I started out playing trumpet, then switched to euphonium, then baritone, back to trumpet and euphonium, and now Eb alto, my response to “what that?” has always been “tiny tuba”
Good work in general, but there are a few glaring errors. I will try to correct a few of them: - Euphoniums are really just tenor-pitched tubas; they are in the same family and have the same bore profile (degree of conicity). Anyone who thinks that the euphonium is NOT in the same family as tubas is wrong. - In the American Civil War, the military bands used by the Union Army (and to a lesser degree by Confederate Army bands) were comprised of brass instruments exclusively of the Saxhorn type, which has a bore profile wider than a baritone and less conical than a euphonium. I have never seen anyone or any source refer to any Civil War brass instruments as "euphoniums", and that is because they were not in use in such bands. Indeed, what we call a "euphonium" today did not even exist during this period. The instrument that is shown in this video under the description of "Over the Shoulder Euphonium" is in fact an Over the Shoulder Saxhorn. Some, but not all, modern true "baritones" are types of Saxhorns, but many others are not. This is easy to verify, since the Saxhorn family uses two slightly different bore profiles, defined in the patent, and simple measurements of any horn in question can be compared to the patent to see of that instrument is or is not a Saxhorn. - The instrument with the forward angled bell that is being called "American Euphonium" is actually what is called an "American Baritone". Its bore is rather Saxhorn like without quite being a Saxhorn, and is wider than true baritones yet not as wide as euphoniums. These are virtually always three valve instruments. They were designed to provide an inexpensive, easy to carry, forward projecting, light weight 'baritone voice' brass instrument, and were quire popular with school bands. By today's definitions, they are neither baritones nor euphoniums. - The instrument with the oval body and bell curving off to one side is the German "Bariton". While there is some confusing variation in nomenclature between manufacturers and musicians, these are mostly NOT a kind a euphonium, but for the most part are more euphonium than they are baritone. They are great for certain types of music, and are widely used in German "oom pah" bands, but they are a poor substitute for a euphonium since they don't deliver the same quality of sound.
12:30 Apparently, I have been playing this for the past 5 years and I always thought it was a weird baritone but just slightly different, not quite fitting with either baritone or euphonium, and the band director seemed confused with it as well. Knowing this is different makes me feel a lot better, and after some research I found some people apparently call it a baritonium, so now I just tell people I play baritonium and nobody understands what I am saying, its quite funny. Ty for this video!
The euphonium is a glitch in the simulation. It doesn't exist for everybody. Some people say the word 'euphonium' is not recognized by spell-checkers. Fact Check: all spell-checkers recognize euphonium. These same people claim they live in a universe where euphoniums exist in several configurations instead of the international standard version that was developed 350 years ago. The craziest theory is the Tuba Mandela Effect where people swear they've seen and heard a euphonium but they actually have not because their universe only has tubas.
Damn kid, you are a walking encyclopedia, much respect My GF is bringing home her Grand Fathers double bell Euphonium from Kansas later this month for me to restore
actually a really good in-depth video about this topic! Great work! One small addendum about flugelhorns, they're actually used massively in the Netherlands and Belgium as the 'main' instrument of the typical band style there, the 'fanfare orchestra', the same way brass bands have cornets and concert bands have clarinets. This band type also traditionally uses baritones like in brass bands, but over the past 30-odd years they have been replaced almost completely by euphoniums too because of the reasons you named in the video, which in fact creates an issue in the overall sound of the band (euphoniums just don't blend as well with (alto/tenor/french)horns and trombones as baritones do). Luckily there are still some bands (including mine) that have kept true to the original instrumentation.
Excellent exposition here! Well done from an old euphoniumist! I thought the GD inserted to the last "Wessex also makes these" was particularly appropriate! I really enjoyed this. I was also pleased with the mention of Trent's channel. He really talks funny with his Kiwi vowel fornications, but he has some really interesting and totally weird things. Good job! Oh yeah - and having the Holst playing in the background was perfect. Some of my absolute favorite music - which, of course, makes wonderful use of our previous euphonia!
When you said there isn't a double bell baritone, you were kind of correct in the since that there is no double bell with the main bell being a baritone. Every double bell euphonium I have played has sounded and felt like a baritone to me when playing through the second bell so I would personally consider the double bell euphonium and double bell baritone the same instrument. Also Wessex makes a brand new double bell as well and it is genuinely fantastic.
