requires an experienced instrument technician.


The valves add tubing to the main tube of the instrument, thus lowering its fundamental pitch. The first valve lowers the pitch by a whole step (two semitones), the second valve by a semitone, and the third valve by three semitones. Used in combination, the valve tubing is too short and the resulting pitch tends to be sharp. For example, a BB{{music|flat}} tuba becomes (in effect) an A{{music|flat}} tuba when the first valve is depressed. The third valve is long enough to lower the pitch of a BB{{music|flat}} tuba by three semitones, but it is not long enough to lower the pitch of an A{{music|flat}} tuba by three semitones. Thus, the first and third valves used in combination lower the pitch by something ''just short'' of five semitones, and the first three valves used in combination are nearly a quarter tone sharp.
[[File:Tuba Melton Meinl Weston.png|thumb|upright|C tuba with five rotary valves]]
Tubas usually have four or five valves, but can range from three to six. Three-valve tubas are usually inexpensive student models or smaller marching instruments to conserve weight; the [[sousaphone]] usually has three valves. Among professional players, four and five valve tubas are the most common. F tubas usually have five or six valves,{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=49}} including the six-valved {{lang|de|Wiener Konzerttuba}} (Vienna concert tuba) used in Austria.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=43–44}}


The fourth valve lowers the pitch by a perfect fourth, so it can be used in place of the combination of the first and third valves. When tuned properly it helps solve the issue of valve combinations being too sharp. Using the fourth valve with the first three valves allows the musician to extend the instrument's range down to the fundamental pitch. As with other valve combinations that lengthen the tubing considerably, some of these lower notes can be sharp.
A valve works by adding a loop of tubing of a certain length to the main tubing of the instrument, thus lowering its fundamental pitch. On modern tubas, the first three valves work the same way as other valved brass instruments: the first lowers the pitch by two semitones (whole step), the second by one semitone (half step), and the third by three semitones (minor third).


A fifth and sixth valve, if fitted, are used to provide alternative fingering possibilities to improve intonation, and are also used to reach into the low register of the instrument where all the valves will be used in combination to fill the first octave between the fundamental pitch and the next available note on the open tube. The fifth and sixth valves also give the musician the ability to trill more smoothly or to use alternative fingerings for ease of playing. This type of tuba is what is most found in orchestras and wind bands around the world.
==== Fourth, fifth, and sixth valves ====


The bass tuba in F is pitched a fifth above the BB{{music|flat}} tuba and a fourth above the CC tuba, so it needs additional tubing length beyond that provided by four valves to play securely down to a low F as required in much tuba music. The fifth valve is commonly tuned to a flat whole step, so that when used with the fourth valve, it gives an in-tune low B{{music|flat}}. The sixth valve is commonly tuned as a flat half step, allowing the F tuba to play low G as 1-4-5-6 and low G{{music|flat}} as 1-2-4-5-6. In CC tubas with five valves, the fifth valve may be tuned as a flat whole step or as a minor third depending on the instrument.
The fourth valve lowers the pitch by five semitones (a perfect fourth), and used instead of the combination of valves 1 and 3 which is too sharp. When tuned properly, it helps solve the intonation of valve combinations of valves 1, 2, and 3. Using valve 4 with valves 1, 2, and 3 extends the range down to the fundamental pitch, but as with other valve combinations, some of these lower notes will be too sharp.


===Compensating valves===
The fifth and sixth valves, if fitted, provide alternative fingering possibilities to improve intonation, particularly in the octave between the fundamental pitch ([[pedal tone]]) and the second partial, and for smooth trills and ease of playing. Usually, the fifth valve is tuned to two and a half semitones (flattened whole step), and the sixth to one and a half semitones (flattened half step). In C tubas with five valves, the fifth valve may be tuned as a flattened whole step or as a minor third, depending on the instrument. The B♭ rarely has a fifth valve, but if fitted is tuned similarly to that of a C tuba.
Some tubas have a compensating system to allow accurate tuning when using several valves in combination, simplifying fingering and removing the need to constantly adjust slide positions. The most popular of the automatic compensation systems was invented by Blaikley (Bevan, 1874) and was patented by Boosey (later, [[Boosey and Hawkes]], which also, later still, produced Besson instruments). The patent on the system limited its application outside of Britain, and to this day, tubas with compensating valves are primarily popular in the United Kingdom and countries of the former British Empire.  


The Blaikley design plumbs the instrument so that if the fourth valve is used, the air is sent back through a second set of branches in the first three valves to compensate for the combination of valves. This does have the disadvantage of making the instrument significantly more "stuffy" or resistant to air flow when compared to a non-compensating tuba. This is due to the need for the air to flow through the valves twice. It also makes the instrument heavier. But many prefer this approach to having additional valves{{snd}}or to the manipulation of tuning slides while playing{{snd}}to achieve improved intonation within an ensemble.
==== Compensating valves ====


Most modern professional-grade euphoniums also now feature Blaikley-style compensating valves.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dwerden.com/eu-articles-comp.cfm|title=Compensating System|website=Dwerden.com|access-date=4 February 2018}}</ref>
Most high-end saxhorn-style tubas in E♭ and B♭, instead of providing a fifth or sixth valve, provide a compensating system on the fourth valve to adjust intonation when using valves in combination.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dwerden.com/eu-articles-comp.cfm|title=Compensating System|website=Dwerden.com|access-date=4 February 2018}}</ref> This reduces the need to constantly adjust tuning slides while playing, and also simplifies fingering. The compensating piston valve was invented in the 1870s by [[David Blaikley]], the factory manager at [[Boosey & Hawkes|Boosey & Co.]], who patented it in 1878.{{sfn|O'Connor|2007|p=6}} The tubing of the fourth valve is re-routed back through the other three valves to add an extra set of small correcting tubing loops.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=51}} This achieves correct intonation in the lower range of the instrument when using the fourth valve.{{sfn|Herbert|Myers|Wallace|2019|pp=436–437|loc="Valve"}}


===Resonance and false tones===
The patent limited its application outside of Britain, and tubas with compensating valves are mainly found in Britain and [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]] countries. Compensating valves can make the instrument significantly more "stuffy" or resistant to air flow when compared to a non-compensating tuba, and it also makes the instrument heavier.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=51–52}}
Some tubas have a strong and useful resonance that is not in the well-known harmonic series. For example, most large B{{music|flat}} tubas have a strong resonance at low E{{music|flat}} (E{{music|flat}}<sub>1</sub>, 39&nbsp;Hz), which is between the fundamental and the second harmonic (an octave higher than the fundamental). These alternative resonances are often known as [[Acoustic resonance#False tones|false tones]] or privileged tones. Adding the six semitones provided by the three valves, these alternative resonances let the instrument play chromatically down to the fundamental of the open bugle (which is a 29&nbsp;Hz B{{music|flat}}<sub>0</sub>). The addition of valves below that note can lower the instrument a further six semitones to a 20&nbsp;Hz E<sub>0</sub>. Thus, even three-valved instruments with good alternative resonances can produce very low sounds in the hands of skilled players; instruments with four valves can play even lower.


