Indy bass switching between F/G/Eb and F/Gb/D
- BGuttman
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Re: Indy bass switching between F/G/Eb and F/Gb/D
Pedal Bb (Bb1) has a frequency of 58.27 Hz and a wavelength (under Standard Conditions) of 559 cm. At 30 cm per foot, that's approximately 18 feet. Since a trombone is a half wave device, the pedal half wave is very close to the length of the tube.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
- Matt K
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Re: Indy bass switching between F/G/Eb and F/Gb/D
Functionally, yes. Tuners are useful, but the're not the full picture. You can lip a note down and have a tuner tell you that you are playing "in-tune", for example, playing anWell, a good tuner will record the pedal tones very easy. Is the tuner hallucinating?




- ithinknot
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- Joined: Fri Jul 24, 2020 3:40 pm
Re: Indy bass switching between F/G/Eb and F/Gb/D
All my own fabulous work

To the original point: all the systems have specific advantages, and no global advantages (unless you have short arms, in which case keeping low C and B closer would be an absolute benefit).
If you're interested, experiment and see what you like... and if not, learn F/Gb/D because everything comes that way, and be happy.
Personally, I've stuck with a particular brand of esoteric madness (Bollinger 2nd valve and 1st valve pulled enough to get back to combination D), but I'm a ridiculous person, able to modify horns, and prone to Ideas.
Also, use the 2nd valve independently. It's great. You'll see claims that "most people don't"... I suspect these are based on a sample size of one... or from observing players that don't warrant much observation.
By the same token, dependents can also be great, and I'd rather play a really good dependent than a meh indy... so try things and enjoy them for what they are.