6:23 after randomly looking at the history of marching instruments one day and coming back to this video, turns out that Bb/F marching instruments were made in tandom with the G types in the 70s. Companies like Dynasty and Getzen wanted to expand their market beyond drum corps and market also towards colleges and highschool marching bands. They did this by manipulating some of their instruments in the factories, adding valves and of course changing keys.
I played this to learn a bit as my son is starting to play the euphonium in band this year, but it turned out to be one of the most educational and humorous videos I've seen in a while, and those are two of the genres I watch the most. Well done!
Amazing video. I'm a woodwind player and have always been confused about the euphonium and the history and multifaceted nature of all the instruments you talked about. Love the shirt btw! :)
My high school for some reason had four or five altoniums. When we discovered them in the corner of the locker room my band director was quite disappointed.
I was actually given a euphonium in middle school because I was too small to play the baritone. I ended up switching to baritone in HS but I always just tell people I played baritone the whole time, a lot less questions asked that way 😅
That doesn’t make sense… Euphonium is bigger than baritone and people usually begin with baritone when they’re small and later when they’ve grown they switch to euphonium. Are you sure you didn’t switch up the names?
As a trombonist, I believe we don't see many superbones out there because trombonists typically see valves as cheating when playing fast. Good trombonists don't need a valve section, they can just tongue fast enough. They are seen as unnecessary and dumb.
As a sousaphone and BBb Tuba player I can agree fully with what you say and it absolutly kills your shoulder if you have it on for more than a few hours.
Very informative and well-researched. I love the pictures of those weird vintage instruments (I am a collector myself). I used to play Cornet, Trumpet, then Tuba, then Euphonium. Now I play French Horn but also have a vintage Ophicleide (but did you know Wessex also makes them?) that I play for fun. You are right when you say it sounds especially good in the higher register.
Great video and research! I sincerely hope you get more subscribers and you continue talking about brass instruments because you have great potential and I also really like your humour. Loved the plastic euphonium and the Tuba band plastic edition videos too.
As a composer and overall acoustic instrument enthusiast, I am at least aware and able to visually - if not also aurally - recognize tons of instruments from all around the world, to the point of surprising even musicians of those countries with instruments even they don't know about. But I always felt like exploring the Western brass family would be a pathway to much knowledge some consider to be ... unnatural - and innumerous. I finally decided to look into it, ran into this video and.... I was more right than I could have ever known. Just that mess of who calls what a tenor/alto horn means this is impossible knowledge to keep straight without being deep in this world as a brass player like you could be, lol. I'm halfway in and this is an amazing video, thank you. Main thing I wanted to get straight was understand these mini-horn/tuba variants better. I know of the Euphonium and Wagner Tuben but felt like I've seen too many variations or similar instruments to be consistent. Now I know why. Finally, I'm also a sort of writer working on a sci-fi universe - I think I'll definitely be bringing back double-belled and rear-facing instruments in it (and any other cool instruments I see later, like that superbone)!
13:26 The composer Paul Hindemith wrote a beautiful sonata for Althorn. Please check out the first movement performed by „Anneke Scott“ on RUclips! She plays it on a forward facing Althorn looking like a bigger flugelhorn.
I have one remark about the Tornister tuba. As you mentioned, it also comes in the key of b-flat. However, having that type of tuba as the foundation of your orchestra isn't working (at least to me), due to it's small size. I myself am the proud owner of a Conn 25J, a large bore (0.773") instrument with a 23.62 inch or 60 cm bell. And believe me, the sound of it is just beyond fabulous. I'm able to literally give a broad bass-sound with ease. In my opinion a Tornister tuba is nice as a practice instrument in a hotel room. Easy to carry, but that's practically all.
anytime someone asks me '"what is that" and i tell them and they have NO idea.....i then say......it's a miniature tuba....then the response is always "OH".......and i play the BARITONE not the Euphonium....lol and i have a removable bell....and it's 75 years old....it sounds incredible!!!
Okay, now you've upset me, flügelhorns DO NOT have bad intonation. I think most people think this(like I used to) because in most highschool bands, the flügels are really crappy cheap ones. They are harder to play then the trumpet for sure, but quality flügelhorns have no intonation problems and are really pleasant to play. Especially good German rotary valve ones.
Often left out of the Eurocentric history of brass instruments is Allen Dodworth. An American bandsman that had a family of conical bore instruments made for his band in the 1840s before Adoloh Sax named them after himself.
I love this thanks! I play uk tenor/alto horn in a brass band and have a few others which took a while to name....one came out of a junk shop....I love them all
I still play my 2-valve, G-keyed, baritone bugle in a marching band. Not having a 3rd valve is beyond frustrating, especially since I'm the one who has to arrange the parts for the corps and must write around the fact that we can't hit certain notes.