The lowest note in the widely known repertoire is a 16&nbsp;Hz double-pedal C<sub>0</sub> in the [[William Kraft]] piece ''Encounters II'', which is often played using a timed [[Flutter-tonguing|flutter tongue]] rather than by buzzing the lips. The fundamental of this pitch borders on [[infrasound]] and [[missing fundamental|its overtones define the pitch]] in the listener's ear.
=== Materials and finish ===


===Materials and finish===
The tuba is generally constructed of [[brass]], which is either [[electroplating|electro-plated]] with [[silver]] or coated with a thin transparent [[lacquer]].{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=34}} Unfinished brass will eventually [[tarnish]] and must be periodically [[polishing|polished]] to maintain its appearance.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Winter|first=James|title=Brass|journal=Music Educators Journal|year=1975|volume=62|issue=2|pages=34–37|doi=10.2307/3394871|jstor=3394871|s2cid=221063884}}</ref>
The tuba is generally constructed of [[brass]], which is either unfinished, [[lacquer]]ed or [[electroplating|electro-plated]] with [[nickel]], [[gold]] or [[silver]]. Unfinished brass will eventually [[tarnish]] and thus must be periodically [[polishing|polished]] to maintain its appearance.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Winter|first=James|title=Brass|journal=Music Educators Journal|year=1975|volume=62|issue=2|pages=34–37|doi=10.2307/3394871|jstor=3394871|s2cid=221063884}}</ref>


=== Manufacturers ===
=== Manufacturers ===
There are many types of tubas that are manufactured in Europe, the United States, and Asia. In Europe, the predominant models that are professionally used are [[Meinl-Weston]] (Germany) and Miraphone (Germany). Asian brands include the [[Yamaha Corporation]] (Japan) and Jupiter Instruments (Taiwan). [[Holton Instrument Company]] and [[King Musical Instruments]] are some of the most well known brands from the United States.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Instruments and Equipment|journal=Music Educators Journal|year=1969|volume=55|issue=9|pages=101–102|doi=10.2307/3392572|jstor=3392572|s2cid=221060268}}</ref>
There are many types of tubas that are manufactured in Europe, the United States, and Asia. In Europe, the predominant models that are professionally used are [[Meinl-Weston]] (Germany) and Miraphone (Germany). Asian brands include the [[Yamaha Corporation]] (Japan) and Jupiter Instruments (Taiwan). [[Holton Instrument Company]] and [[King Musical Instruments]] are some of the most well known brands from the United States.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Instruments and Equipment|journal=Music Educators Journal|year=1969|volume=55|issue=9|pages=101–102|doi=10.2307/3392572|jstor=3392572|s2cid=221060268}}</ref>


==Variations==
== Performance ==
Some tubas are capable of being converted into a [[marching band|marching]] style, known as "marching tubas". A [[leadpipe]] can be manually screwed on next to the valves. The tuba is then usually rested on the left shoulder (although some tubas allow use of the right shoulder), with the bell facing directly in front of the player. Some marching tubas are made only for marching, and cannot be converted into a concert model.  
{{more citations needed section|date=October 2019}}
{{See also|List of tubists}}
 
=== Notation ===
 
In orchestras, concert bands, and US military bands, the tuba is written at concert pitch in the [[bass clef]] as a non-transposing instrument, like the orchestral trombone, cello, and bassoon. High passages are seldom written in [[tenor clef]]. Tuba players reading music in bass clef must therefore learn the valve fingerings for each different size of tuba. Players are used to reading at least four [[leger line]]s above and below the bass staff.
 
In British brass bands, all instruments except the bass trombone are [[transposing instrument]]s using the [[treble clef]] notation popularized in France by the instrument maker Adolphe Sax for his families of instruments.{{Sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=69–70}} Thus the tuba parts are notated in treble clef, sounding an octave and a sixth below written for E♭ tuba, like the [[baritone saxophone]], or two octaves and a second for B♭ tuba, like the [[contrabass clarinet]]. This allows band musicians to change instruments without having to learn new fingerings for the same written music.
 
{{Image frame |align=center |innerstyle=background:white;padding:0.5em;
  | caption = Brass band transposing treble clef notation, and the resulting concert pitch for tubas in B♭ and E♭
  | content = <score lang="lilypond"> \relative {
    \cadenzaOn
    \clef treble \key c \major
    c'8[ ^ \markup \tiny "written, transposing" d e f] g4 c
    s4 \bar "|"
    \clef bass \key bes \major \time 4/4
    bes,,,!8[ ^ \markup \tiny "sounds (B♭ tuba)" c d ees!] f4 bes!
    \bar "|"
    \clef bass \key ees \major \time 4/4
    ees,!8[ ^ \markup \tiny "(E♭ tuba)" f g aes!] bes4 ees!
  }</score>
}}
 
Concert band music sometimes provides tuba parts in E♭ and B♭ treble clef as well, to accommodate players from either background, although professional players are usually familiar with either notation.{{Sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=68}}        <!-- TODO:
=== Range ===
=== Techniques ===
=== Notable players ===  -->


Most marching bands opt for the [[sousaphone]], an instrument that is easier to carry since it was invented specifically for this and almost always cheaper than a true marching tuba.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Detwiler|first=Dave|title=Heritage: Marching Through the Early History of the Sousaphone|journal=ITEA Journal|volume=42|pages=27–29}}</ref> The earlier [[Helicon (instrument)|helicon]] is still used by bands in Europe and other parts of the world. [[Drum and bugle corps (modern)|Drum and bugle corps]] players, however, generally use marching tubas or [[Contrabass bugle]]s.
=== Range ===


Standard tubas can also be played whilst standing and marching, which is the usual practice in [[British brass band]]s and [[military band]]s. With the comfort of the player in mind, companies have provided harnesses that sometimes use a strap joined to the tuba with two rings, a 'sack' to hold the bottom of the tuba, or numerous straps holding the larger parts of tubing on the tuba. The strap(s) goes over the shoulder like a sash or sit at the waist, so the musician can play the instrument in the same position as when sitting.
The written range of the tuba is large, partly because different sized instruments have been used at different times and in different regions. The CC or BB♭ ''Kontrabaß'' tubas called for by Wagner and later German composers could scarcely reach middle C, while the range of the euphonium-like French C tuba built an octave higher in early 20th century French music ranges from its pedal F{{sub|1}} to the C{{sub|5}} above middle C. On any tuba, the range from F{{sub|1}} to C{{sub|4}} (middle C) is easily accessible, but the full working range from contemporary solo repertoire includes the [[pedal tone|pedal range]] to at least B♭{{sub|0}}, and extends up to at least C{{sub|5}}.{{sfn|Herbert|Myers|Wallace|2019|p=484|loc=Appendix 2: The Ranges of Labrosones}}{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=182}}
 
{{Image frame |align=center |innerstyle=background:white;padding:0.5em;
  | caption = Range of the tuba; higher and lower notes are possible.
  | content = <score lang="lilypond"> {
    \new Staff \with { \omit Score.TimeSignature }
    \clef bass \key c \major \cadenzaOn \omit Stem
    c,,1 _ \markup \tiny "C₁"
    \glissando
    a' ^ \markup \tiny "A₄"
    \grace c''4 ^ \markup \tiny "↑"
  }</score>
}}
 
Higher notes are possible since the upper range is limited only by the fitness of the players' embouchure, although notes above the ''[[Cutoff frequency|bell cutoff frequency]]'' around the tenth harmonic are difficult to centre and continuous ''[[glissando|glissandi]]'' are possible, making valve fingering largely redundant.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|pp=60-63}} The wide bore profile of the tuba means that pedal notes are easily produced, compared to other brass instruments.{{sfn|Adler-McKean|2020|p=32, 58}}
 
=== Resonance and false tones ===
 
Some tubas have a strong and useful resonance that is not in the well-known harmonic series. For example, most large B♭ tubas have a strong resonance at low E♭ (E♭<sub>1</sub>, 39&nbsp;Hz), which is between the fundamental and the second harmonic (an octave higher than the fundamental). These alternative resonances are often known as [[Acoustic resonance#False tones|false tones]] or privileged tones. Adding the six semitones provided by the three valves, these alternative resonances let the instrument play chromatically down to the fundamental of the open bugle (which is a 29&nbsp;Hz B♭<sub>0</sub>). The addition of valves below that note can lower the instrument a further six semitones to a 20&nbsp;Hz E<sub>0</sub>. Thus, even three-valved instruments with good alternative resonances can produce very low sounds in the hands of skilled players; instruments with four valves can play even lower.  
 
The lowest note in the widely known repertoire is a 16&nbsp;Hz double-pedal C<sub>0</sub> in the [[William Kraft]] piece ''Encounters II'', which is often played using a timed [[Flutter-tonguing|flutter tongue]] rather than by buzzing the lips. The fundamental of this pitch borders on [[infrasound]] and [[missing fundamental|its overtones define the pitch]] in the listener's ear.
 
=== Jazz ===


==Jazz==
[[File:Riverside Stompers - Martin Stanzel solo - Dieter Bietak 2007.jpg|thumb|upright|"Kaiserbass" (tuba in B♭) and&nbsp;[[cornet]]]]
[[File:Riverside Stompers - Martin Stanzel solo - Dieter Bietak 2007.jpg|thumb|upright|"Kaiserbass" (tuba in B♭) and&nbsp;[[cornet]]]]
The tuba has been used in [[jazz]] since the genre's inception. In the earliest years, bands often used a tuba for outdoor playing and a [[double bass]] for indoor performances. In this context, the tuba was sometimes called "brass bass", as opposed to the double bass ''(string bass)''. Many musicians played both instruments.
The tuba has been used in [[jazz]] since the genre's inception. In the earliest years, bands often used a tuba for outdoor playing and a [[double bass]] for indoor performances. In this context, the tuba was sometimes called "brass bass", as opposed to the double bass ''(string bass)''. Many musicians played both instruments.


This practice was mostly used in the [[New Orleans]] jazz scene. The tuba was used most frequently with the [[Louis Armstrong]] groups and prominent in the album ''[[Hot Five]]''.
This practice was mostly used in the [[New Orleans]] jazz scene. The tuba was used most frequently with the [[Louis Armstrong]] groups and prominent in the album ''[[Hot Five]]''.


In modern jazz, it is not unknown for their players to take solos. [[New Orleans]] style [[brass band]]s like the [[Dirty Dozen Brass Band]] and the [[Rebirth Brass Band]] use a sousaphone as the bass instrument. [[Bill Barber (musician)|Bill Barber]] played tuba on several [[Miles Davis]] albums, including the sessions compiled as the ''[[Birth of the Cool]]'' and ''[[Miles Ahead (album)|Miles Ahead]]''. New York City-based tubist [[Marcus Rojas]] performed frequently with [[Henry Threadgill]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last=William|first=Pryor|title=New Orleans Jazz and the Trad Jazz Movement|journal=IAJRC Journal|volume=49|pages=61–65}}</ref> Starting in 1955, [[Stan Kenton]] made his fifth trombonist double on tuba, namely on ballads to make use of the tuba's distinct warm, enveloping sound.<ref>{{Cite news |last=RUSSONELLO |first=GIOVANNI |date=Jan 15, 2021 |title=Howard Johnson, 79, Who Elevated the Mighty Tuba in Jazz |work=The New York Times}}</ref>
In modern jazz, it is not unknown for their players to take solos. [[New Orleans]] style [[brass band]]s like the [[Dirty Dozen Brass Band]] and the [[Rebirth Brass Band]] use a sousaphone as the bass instrument. [[Bill Barber (musician)|Bill Barber]] played tuba on several [[Miles Davis]] albums, including the sessions compiled as the ''[[Birth of the Cool]]'' and ''[[Miles Ahead (album)|Miles Ahead]]''. New York City-based tubist [[Marcus Rojas]] performed frequently with [[Henry Threadgill]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last=William |first=Pryor |title=New Orleans Jazz and the Trad Jazz Movement |journal=IAJRC Journal |date= |volume=49 |pages=61–65}}</ref> Starting in 1955, [[Stan Kenton]] made his fifth trombonist double on tuba, namely on ballads to make use of the tuba's distinct warm, enveloping sound.<ref>{{Cite news |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=14 January 2021 |title=Howard Johnson, 79, Dies; Elevated the Tuba in Jazz and Beyond |last=Russonello |first=Giovanni |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/14/arts/music/howard-johnson-dead.html |access-date=8 December 2025}}</ref>
 
== Repertoire ==
{{more citations needed section|date=October 2019}}
{{See also|Tuba repertoire}}
 
A [[symphony orchestra]] typically includes a single tuba, although a second is sometimes called for in large works, such as Stravinsky's ballet ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'' (1913), and [[Havergal Brian]]'s [[Symphony No. 1 (Brian)|Symphony No. 1]] (1927). The tuba serves as the bass of the orchestral [[Brass instrument|brass]] section, and it can reinforce the bass voices of the [[String instrument|strings]] and [[woodwind]]s.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Tuba |url=https://philharmonia.co.uk/resources/instruments/tuba/ |access-date=2023-12-08 |website=Philharmonia |language=en-GB}}</ref> It provides the bass of brass quintets and choirs, although sometimes a small brass ensemble will use the [[euphonium]] or [[bass trombone]] as the lowest voice.
 