I played the sousaphone for a few years in high school, that's probably where my current back pain comes from. We had the fiberglass ones but they were still heavy.
The story I heard is that the flugelhorn, alto and baritone horns were all developed together as part of the Saxhorn family. The soprano saxhorn eventually replaced the older instrument that used to be called a flugelhorn and took over the name. Sax horns are characterized by modest to moderate flare, except for the flugelhorn which needed stronger flare to distinguish the tone from the cornet. The euphonium actually is a tenor tuba, having the same flare in the tubing but in a smaller size. Next, maybe you could do a video on circular instruments. They start with the valved posthorn, which is a Bb soprano instrument, but what intermediate steps are there on the way to the French horn and sousaphone?
My school system had a bass trumpet, and everyone who played it loved it. I only got to play it on our middle school "jazz band" shows, and for a day or two before each show (to get used to it). I would have loved to keep it instead of my baritone. I honestly don't remember why (40+ years ago). After watching this, I wonder if it was actually a bass trumpet or one of the other similar horns you showed.
Bravo! Finally, someone gets it right! Well done. Found myself laughing more and more toward the end. Still playing my euphonium in band twice a week since 1968 (Besson New Standard)
Great job ! Very extensive landscape of todays Euphonium world. May I add that instrument makers have always tended to use the most innovative technology of their time : wood technology was at its best in Stradivarius time, and it is no wonder that a Belgian instrument maker ( Adolphe Sax) used the locomotive valve and piston technology to make « easily transposing » brass instruments : Belgium had the first railway infrastructure when it was the first or second economy in the World. And there is another thing to consider : during the XIXth century, armies were developing in Europe, and had « competitions » outside wars : they would show up their armies in musical marches - a tradition kept in the UK and USA. But at that time hey lacked Bass instruments… Bassoons were uncomfortable on horse, - less than double basses though… - and horns weren’t chromatic in their bass register. So they ( I mean Sax), who was born in a metalwork dedicated part of Belgium, used the industry piston and valves technology to built the chromatic Bass brass instruments showing-up European armies needed ! At that time they had « military music (and drill) demonstrations » all over Europe to build up their Nations reputation, and big brass ensemble were part of the popular success - and fear- induced. Composers -like Wagner- even asked for specific brass instruments and tones, something they could not obtain from the more traditional string instruments.
Maan, I had such a great time, imagining all the musicians you offended or suggested us to offend 🤣 Also, very nice video. But, I'm not saying to argue this, but I hate some instruments you called "in the tuba family" to be called like that. I'm such a fanatic of the smooth brass instrument sound that anything that is more cylindrical than an absolute funnel don't make me interested. And euphonium ends up being my ultimate instrument with a great compromise on range. Not too high like a flugelhorn, not too low like a contrabass tuba. TBF, if someone makes a huge bell flugelhorn with 2 octave valves and compensation for all octaves, it might become amazing! But it probably fails with a very difficult mouthpiece, since the chances of being able to use the optimal mouthpiece all the time drops. It probably becomes a french horn with a bit more conical tubing.
Im pretty sure that when the valves are on the front and the bell pointed forward its a baritone if you look in the tradition of excellence Baritone/Euphonium BC second edition on the very first page(behind the cover) you'll see what i mean
As curiosity, the alto-horn/tenor-horn/alto euphonium... in some regions of Spain is called "ONOBEN". Nobody knows why this strange word, some people thinks that its a mispronunciation to Spanish of the english/german words "horn Eb".
The Marching Euphonium did not come from the tenor bugle. They were completely different instruments. The Tenor bugle wasn’t even a tenor pitched instrument. It had the same exact length of tubing as any other G Soprano bugle at the time, with the only difference being that the Tenor bugle had a much bigger bore and bell, causing the sound to be much fuller. Later on, the baritone bugle was invented, and it was a true baritone voiced bugle, a whole octave below the Soprano. This however was still extremely cylindrical and had a small bell as pictured at 6:19 The “Bass-Baritone” went on to be a real Baritone Bugle, it had a slightly larger bore than a concert baritone, and usually had a bell flare and size similar to a concert baritone. In the late 50’s and 60’s, horn instructors wanted more color so the first G/D/F Valve/Rotor Euphoniums were made by Smith Music Sales and Whaley Royce. They obviously evolved to be changed to G/F/F#, then had two piston valves, three piston valves, and now are replaced with modern Bb Marching Euphoniums.
OH MY GOD, IT'S IN HERE, SO MY EUPHONIUM AT SCHOOL STOPPED WORKING, JUST IN TIME FOR BASKETBALL PEP BADN AROUND NOVEMBER DECEMBER, LONG STORY SHORT, I HAVE BEEN PLAYING THE VALVE TROMBONE SINCE THEN, AND ONLY TODAY, DID I GET THE EUPHONIUM BACK(a spare) AND I FOUND YOUR CHANNEL TODAY. I WANNA VOUCH, THE VALVE TROMBONE IS SILLY, BUT IT GETS THE JOB DONE, PLAYS JUST LIKE A EUPHONIUM, BUT IS JUST PUNCHIER AND MORE TRUMPET LIKE, THINK OF A TRUMPET AND A EUPHONIUM HAVING A BABY, IT'S THAT, BUT YEA, THEY'RE GOOD INSTRUMENTS, THANK GOD I HAVE MY EUPHONIUM, AND I JUST SUBSCRIBED
As SAX was very influential in the development of brass valved instruments. There fore I think the history in a brief form should have been an essential step right after the introduction and how Saxhorns could also fit in with Euphoniums and Baritones.
Wait, I wasn't expecting the Volkswagen Caddy joke 🤣 Explanation to those who didn't understand: The word for "cat" is "kedi" in Turkish, which sounds similar to "Caddy". And Volkswagen Caddy is a van. Hence, a "cat" becomes "a Turkish van" 🤣
The German style euphonium/Kaiser baritone looks suspiciously like a Wagner tuba (more of a French horn variant with _some_ tuba characteristics, despite the name). How do you tell them apart?
Great research. Thank you for making this. Drum corps didnt use the Bb back in the day but they did exist. The one I played in 1990 looked old even then. I ran across a little more about the origin of the marching euphonium here ruclips.net/video/IW3-oazhKYA/видео.htmlsi=nLh20BtebxLGEzWO
I have seen an example of someone making their own sudrophone from recycled instrument parts which you can find on RUclips. If you get good enough at metalworking maybe you can make your own stupid brass instruments for cheap.
I started out playing trumpet, then switched to euphonium, then baritone, back to trumpet and euphonium, and now Eb alto, my response to “what that?” has always been “tiny tuba”
Same here I went from trumpet to Euphonium
😂
I also switched from Trumpet to Euph. Thats also my go to for describing it lol
Good work in general, but there are a few glaring errors. I will try to correct a few of them:
- Euphoniums are really just tenor-pitched tubas; they are in the same family and have the same bore profile (degree of conicity). Anyone who thinks that the euphonium is NOT in the same family as tubas is wrong.
- In the American Civil War, the military bands used by the Union Army (and to a lesser degree by Confederate Army bands) were comprised of brass instruments exclusively of the Saxhorn type, which has a bore profile wider than a baritone and less conical than a euphonium. I have never seen anyone or any source refer to any Civil War brass instruments as "euphoniums", and that is because they were not in use in such bands. Indeed, what we call a "euphonium" today did not even exist during this period. The instrument that is shown in this video under the description of "Over the Shoulder Euphonium" is in fact an Over the Shoulder Saxhorn. Some, but not all, modern true "baritones" are types of Saxhorns, but many others are not. This is easy to verify, since the Saxhorn family uses two slightly different bore profiles, defined in the patent, and simple measurements of any horn in question can be compared to the patent to see of that instrument is or is not a Saxhorn.
- The instrument with the forward angled bell that is being called "American Euphonium" is actually what is called an "American Baritone". Its bore is rather Saxhorn like without quite being a Saxhorn, and is wider than true baritones yet not as wide as euphoniums. These are virtually always three valve instruments. They were designed to provide an inexpensive, easy to carry, forward projecting, light weight 'baritone voice' brass instrument, and were quire popular with school bands. By today's definitions, they are neither baritones nor euphoniums.
- The instrument with the oval body and bell curving off to one side is the German "Bariton". While there is some confusing variation in nomenclature between manufacturers and musicians, these are mostly NOT a kind a euphonium, but for the most part are more euphonium than they are baritone. They are great for certain types of music, and are widely used in German "oom pah" bands, but they are a poor substitute for a euphonium since they don't deliver the same quality of sound.