Since the mid-20th century, a considerable body of repertoire has amassed for tuba as a solo instrument,{{sfn|Skillen|Goldstein|2006|pp=1-2}} both with ensemble or piano accompaniment, and unaccompanied.{{sfn|Northcut|Gray|2006|pp=173-4}}{{sfn|Sinder|Funderburk|2006|pp=217-8}}
 
The tuba is the principal bass instrument in [[concert band]]s, [[Brass band (British style)|brass bands]] and [[military band]]s, usually two to four in number. Brass band music has two parts, for E♭ and B♭ tubas respectively, often referred to as ''basses''.{{sfn|Bevan|2000|pp=430–431}}<ref name="Odello-2014">{{Cite journal |last=Odello |first=Denise |title=British Brass Band Periodicals and the Construction of a Movement |journal=Victorian Periodicals Review |date=2014 |volume=47 |issue=3 |pages=432–453 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43663256 |access-date=8 December 2025}}</ref> Tubas are also used in [[marching band]]s, [[Drum and bugle corps (modern)|drum and bugle corps]] and in [[jazz band]]s.
 
Well known and influential orchestral parts for the tuba include:
<!-- what value is this list really adding? TODO: rewrite as prose, explaining notability/other reason(s) for each, as elsewhere -->
* [[Modest Mussorgsky]] (orch. [[Maurice Ravel|Ravel]]): ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'' – ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition|Bydło]]'', ''[[Night on Bald Mountain]]''
* [[Richard Strauss]]: ''[[Also sprach Zarathustra (Strauss)|Also sprach Zarathustra]]'', ''[[Eine Alpensinfonie]]'', ''[[Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks|Till Eulenspiegel]]'', ''[[Ein Heldenleben]]''
* [[Dmitri Shostakovich|Shostakovich]]: All symphonies, except the [[Symphony No. 14 (Shostakovich)|Fourteenth]]
* [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]]: ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'', ''[[Petrushka (ballet)|Petroushka]]''
* [[Edgard Varèse]]: ''[[Déserts]]''
* [[Richard Wagner]]: ''[[Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg]]'', ''[[Lohengrin (opera)#Act 3|Lohengrin]]'', ''[[Ride of the Valkyries]]'', ''[[Faust Overture]]''
* [[Sergei Prokofiev]]: [[Symphony No. 5 (Prokofiev)|Fifth Symphony]], ''[[Romeo and Juliet (Prokofiev)|Romeo and Juliet]]''
* [[George Gershwin]]: ''[[An American in Paris]]''
* [[Silvestre Revueltas]]: ''[[Sensemayá]]'', ''[[La noche de los mayas (suite)|La noche de los mayas]]'', ''[[Homenaje a Federico García Lorca]]''
* [[Gustav Holst]]: ''[[The Planets]]''
* [[Gustav Mahler]]: Symphonies Nos. [[Symphony No. 1 (Mahler)#Movement 3|1]], [[Symphony No. 2 (Mahler)|2]], [[Symphony No. 5 (Mahler)|5]], [[Symphony No. 6 (Mahler)|6]], and [[Symphony No. 8 (Mahler)|8]]
* [[Ottorino Respighi]]:  ''[[Fountains of Rome (symphonic poem)|Fountains of Rome]]'', ''[[Pines of Rome]]''
* [[Hector Berlioz]]: ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]'', ''[[La damnation de Faust|Hungarian March]]''
* [[Paul Hindemith]]: ''[[Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber|Symphonic Metamorphosis]]''
*[[Johannes Brahms]]: [[Symphony No. 2 (Brahms)|Symphony No. 2]]
*[[Anton Bruckner]]: Symphonies Nos. [[Symphony No. 4 (Bruckner)|4]], [[Symphony No. 7 (Bruckner)|7]], and [[Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)|8]]
 
Notable [[concerto]]s have been written for the tuba by many composers, including [[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] ([[Tuba Concerto (Vaughan Williams)|Tuba Concerto]]), [[Edward Gregson]], [[John Williams]], [[Alexander Arutiunian]], [[Eric Ewazen]], [[James Barnes (composer)|James Barnes]], [[Joseph Hallman]], [[Martin Ellerby]], [[Philip Sparke]],{{sfn|Sisk|2017|pp=3–20}} [[Kalevi Aho]], [[Josef Tal]], [[Bruce Broughton]] (Tuba Concerto), [[John Golland]], [[Roger Steptoe]], [[David Carlson]], [[Jennifer Higdon]] ([[Tuba Concerto (Higdon)|Tuba Concerto]]), and [[Marcus Paus]] ([[Tuba Mirum (Paus)|''Tuba Mirum'']]).
 
<!-- TODO: other repertoire, e.g. Jazz, chamber music, popular, avant guarde etc. -->
 