Yes please, 20 minute complicated discussion of a niche topic 👀
You know you really are an obscure and underused instrument when people mistake you by an euphonium 💀
12:30 Apparently, I have been playing this for the past 5 years and I always thought it was a weird baritone but just slightly different, not quite fitting with either baritone or euphonium, and the band director seemed confused with it as well. Knowing this is different makes me feel a lot better, and after some research I found some people apparently call it a baritonium, so now I just tell people I play baritonium and nobody understands what I am saying, its quite funny. Ty for this video!
The euphonium is a glitch in the simulation. It doesn't exist for everybody. Some people say the word 'euphonium' is not recognized by spell-checkers. Fact Check: all spell-checkers recognize euphonium. These same people claim they live in a universe where euphoniums exist in several configurations instead of the international standard version that was developed 350 years ago. The craziest theory is the Tuba Mandela Effect where people swear they've seen and heard a euphonium but they actually have not because their universe only has tubas.
Damn kid, you are a walking encyclopedia, much respect
My GF is bringing home her Grand Fathers double bell Euphonium from Kansas later this month for me to restore
actually a really good in-depth video about this topic! Great work!
One small addendum about flugelhorns, they're actually used massively in the Netherlands and Belgium as the 'main' instrument of the typical band style there, the 'fanfare orchestra', the same way brass bands have cornets and concert bands have clarinets.
This band type also traditionally uses baritones like in brass bands, but over the past 30-odd years they have been replaced almost completely by euphoniums too because of the reasons you named in the video, which in fact creates an issue in the overall sound of the band (euphoniums just don't blend as well with (alto/tenor/french)horns and trombones as baritones do). Luckily there are still some bands (including mine) that have kept true to the original instrumentation.
Love your presentation and especially the Holst in the background which reminds me of my playing days in HS and college
Excellent exposition here! Well done from an old euphoniumist! I thought the GD inserted to the last "Wessex also makes these" was particularly appropriate! I really enjoyed this. I was also pleased with the mention of Trent's channel. He really talks funny with his Kiwi vowel fornications, but he has some really interesting and totally weird things. Good job!
Oh yeah - and having the Holst playing in the background was perfect. Some of my absolute favorite music - which, of course, makes wonderful use of our previous euphonia!
When you said there isn't a double bell baritone, you were kind of correct in the since that there is no double bell with the main bell being a baritone. Every double bell euphonium I have played has sounded and felt like a baritone to me when playing through the second bell so I would personally consider the double bell euphonium and double bell baritone the same instrument. Also Wessex makes a brand new double bell as well and it is genuinely fantastic.
6:23 after randomly looking at the history of marching instruments one day and coming back to this video, turns out that Bb/F marching instruments were made in tandom with the G types in the 70s.
Companies like Dynasty and Getzen wanted to expand their market beyond drum corps and market also towards colleges and highschool marching bands.
They did this by manipulating some of their instruments in the factories, adding valves and of course changing keys.
I played this to learn a bit as my son is starting to play the euphonium in band this year, but it turned out to be one of the most educational and humorous videos I've seen in a while, and those are two of the genres I watch the most. Well done!
Amazing video. I'm a woodwind player and have always been confused about the euphonium and the history and multifaceted nature of all the instruments you talked about.
Love the shirt btw! :)
My high school for some reason had four or five altoniums. When we discovered them in the corner of the locker room my band director was quite disappointed.
the chad himself has returned.
I was actually given a euphonium in middle school because I was too small to play the baritone. I ended up switching to baritone in HS but I always just tell people I played baritone the whole time, a lot less questions asked that way 😅
You know that the euphonium is bigger than the baritone right...
That doesn’t make sense… Euphonium is bigger than baritone and people usually begin with baritone when they’re small and later when they’ve grown they switch to euphonium. Are you sure you didn’t switch up the names?
Baritones are like 60% of the weight and height of euphoniums
Euphonium is literally larger
Euphonium is kinda easy but like yeah its bigger but more practical than baritone
As a trombonist, I believe we don't see many superbones out there because trombonists typically see valves as cheating when playing fast. Good trombonists don't need a valve section, they can just tongue fast enough. They are seen as unnecessary and dumb.
Trombonium? The element I’ve been looking for all these years?
As a now former Euphonium player, this video was actually quite intriguing to me, and it was nice to learn the different euphoniums as well
As a sousaphone and BBb Tuba player I can agree fully with what you say and it absolutly kills your shoulder if you have it on for more than a few hours.
Such great information. Also, love your humor.
as a euphoniumist, i am used to my fellow schoolmates calling it a tuba.
Very informative and well-researched. I love the pictures of those weird vintage instruments (I am a collector myself). I used to play Cornet, Trumpet, then Tuba, then Euphonium. Now I play French Horn but also have a vintage Ophicleide (but did you know Wessex also makes them?) that I play for fun. You are right when you say it sounds especially good in the higher register.
Great video and research! I sincerely hope you get more subscribers and you continue talking about brass instruments because you have great potential and I also really like your humour. Loved the plastic euphonium and the Tuba band plastic edition videos too.
Euphonium's in the wild. Love it! Thank you for creating content for the ignored.
As a composer and overall acoustic instrument enthusiast, I am at least aware and able to visually - if not also aurally - recognize tons of instruments from all around the world, to the point of surprising even musicians of those countries with instruments even they don't know about. But I always felt like exploring the Western brass family would be a pathway to much knowledge some consider to be ... unnatural - and innumerous.
I finally decided to look into it, ran into this video and.... I was more right than I could have ever known. Just that mess of who calls what a tenor/alto horn means this is impossible knowledge to keep straight without being deep in this world as a brass player like you could be, lol. I'm halfway in and this is an amazing video, thank you.
Main thing I wanted to get straight was understand these mini-horn/tuba variants better. I know of the Euphonium and Wagner Tuben but felt like I've seen too many variations or similar instruments to be consistent. Now I know why.
Finally, I'm also a sort of writer working on a sci-fi universe - I think I'll definitely be bringing back double-belled and rear-facing instruments in it (and any other cool instruments I see later, like that superbone)!
13:26 The composer Paul Hindemith wrote a beautiful sonata for Althorn. Please check out the first movement performed by „Anneke Scott“ on RUclips! She plays it on a forward facing Althorn looking like a bigger flugelhorn.
yay more euphonium stuff
This is just the coolest ever, about our family of brass, BRASS POWER!!!
I have one remark about the Tornister tuba. As you mentioned, it also comes in the key of b-flat. However, having that type of tuba as the foundation of your orchestra isn't working (at least to me), due to it's small size. I myself am the proud owner of a Conn 25J, a large bore (0.773") instrument with a 23.62 inch or 60 cm bell.
And believe me, the sound of it is just beyond fabulous. I'm able to literally give a broad bass-sound with ease. In my opinion a Tornister tuba is nice as a practice instrument in a hotel room. Easy to carry, but that's practically all.
anytime someone asks me '"what is that" and i tell them and they have NO idea.....i then say......it's a miniature tuba....then the response is always "OH".......and i play the BARITONE not the Euphonium....lol and i have a removable bell....and it's 75 years old....it sounds incredible!!!
Okay, now you've upset me, flügelhorns DO NOT have bad intonation.
I think most people think this(like I used to) because in most highschool bands, the flügels are really crappy cheap ones.
They are harder to play then the trumpet for sure, but quality flügelhorns have no intonation problems and are really pleasant to play. Especially good German rotary valve ones.
Often left out of the Eurocentric history of brass instruments is Allen Dodworth. An American bandsman that had a family of conical bore instruments made for his band in the 1840s before Adoloh Sax named them after himself.
I subscribed because of the Turkish Van kitty. That was hilarious!!
His name is Timoshenko, he is extremely silly.
is that the Rocket Jump Waltz I hear at 18:35 ?
Great video! The Holst piece in the background is one of the things I've been working on recently and I thought I was imagining it for a while lol.
I will still fight anyone who calls an Euphonium a Tuba.
This one guy really said, nice tuba, I don’t care if u see this, NIXON
someone once called my french horn a tuba
What about calling it a baritone?
@@jeice13 acceptable
@@jeice13They would be long gone
I love this thanks! I play uk tenor/alto horn in a brass band and have a few others which took a while to name....one came out of a junk shop....I love them all
I still play my 2-valve, G-keyed, baritone bugle in a marching band. Not having a 3rd valve is beyond frustrating, especially since I'm the one who has to arrange the parts for the corps and must write around the fact that we can't hit certain notes.
I played the sousaphone for a few years in high school, that's probably where my current back pain comes from. We had the fiberglass ones but they were still heavy.
The story I heard is that the flugelhorn, alto and baritone horns were all developed together as part of the Saxhorn family. The soprano saxhorn eventually replaced the older instrument that used to be called a flugelhorn and took over the name. Sax horns are characterized by modest to moderate flare, except for the flugelhorn which needed stronger flare to distinguish the tone from the cornet.
The euphonium actually is a tenor tuba, having the same flare in the tubing but in a smaller size.