== See also ==


==See also==
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
* [[Brass instrument valves]]
* [[Contrabass bugle]]
* [[Subcontrabass tuba]]
* [[Subcontrabass tuba]]
* [[Sousaphone]]
* [[Helicon (instrument)]]
* [[List of tuba players]]
* [[Roman tuba]]
* [[Roman tuba]]
* [[Tuba repertoire]]
* [[Tubachristmas]] (music event)
* [[Wagner tuba]]
* [[Wagner tuba]]
{{div col end}}
{{div col end}}
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{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
{{ubli
{{ubli
| {{Cite Q|last=Bevan  |date=2000 |first=Clifford |author-link=Clifford Bevan |Q111040769}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Adler-McKean |date=2020 |first=Jack |Q134349391}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Meucci |date=1996 |first=Renato |Q111077162}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Bevan      |date=1996 |first=Clifford |author-link=Clifford Bevan
| {{Cite Q|last=Yeo   |date=2021 |first=Douglas |author-link=Douglas Yeo |Q111040546}}
  | chapter=A Brief History of the Tuba |pages=1–9 |Q135911601}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Bevan     |date=1997 |first=Clifford |author-link=Clifford Bevan
  | chapter=Special NEH report: Cimbasso Research and Performance Practice: An Update
  | page=289–299 |Q127092138}}
  | {{Cite Q|last=Bevan      |date=2000 |first=Clifford |author-link=Clifford Bevan |Q111040769}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Bowman    |date=2007 |first=Brian |author-link=Brian Bowman |pages=251–255
  | chapter=Band and Orchestral Excerpts |editor1-last=Bone
  | editor1-first=Lloyd E. |editor2-last=Paull |editor2-first=Eric |editor3-last=Morris
  | editor3-first=R. Winston |editor3-link=R. Winston Morris |Q135963380}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Forsyth    |date=1914 |first=Cecil |Q121879329}}
| {{Cite Q|editor1-last=Herbert |editor2-last=Myers |editor3-last=Wallace |date=2019
  | editor1-first=Trevor |editor2-first=Arnold |editor3-first=John
  | publication-place=unset |Q136027509}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Meucci     |date=1996 |first=Renato |Q111077162}}
| {{Cite Q|last1=Northcut |last2=Gray |date=2006 |first1=Timothy J. |first2=Skip
  | chapter=Music for Tuba and Orchestra |pages=173–187 |Q135911410}}
| {{Cite Q|last=O'Connor  |date=2007 |first=Michael |pages=1–17
  | chapter=A Short History of the Euphonium and Baritone Horn |editor1-last=Bone
  | editor1-first=Lloyd E. |editor2-last=Paull |editor2-first=Eric |editor3-last=Morris
  | editor3-first=R. Winston |editor3-link=R. Winston Morris |Q135963380}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Pirtle    |date=2002 |chapter=The evolution of the bugle
  | first=Scooter |editor-last=Vickers |editor-first=Steve |Q136465477}}
| {{Cite Q|last1=Sinder |last2=Funderburk |date=2006 |first1=Philip |first2=Jeffrey L.
  | chapter=Music for Unaccompanied Tuba |pages=217–247 |Q135911410}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Sisk      |date=2017 |first=Robin A. |type=DMA thesis |Q137209576}}
| {{Cite Q|last1=Skillen |last2=Goldstein |date=2006 |first1=Joseph |first2=Edward R.
  | chapter=Music for Tuba and Keyboard |pages=1–149 |Q135911410}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Solomonson |date=1978 |first=Glen Terrance |type=MME thesis |Q137205099}}
| {{Cite Q|last=Yeo       |date=2021 |first=Douglas |author-link=Douglas Yeo |Q111040546}}
}}
}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}
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* {{Commons-inline|Tuba (instrument)|the tuba}}
* {{Commons-inline|Tuba (instrument)|the tuba}}
* {{wiktionary-inline}}
* {{wiktionary-inline}}
* [https://www.tubaforum.net/ TubaForum.net] — online forum
* [http://forums.chisham.com/ TubeNet], [https://www.tubaforum.net/ TubaForum.net] — online forums
* [https://simonettitubacollection.com/ The Vincent and Ethel Simonetti Historic Tuba Collection] — Durham, North Carolina
* [https://simonettitubacollection.com/ The Vincent and Ethel Simonetti Historic Tuba Collection] — Durham, North Carolina
* [https://historyofthetuba.substack.com/ History of the Tuba Podcast] — Jake Kline & Jack Adler-McKean
* [https://historyofthetuba.substack.com/ History of the Tuba Podcast] — Jake Kline & Jack Adler-McKean
* [https://www.tubaday.com International Tuba Day] — first Friday in May
* [https://www.tubaday.com International Tuba Day] — first Friday in May
* [https://www.tubachristmas.com/ Tuba Christmas] — official site for the annual concerts
* [https://www.tubachristmas.com/ Tuba Christmas] — official site for the annual [[Tubachristmas]] concerts
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Bombardon}}
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Bombardon}}



Latest revision as of 10:22, 1 January 2026

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

The tuba (Latin, "trumpet";[1] Template:IPAc-en;[2] Template:IPAc-en) is a large brass instrument in the bass-to-contrabass range with a wide, bugle-like conical bore and between three and six (usually four or five) valves. It first appeared in 1835 in Prussia as the Script error: No such module "Lang"., an application of five valves to a bugle scaled up to [[Eight-foot pitch|12-foot (Template:Prime)]] F, providing a fully chromatic contrabass range with a deep, full timbre.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Subsequently, the Paris maker Adolphe Sax developed the E♭ and B♭ band tubas with piston valves as members of his saxhorn family by the 1850s, and Václav František Červený in Austria-Hungary developed contrabass tubas in Template:Prime C and Template:Prime B♭ with rotary valves in the 1870s.

As with any brass instrument, sound is produced with a lip vibration or "buzz" in the mouthpiece. A person who plays the tuba is called a tubaist or tubist,[3] or simply a tuba player. In British brass bands and military bands, they are known as a bass player.

History

The early history of the tuba was the search for a practical valved brass instrument with a bass and contrabass voice, suitable for use in bands and the orchestra brass section.Template:Sfn Before the emergence of the first valves in the 1820s, brass instruments were either restricted to a single harmonic series like the natural trumpet or bugle, or used a slide like the trombone, or used keys and tone holes like the keyed bugle or serpent.

Origins

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Script error: No such module "Multiple image". For the earliest low-pitched brass instruments, none of these solutions were ideal. Natural instruments can only approach diatonic or chromatic scales in their high register, bass trombones had long slides with handles which were unwieldy for rapid passages, and the timbre of the serpent was often criticized.Template:Sfn

To replace the serpent and its various upright derivatives, the Paris-based maker Jean Hilaire Asté invented the ophicleide in 1817, extending the keyed bugle into the bass register with a folded, bassoon-like form.Template:Sfn It was a sufficient improvement, in both intonation and timbre, that it was widely adopted in brass and military bands. It was also used in the orchestra particularly by French composers, most notably Hector Berlioz.Template:Sfn Although the ophicleide was initially successful, and serpents were still being used in bands and church ensembles, neither instrument could play much below C₂ into the contrabass range.Template:Sfn

The first tubas

In Prussia, the military bandmaster Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht required an instrument capable of a secure contrabass compass for his bands, and with the Berlin-based instrument maker Johann Gottfried Moritz invented the <templatestyles src="Template:Visible anchor/styles.css" />Script error: No such module "Lang". in F (Prussian patent 9121, granted 12 September 1835). It used five Script error: No such module "Lang". valves (forerunners of the modern Périnet piston valves) to provide a chromatic compass down to F₁, its first fundamental or pedal tone.Template:Sfn Berlin valves, invented by Wieprecht two years earlier, were capable of operating on the wider bore tubing of larger instruments than the earlier Stölzel and Vienna valve designs. This contributed to the Baß-Tuba being the first successful contrabass valved brass instrument.Template:Sfn The first tenor tuba was invented in 1838 by Moritz's son, Carl Wilhelm Moritz, which was a forerunner of the euphonium.Template:Sfn

Paris-based instrument maker Adolphe Sax, like Wieprecht, was interested in marketing families of instruments ranging from soprano to bass, and developed his saxhorn series of brass instruments, pitched in E♭ and B♭. Sax's instruments gained dominance in French military bands, and later in Britain and America. Their widespread success was a result of the movements of popular instrument makers, notably Gustave Auguste Besson, who moved from Paris to London, and Henry Distin, who started manufacturing them in London, and later moved his business to the United States.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The saxhorns in E♭ and B♭ constitute almost the whole instrumentation of the modern British brass band, with the addition of cornets, trombones and a flugelhorn.Template:Sfn Modern E♭ and B♭ band tubas are not far removed from their contrabass saxhorn ancestors, differing only in having a wider conical bore and often adding a compensating fourth valve.

The helicon is thought to have first appeared in Russia in the mid-1840s, and first patented in 1848 in Vienna by Stowasser. Like the Ancient Roman buccina, its tubing is wrapped under the right arm with the bell resting on the player's left shoulder. The helicon also became popular throughout Europe and North America, particularly for its suitability for marching and mounted bands.Template:Sfn

Early American tubas

Script error: No such module "Multiple image". In the United States saxhorns had become popular by the mid-19th century, particularly in military and brass bands. In 1838, the New York maker Allen Dodworth patented his "over-the-shoulder" (OTS) instruments, with bells pointing backwards over the player's left shoulder, that included an E♭ bass model.Template:Sfn This design allowed soldiers, usually marching behind the band, to better hear the music.[4] Demand for bugles and OTS saxhorns grew, particularly in the early 1860s during the American Civil War, and tens of thousands were made in the United States or imported from Europe. After the war, the bands and their music remained popular, and manufacturing demand remained strong.Template:Sfn From these ensembles and musicians emerged the American drum and bugle corps tradition,Template:Sfn and the mixed-winds concert bands popularised by Patrick Gilmore and John Philip Sousa.Template:Sfn

In 1893, Sousa, unhappy with the sound from his BB♭ contrabass helicon tubas, had the Philadelphia instrument maker J. W. Pepper build a helicon with an upward-pointing bell, to better diffuse the sound. This sousaphone model was later made by the American manufacturers Holton and C. G. Conn, who some time in the early 20th century turned the bell forward to create the iconic modern form.Template:Sfn

The tuba in Italy

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The Italian word Script error: No such module "Lang"., thought to be a contraction of the term Script error: No such module "Lang". (Template:Lit.), first appeared in scores as c. basso or c. in basso in the 1820s. Initially the cimbasso was a form of upright serpent or bass horn, but over the course of the 19th century the term was used loosely to refer to the lowest bass instrument available in the brass family, including the ophicleide and early Italian valved instruments such as the pelittone and bombardone.Template:Sfn The Italian opera composer Giuseppe Verdi, dissatisfied with the sound of these instruments, commissioned a valved contrabass trombone, built in the 1880s for his late operas.Template:Sfn By the early 20th century this instrument, which he and Giacomo Puccini called simply the trombone basso in their scores, had disappeared from Italian orchestras, replaced by the tuba. The modern cimbasso, commonly called for in film and video game soundtracks, was revived from Verdi's instrument, via the German contrabass trombone in F, in the early 1980s.Template:Sfn

Construction

In organology, the tuba is classified as a bass valved bugle. The valved bugles are a large family of brass instruments that includes the euphonium, flugelhorn, and the wider-bored members of the saxhorn family, distinguished by having valves and a wide conical bore.Template:Sfn The conical bore of bugles is wider than other conical brass instruments, like the horn or cornet, or the cylindrical-bore trumpet and trombone. The bore diameter increases as a function of the tubing distance from the mouthpiece. This causes the instrument to favor lower spectral content, producing a mellow, warm timbre. The wide rate of taper of the last portion of the tubing leading to the bell, combining with the bell's large diameter, amplifies these lower frequencies and produces a deep contrabass sound.Template:Sfn

Sizes

Tubas are made in four pitches. The length of tubing (with no valves engaged) determines the fundamental pitch of the instrument. The smaller <templatestyles src="Template:Visible anchor/styles.css" />bass tuba is built in 12-foot (12′) F or 13′ E♭, while the larger <templatestyles src="Template:Visible anchor/styles.css" />contrabass tuba is built in 16′ C or 18′ B♭. Often the contrabass tubas are called "CC" or "BB♭" tubas, based on an English variant of the Helmholtz pitch notation no longer in use, and the basscontrabass distinction is not always used by composers or musicians.

File:MIMEd 2131. Higham tuba in F.png
"Barlow" model British F tuba (University of Edinburgh)

The original 1835 Script error: No such module "Lang". in F survives as various much-modified models of F tuba. It is commonly used by professional players as a solo instrument and, in America, to play higher parts in the classical repertoire, often parts originally written for F tuba. In most of Europe, the F tuba is the standard orchestral instrument, supplemented by the C or B♭ tuba only when the extra weight is desired. Wagner, for example, specifically notated the low tuba parts for Kontrabasstuba, which are played on C or B♭ tubas in most regions. The traditional tuba in Vienna is in F with six rotary valves, in two groups of three for each hand. In Britain from the late 19th century until the 1960s, the standard orchestral tuba was in F, with four or five piston valves, and a narrower bore profile closer to the euphonium.Template:Sfn

The E♭ tuba often plays an octave above the B♭ tubas in brass bands, where it is commonly built with three top-mounted piston valves and a fourth compensating valve on the side. In the United Kingdom, the E♭ tuba began to displace the old British F tuba in the 1960s, and is still found in British orchestras today, although some players are favouring larger C instruments since the 1990s.Template:Sfn

The C tuba is used as an orchestral and concert band instrument in the US, but B♭ tubas with rotary valves are the contrabass tuba of choice in German, Austrian, and Russian orchestras. In the United States, the B♭ tuba is the most common in schools, largely due to the use of B♭ sousaphones in high school marching bands. Many professionals in the US play C tubas, with B♭ also common, and many train in the use of all four pitches of tubas.[5] The B♭ saxhorn-style tuba, with three top-mounted piston valves and usually a fourth compensating valve on the side, is standard in British brass bands.

Quarter designation

Even within instruments of the same pitch, tubas also vary in size: the overall width of the tubing sections, the bell diameter, and rate of bell taper. The size is usually denoted in quarters, with 4/4 designating a normal, full-size tuba.Template:Sfn Smaller instruments, often student or intermediate models, may be described as 3/4 instruments. Often with only three valves, these are common in schools for use by young players where a full-size tuba may be too large. Larger instruments are denoted as 5/4, or 6/4 for the largest tubas, sometimes known as grand orchestral tubas. These include the Conn 36J "Orchestra Grand Bass" from the 1930s, and the replicas by several manuacturers of the large York tubas owned by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

The designations have no standardised measurements. Between manufacturers, they do not correlate to tubing bore diameters or bell diameters reported in instrument specifications, so they are only useful for making comparisons between models within a single manufacturer's catalog.Template:Sfn

Other sizes

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The euphonium, pitched in 9′ B♭ a fourth above the bass tuba in F, is sometimes referred to as a <templatestyles src="Template:Visible anchor/styles.css" />tenor tuba, particularly by British composers.[6] This term can also refer more specifically to the German Script error: No such module "Lang"., a similar instrument in B♭ with rotary valves.Template:Sfn These instruments are used to play tenor tuba parts, and often ophicleide parts and the high tuba parts written for the small French tuba.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The small French tuba is based on the bass saxhorn, built in 8′ C with six piston valves. This instrument, standard in French orchestras in the late 19th century until at least the 1950s, was expected by French composers of that time.[7] A notable high exerpt from the orchestral repertoire is the tuba solo in the "Bydło" movement in Maurice Ravel's orchestration of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, though the part also descends into the low register in other movements, to low F♯1.Template:Sfn