Next, maybe you could do a video on circular instruments. They start with the valved posthorn, which is a Bb soprano instrument, but what intermediate steps are there on the way to the French horn and sousaphone?
Your humor is superb, and I learned quite a bit :)
I love 2nd Suite in F, so glad you used it
thank you for someone finally knowing this goddamn instrument
My school system had a bass trumpet, and everyone who played it loved it. I only got to play it on our middle school "jazz band" shows, and for a day or two before each show (to get used to it). I would have loved to keep it instead of my baritone. I honestly don't remember why (40+ years ago). After watching this, I wonder if it was actually a bass trumpet or one of the other similar horns you showed.
Bravo! Finally, someone gets it right! Well done. Found myself laughing more and more toward the end. Still playing my euphonium in band twice a week since 1968 (Besson New Standard)
Is that second suite for military band in f in the background? Epic euphonium solo for sure
Is the cofrect plural 'euphoniums' o 'euphonia'?'
Man this is such a well produced vid. Great music choices too btw hehe
The Tenor Tuba refers to the Wagner Tuba in B-flat. When Wagner had them developed, they were made in B-flat tenor and F bass.
Great job ! Very extensive landscape of todays Euphonium world. May I add that instrument makers have always tended to use the most innovative technology of their time : wood technology was at its best in Stradivarius time, and it is no wonder that a Belgian instrument maker ( Adolphe Sax) used the locomotive valve and piston technology to make « easily transposing » brass instruments : Belgium had the first railway infrastructure when it was the first or second economy in the World. And there is another thing to consider : during the XIXth century, armies were developing in Europe, and had « competitions » outside wars : they would show up their armies in musical marches - a tradition kept in the UK and USA. But at that time hey lacked Bass instruments… Bassoons were uncomfortable on horse, - less than double basses though… - and horns weren’t chromatic in their bass register. So they ( I mean Sax), who was born in a metalwork dedicated part of Belgium, used the industry piston and valves technology to built the chromatic Bass brass instruments showing-up European armies needed ! At that time they had « military music (and drill) demonstrations » all over Europe to build up their Nations reputation, and big brass ensemble were part of the popular success - and fear- induced. Composers -like Wagner- even asked for specific brass instruments and tones, something they could not obtain from the more traditional string instruments.
Excellent video and very useful. Thank you.
Maan, I had such a great time, imagining all the musicians you offended or suggested us to offend 🤣
Also, very nice video. But, I'm not saying to argue this, but I hate some instruments you called "in the tuba family" to be called like that. I'm such a fanatic of the smooth brass instrument sound that anything that is more cylindrical than an absolute funnel don't make me interested. And euphonium ends up being my ultimate instrument with a great compromise on range. Not too high like a flugelhorn, not too low like a contrabass tuba.
TBF, if someone makes a huge bell flugelhorn with 2 octave valves and compensation for all octaves, it might become amazing! But it probably fails with a very difficult mouthpiece, since the chances of being able to use the optimal mouthpiece all the time drops. It probably becomes a french horn with a bit more conical tubing.
I just got switched to euphonium from trombone, I have been playing trombone for 6-7 years lmao hopefully I grasp it well
6:06 If you add valves to a bugle, it isn't a bugle any more, right?
finally a euphonium player who knows their instrument is a tuba
also the baritone and alto horn arent tubas, they are part of the saxhorn family along with the flugelhorn.
Im pretty sure that when the valves are on the front and the bell pointed forward its a baritone if you look in the tradition of excellence Baritone/Euphonium BC second edition on the very first page(behind the cover) you'll see what i mean
6:33 This one's practically a Wagner tuba.
Having played a contrabass bugle, yes they are awesome.
Great video! well researched.
As curiosity, the alto-horn/tenor-horn/alto euphonium... in some regions of Spain is called "ONOBEN". Nobody knows why this strange word, some people thinks that its a mispronunciation to Spanish of the english/german words "horn Eb".
HES BACK
The Marching Euphonium did not come from the tenor bugle. They were completely different instruments.
The Tenor bugle wasn’t even a tenor pitched instrument. It had the same exact length of tubing as any other G Soprano bugle at the time, with the only difference being that the Tenor bugle had a much bigger bore and bell, causing the sound to be much fuller.
Later on, the baritone bugle was invented, and it was a true baritone voiced bugle, a whole octave below the Soprano. This however was still extremely cylindrical and had a small bell as pictured at 6:19
The “Bass-Baritone” went on to be a real Baritone Bugle, it had a slightly larger bore than a concert baritone, and usually had a bell flare and size similar to a concert baritone.
In the late 50’s and 60’s, horn instructors wanted more color so the first G/D/F Valve/Rotor Euphoniums were made by Smith Music Sales and Whaley Royce.
They obviously evolved to be changed to G/F/F#, then had two piston valves, three piston valves, and now are replaced with modern Bb Marching Euphoniums.
Serpent is soooooo difficult. Hardest instrument Ive played. But I love it.
8:57 "a mini-tuba". You don't have to diminish the instrument just because it's a tenor instrument. Tenor tubas are just as much tubas as bass tubas.
Mini only means smaller.
glad to see you back
Good job, young man! Well done!
Epic video, what pose, what power this man emits
Btw, I have that Plastic Kaiser one.
Fun fact: The Serpent was used in the music for the science-horror movie Aliens.
OH MY GOD, IT'S IN HERE, SO MY EUPHONIUM AT SCHOOL STOPPED WORKING, JUST IN TIME FOR BASKETBALL PEP BADN AROUND NOVEMBER DECEMBER, LONG STORY SHORT, I HAVE BEEN PLAYING THE VALVE TROMBONE SINCE THEN, AND ONLY TODAY, DID I GET THE EUPHONIUM BACK(a spare) AND I FOUND YOUR CHANNEL TODAY.
I WANNA VOUCH, THE VALVE TROMBONE IS SILLY, BUT IT GETS THE JOB DONE, PLAYS JUST LIKE A EUPHONIUM, BUT IS JUST PUNCHIER AND MORE TRUMPET LIKE, THINK OF A TRUMPET AND A EUPHONIUM HAVING A BABY, IT'S THAT, BUT YEA, THEY'RE GOOD INSTRUMENTS, THANK GOD I HAVE MY EUPHONIUM, AND I JUST SUBSCRIBED
DO YOU WRITE ESSAYS LIKE THIS, COMMA SPLICES FOR NO REASON LIKE THIS?
@@boingy6017 :( I was just excited. Sorry
sick rocket jump waltz
Very well done, young man...
love double bell instruments
Make a saxhorn vid pls brother
Brilliant video
The return?!
What an incredible video
As SAX was very influential in the development of brass valved instruments. There fore I think the history in a brief form should have been an essential step right after the introduction and how Saxhorns could also fit in with Euphoniums and Baritones.
So many funny looking tubas! ❤❤❤
Wait, I wasn't expecting the Volkswagen Caddy joke 🤣
Explanation to those who didn't understand: The word for "cat" is "kedi" in Turkish, which sounds similar to "Caddy". And Volkswagen Caddy is a van. Hence, a "cat" becomes "a Turkish van" 🤣
Wow im a band nerd I loved this video
I've played 7 tubas since 5th grade. Only two of which were exactly the same shape and size wise.
Well the bigger the brass instruments get, the more variance occurs
Great video
Super video!
Nice vid man!
1:59 ahh yes the sheidiphone (shiddy-phone)
I did indeed refer to it as a small tuba to my friends that didn't know any better.
Euphonium best instrument
good job 👏
The serpent is actually fun to play.
Please make a saxhorn video!
First man on the Moon, Neil Armstrong, was a euphonium/baritone player and had a small collection of instruments in his home. (Useless fact#712)
The German style euphonium/Kaiser baritone looks suspiciously like a Wagner tuba (more of a French horn variant with _some_ tuba characteristics, despite the name). How do you tell them apart?
Pretty sure it's to do with bore diameter and mouthpiece. Probably some other weird characteristics as well.
18:32 rocket jump waltz
The music in the left ear made me feel schizophrenic
Does anyone know what Euphonium is pictured at 5:29?
That's a Besson prestige. I forgot what exact model.
Great research. Thank you for making this. Drum corps didnt use the Bb back in the day but they did exist. The one I played in 1990 looked old even then. I ran across a little more about the origin of the marching euphonium here ruclips.net/video/IW3-oazhKYA/видео.htmlsi=nLh20BtebxLGEzWO
22:30 ngl, when I saw this I was thinking I'd buy it as a joke, but now I kinda want one lmao
Sudrophones are very rare instruments. Even if you do find one I'd doubt it would be at a "lets buy this as a meme" price
@@Bennim yeah, instruments do be expensive
this reason is kinda also why I changed my mind
I have seen an example of someone making their own sudrophone from recycled instrument parts which you can find on RUclips. If you get good enough at metalworking maybe you can make your own stupid brass instruments for cheap.