A small number of very large novelty subcontrabass tubas have been built, and five playable instruments with functioning valves survive, mostly in museums.[8] Two in 36′ B♭, an octave below the B♭ contrabass, were built by Gustave Besson on the suggestion of Patrick Gilmore, and one survives in the Harvard University Band where it was restored and features occasionally in concerts.Template:Sfn Another with four valves now owned by Amati Kraslice was originally exhibited by the Czech maker Bohland & Fuchs in 1928.[9] In 1956, one of two 32′ C tubas built c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". by the German maker Rudolf Sander featured in the first comedy Hoffnung Music Festival.Template:Sfn In 2010, a fully playable Riesentuba in 36′ B♭ with four rotary valves was built and resides in Germany at the Markneukirchen Musical Instrument Museum.[10]

Variations

Script error: No such module "Multiple image". The development of tubas took place in several regions throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, which has resulted in many different forms with different bores, bell tapers and sizes, and different types and number of valves.Template:Sfn Broadly, tubas can be divided into two main groups.Template:Sfn

The saxhorn-derived, "French style" tubas have piston valves mounted vertically and operated from the top of the instrument ("top action"), and from the player's viewpoint the leadpipe from the mouthpiece is attached to the left side of the bell, with the valves and tubing positioned to the right of the bell. These are common in France, Britain, and throughout the British Commonwealth, particularly in brass and military bands. The "German style" tubas, derived from the Baß-Tuba and later Červený Kaiser tubas, have the leadpipe attached to the right side of the bell, and the tubing and valves to the left, with the valves mounted in the middle and operated from the front ("front action").Template:Sfn German style tubas usually have rotary valves, although American models based on early 20th century York tubas use piston valves, oriented horizontally so the finger buttons are operated in the same position.Template:Sfn In either group the valves are operated by the right hand, although saxhorn-style instruments with a fourth compensating valve often place the fourth valve on the side, operated by the left hand.Template:Sfn

A tuba with its tubing wrapped for placing the instrument on the player's lap is sometimes called a concert tuba. In the early days of recorded music in the 1920s and 30s, recording tubas were made with the bell pointing forward (Script error: No such module "Lang".) so their sound could more easily be directed towards the recording microphone.

Tubas for marching

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Standard tubas can be played whilst standing and marching, which is the usual practice in British brass bands and military bands. For player comfort and to avoid serious injury, a strap joined to metal rings on the tuba or a leather harness for the bottom bow are used to take the weight, via an over-shoulder strap or waist band.

In North America, most marching bands use the sousaphone, which is designed to be easier to hold and play while marching.[11] The earlier helicon, on which the sousaphone is based, is still used by bands in Europe and other parts of the world.

Some tubas, known as marching tubas, are capable of being converted into a marching configuration, where it rests on the left (or occasionally, right) shoulder with the bell facing directly in front of the player. The leadpipe can be manually screwed on next to the valves, or can swivel between the marching position and a normal upright "concert" position. Some marching tubas, the contrabass bugles, are made only for marching. These were invented in the 1960s for use in modern drum and bugle corps. Originally built in Template:Prime G with only two valves, since 2000 they are built with three or four, in Template:Prime C or Template:Prime B♭.

Valves

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Tubas are made with either piston or rotary valves.Template:Sfn Rotary valves, patented in Prussia by Joseph Riedl in 1835, were first used on tubas in the 1850s by the Austro-Hungarian maker Václav František Červený. The modern piston valve, developed by François Périnet in 1839, had by the 1850s replaced the Berlin valves used on early saxhorn instruments.Template:Sfn

Pistons can be top-action, oriented vertically so the buttons are operated from the top of the instrument, or front-action or side-action, oriented horizontally so the buttons are at the front of the instrument, operated from the side.Template:Sfn Piston valves require regular oiling to keep them freely operating, while rotary valves are sealed, and seldom require oiling. Piston valves are easy to dismantle and reassemble, while rotary valves disassembly and reassembly generally requires an experienced instrument technician.

File:Tuba Melton Meinl Weston.png
C tuba with five rotary valves

Tubas usually have four or five valves, but can range from three to six. Three-valve tubas are usually inexpensive student models or smaller marching instruments to conserve weight; the sousaphone usually has three valves. Among professional players, four and five valve tubas are the most common. F tubas usually have five or six valves,Template:Sfn including the six-valved Script error: No such module "Lang". (Vienna concert tuba) used in Austria.Template:Sfn

A valve works by adding a loop of tubing of a certain length to the main tubing of the instrument, thus lowering its fundamental pitch. On modern tubas, the first three valves work the same way as other valved brass instruments: the first lowers the pitch by two semitones (whole step), the second by one semitone (half step), and the third by three semitones (minor third).

Fourth, fifth, and sixth valves

The fourth valve lowers the pitch by five semitones (a perfect fourth), and used instead of the combination of valves 1 and 3 which is too sharp. When tuned properly, it helps solve the intonation of valve combinations of valves 1, 2, and 3. Using valve 4 with valves 1, 2, and 3 extends the range down to the fundamental pitch, but as with other valve combinations, some of these lower notes will be too sharp.

The fifth and sixth valves, if fitted, provide alternative fingering possibilities to improve intonation, particularly in the octave between the fundamental pitch (pedal tone) and the second partial, and for smooth trills and ease of playing. Usually, the fifth valve is tuned to two and a half semitones (flattened whole step), and the sixth to one and a half semitones (flattened half step). In C tubas with five valves, the fifth valve may be tuned as a flattened whole step or as a minor third, depending on the instrument. The B♭ rarely has a fifth valve, but if fitted is tuned similarly to that of a C tuba.

Compensating valves

Most high-end saxhorn-style tubas in E♭ and B♭, instead of providing a fifth or sixth valve, provide a compensating system on the fourth valve to adjust intonation when using valves in combination.[12] This reduces the need to constantly adjust tuning slides while playing, and also simplifies fingering. The compensating piston valve was invented in the 1870s by David Blaikley, the factory manager at Boosey & Co., who patented it in 1878.Template:Sfn The tubing of the fourth valve is re-routed back through the other three valves to add an extra set of small correcting tubing loops.Template:Sfn This achieves correct intonation in the lower range of the instrument when using the fourth valve.Template:Sfn

The patent limited its application outside of Britain, and tubas with compensating valves are mainly found in Britain and British Commonwealth countries. Compensating valves can make the instrument significantly more "stuffy" or resistant to air flow when compared to a non-compensating tuba, and it also makes the instrument heavier.Template:Sfn

Materials and finish

The tuba is generally constructed of brass, which is either electro-plated with silver or coated with a thin transparent lacquer.Template:Sfn Unfinished brass will eventually tarnish and must be periodically polished to maintain its appearance.[13]

Manufacturers

There are many types of tubas that are manufactured in Europe, the United States, and Asia. In Europe, the predominant models that are professionally used are Meinl-Weston (Germany) and Miraphone (Germany). Asian brands include the Yamaha Corporation (Japan) and Jupiter Instruments (Taiwan). Holton Instrument Company and King Musical Instruments are some of the most well known brands from the United States.[14]

Performance

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Notation

In orchestras, concert bands, and US military bands, the tuba is written at concert pitch in the bass clef as a non-transposing instrument, like the orchestral trombone, cello, and bassoon. High passages are seldom written in tenor clef. Tuba players reading music in bass clef must therefore learn the valve fingerings for each different size of tuba. Players are used to reading at least four leger lines above and below the bass staff.

In British brass bands, all instruments except the bass trombone are transposing instruments using the treble clef notation popularized in France by the instrument maker Adolphe Sax for his families of instruments.Template:Sfn Thus the tuba parts are notated in treble clef, sounding an octave and a sixth below written for E♭ tuba, like the baritone saxophone, or two octaves and a second for B♭ tuba, like the contrabass clarinet. This allows band musicians to change instruments without having to learn new fingerings for the same written music.

<score lang="lilypond"> \relative {

   \cadenzaOn
   \clef treble \key c \major
   c'8[ ^ \markup \tiny "written, transposing" d e f] g4 c
s4 \bar "
Brass band transposing treble clef notation, and the resulting concert pitch for tubas in B♭ and E♭

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Concert band music sometimes provides tuba parts in E♭ and B♭ treble clef as well, to accommodate players from either background, although professional players are usually familiar with either notation.Template:Sfn

Range

The written range of the tuba is large, partly because different sized instruments have been used at different times and in different regions. The CC or BB♭ Kontrabaß tubas called for by Wagner and later German composers could scarcely reach middle C, while the range of the euphonium-like French C tuba built an octave higher in early 20th century French music ranges from its pedal F1 to the C5 above middle C. On any tuba, the range from F1 to C4 (middle C) is easily accessible, but the full working range from contemporary solo repertoire includes the pedal range to at least B♭0, and extends up to at least C5.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

<score lang="lilypond"> {

   \new Staff \with { \omit Score.TimeSignature }
   \clef bass \key c \major \cadenzaOn \omit Stem
   c,,1 _ \markup \tiny "C₁"
   \glissando
   a' ^ \markup \tiny "A₄"
   \grace c4 ^ \markup \tiny "↑"
}</score>
Range of the tuba; higher and lower notes are possible.

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Higher notes are possible since the upper range is limited only by the fitness of the players' embouchure, although notes above the bell cutoff frequency around the tenth harmonic are difficult to centre and continuous glissandi are possible, making valve fingering largely redundant.Template:Sfn The wide bore profile of the tuba means that pedal notes are easily produced, compared to other brass instruments.Template:Sfn

Resonance and false tones

Some tubas have a strong and useful resonance that is not in the well-known harmonic series. For example, most large B♭ tubas have a strong resonance at low E♭ (E♭1, 39 Hz), which is between the fundamental and the second harmonic (an octave higher than the fundamental). These alternative resonances are often known as false tones or privileged tones. Adding the six semitones provided by the three valves, these alternative resonances let the instrument play chromatically down to the fundamental of the open bugle (which is a 29 Hz B♭0). The addition of valves below that note can lower the instrument a further six semitones to a 20 Hz E0. Thus, even three-valved instruments with good alternative resonances can produce very low sounds in the hands of skilled players; instruments with four valves can play even lower.

The lowest note in the widely known repertoire is a 16 Hz double-pedal C0 in the William Kraft piece Encounters II, which is often played using a timed flutter tongue rather than by buzzing the lips. The fundamental of this pitch borders on infrasound and its overtones define the pitch in the listener's ear.

Jazz

File:Riverside Stompers - Martin Stanzel solo - Dieter Bietak 2007.jpg
"Kaiserbass" (tuba in B♭) and cornet

The tuba has been used in jazz since the genre's inception. In the earliest years, bands often used a tuba for outdoor playing and a double bass for indoor performances. In this context, the tuba was sometimes called "brass bass", as opposed to the double bass (string bass). Many musicians played both instruments.

This practice was mostly used in the New Orleans jazz scene. The tuba was used most frequently with the Louis Armstrong groups and prominent in the album Hot Five.

In modern jazz, it is not unknown for their players to take solos. New Orleans style brass bands like the Dirty Dozen Brass Band and the Rebirth Brass Band use a sousaphone as the bass instrument. Bill Barber played tuba on several Miles Davis albums, including the sessions compiled as the Birth of the Cool and Miles Ahead. New York City-based tubist Marcus Rojas performed frequently with Henry Threadgill.[15] Starting in 1955, Stan Kenton made his fifth trombonist double on tuba, namely on ballads to make use of the tuba's distinct warm, enveloping sound.[16]

Repertoire

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A symphony orchestra typically includes a single tuba, although a second is sometimes called for in large works, such as Stravinsky's ballet The Rite of Spring (1913), and Havergal Brian's Symphony No. 1 (1927). The tuba serves as the bass of the orchestral brass section, and it can reinforce the bass voices of the strings and woodwinds.[17] It provides the bass of brass quintets and choirs, although sometimes a small brass ensemble will use the euphonium or bass trombone as the lowest voice.

Since the mid-20th century, a considerable body of repertoire has amassed for tuba as a solo instrument,Template:Sfn both with ensemble or piano accompaniment, and unaccompanied.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The tuba is the principal bass instrument in concert bands, brass bands and military bands, usually two to four in number. Brass band music has two parts, for E♭ and B♭ tubas respectively, often referred to as basses.Template:Sfn[18] Tubas are also used in marching bands, drum and bugle corps and in jazz bands.

Well known and influential orchestral parts for the tuba include:

Notable concertos have been written for the tuba by many composers, including Ralph Vaughan Williams (Tuba Concerto), Edward Gregson, John Williams, Alexander Arutiunian, Eric Ewazen, James Barnes, Joseph Hallman, Martin Ellerby, Philip Sparke,Template:Sfn Kalevi Aho, Josef Tal, Bruce Broughton (Tuba Concerto), John Golland, Roger Steptoe, David Carlson, Jennifer Higdon (Tuba Concerto), and Marcus Paus (Tuba Mirum).


See also

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References

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Bibliography

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External links

Template:Brass instruments Template:Bass (sound) Template:Authority control