Sax on the Web Forum
by Harri Rautiainen
Sax-O-Thon 2009
Giving the gift of Music!
Topic of the Month SOTW Forum: Topic of November Contest

SOTW sponsors:
Kessler
MusicMedic


Go Back   Sax on the Web Forum > The SOTW Forum > (Saxophone) Makes and Models > Other A-M > Eppelsheim

Eppelsheim Manufacturer of the Tubax, Soprillo and others

 
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 07-11-2003, 08:32 PM   #1
StevenW
  
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 108
Default USA première performance of the Subcontrabass Sax (BBBb!)

Yes it was Jay Easton and his Subcontrabass BBBb Tubax at the World Saxophone Congress Wednesday July 9th!

After showing serious "go low" skill on his Orsi Contrabass EEb Sax and Selmer BBb Bass Sax, Jay took "how low can you go" to seriously new depths! The lowest fundimental of the Subcontrabass is roughly 24.6 hertz, low enough that you can nearly count the pulses!!!

What an instrument! The workmanship was stunning! The very serious crowd of exceptional players who mobbed Jay and his horns after his performance really was heartwarming!

I'll ask Jay if it ok to put up the photos.

StevenW
StevenW is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-12-2003, 01:00 PM   #2
Gandar
  
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Finland
Posts: 94
Send a message via ICQ to Gandar Send a message via AIM to Gandar Send a message via MSN to Gandar Send a message via Yahoo to Gandar
Default

Way off-topic, but I have to ask: Why some instruments have like BBBb or EEb or BBb, doesnt just Bb and Eb say the same thing? English is foreign language for me, hope some of you understood what I said.

I listened the subcontrabass-soundclips on his site. Sweet.
Gandar is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-12-2003, 05:02 PM   #3
StevenW
  
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 108
Default

It seems that Custom has been to indicate the "depth" of the instrument by repeating the note of pitch - the Bb Tenor, then one octave lower the BBb Bass and again an additional octave lower BBBb Subcontrabass.

Perhaps someone with a more scholarly background can cast more light on the issue, but I have noticed it is not consistant among instrument families (a Bass Clarinet is one example - kind of skipped the Tenor eh?).

StevenW 8)
StevenW is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-12-2003, 05:17 PM   #4
Pete
SOTW Columnist
  
 
Pete's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Phoenix, AZ USA
Posts: 3,842
Default

"EEb" essentially means "an octave lower than the Eb bass instrument", which is actually the Eb baritone sax in this instance. It's easier to understand for the BBb horns (there is a real Bb bass) and the CC horns (A. Sax's original instrument was a C bass).

This, of course, brings up the unwinnable argument about the stupidity of the contra-, counter-, baritone, bass naming scheme. Just call me a counter-baritone! (Let's not mention that there's music in the key of H )

I've posted some further information iabout the Eppelsheim instruments (with pricing info!) in http://www.saxontheweb.net/vbulletin...read.php?t=499

Last edited by Pete; 04-13-2005 at 05:42 PM.
Pete is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-16-2003, 02:29 AM   #5
Wade2
  
 
Wade2's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Southern California
Posts: 39
Default

Actually, this comes from international pitch notation. The octaves arranged down from highest to lowest are:
c7 (c=16744.0 Hz, eb7 = 19,912.1 Hz; Human hearing threshold is 20,000 Hz)
c6 (c=8372.0 Hz, b6 = 15804.3 Hz)
c5 (c=4186.0 Hz, b5 = 7902.1 Hz)
c4 (c=2093.0 Hz, b4 = 3951.1 Hz)
c3 (c=1046.5 Hz, b3 = 1975.3 Hz)
c2 (c=523.3 Hz, b2 = 987.8 Hz)
c1 (c=261.6 Hz, a1=440Hz, a1 = 493.9 Hz)
small, or c (c=130.8 Hz = Middle C, b (small b) = 246.9 Hz
Great, or C (C = 65.4 Hz, Great B = 123.5 Hz)
Contra, or CC (CC = 32.7 Hz, BB = 61.7 Hz)
Sub-Contra, or CCC (CCC = 16.4 Hz. Human hearing threshold is 20 Hz +/-, BBB = 30.9 Hz)

See the chart at http://home1.gte.net/wwalker/Frequency.html for a better layout of this information.

Anyway, "Bb" is the Key. If the lowest "Concert C" your instrument is designed to play is a Sub-Contra C (CCC) and it is a transposing instrument in the key of Bb, it is a BBBb instrument. If it only plays in the Contra (CC) range, it is a BBb instrument. If it only plays in the Great range (C), it is a Bb instrument. If it only plays in the small (c) range, it is a bb instrument (that is small B-flat). If it is a higher pitch, say playing in the c4 range it is technically a bb4 (B-flat 4) instrument. However this is quite confusing, so most manufacturers only state the key such as Bb for a Tenor saxophone.

When you go down low, saying BBBb says you play so low that you can push the bottom edge of human hearing. Saying BBb says you are an octave above that level.

With the average human threshold of 20 Hz, the lowest note you can hear would be EEE or Sub-Contra E. You might hear EEEb at 19.4 Hz but only if you hear low notes better than average. Most people would feel these bass notes rather than hear them.
Wade2 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-27-2003, 05:48 AM   #6
bari_sax_diva
Über Geek
Forum Contributor 2008 Distinguished SOTW Member
  
 
bari_sax_diva's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: California
Posts: 2,666
Default

Wow... listing to the clips on Jay's site now. It reminds me of those really great low pipe organ notes. They're kind of creepy, but beautiful.
bari_sax_diva is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-28-2004, 10:56 PM   #7
Ayzmo
  
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 11
Default

It's called a tubex. There is one in Eb, and one in Bb if I remember correctly.
Ayzmo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-28-2004, 11:50 PM   #8
bariman
  
 
bariman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: High Point, North Carolina
Posts: 612
Default

Don't mean to be smart, but it's Tubax.

Bariman
bariman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-29-2004, 08:40 AM   #9
Chris S
On a Leave of Absence
  
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Northern Texas
Posts: 2,929
Send a message via AIM to Chris S
Default

saxpics wrote:

Quote:
(Let's not mention that there's music in the key of H Smile)
Technically there is, as H is B natural. This is how Bach spelled his name out in various pieces....

Chris S
__________________
"Using a previous sucking music to justify a current sucking music doesn't lend credibility to either, they still suck."-jazzbluescat

Blog - MySpace - LinkedIn - Digg - del.icio.us - GoogleShared - Twitter
Chris S - SOTW Admin
Chris S is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 04:06 AM.

SOTW Sponsor
pmauriatmusic

Support Sax on the Web Forum
free counters [Valid RSS]

Subscribe to
Sax on the Web Forum Feed

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright 2005-9 Harri Rautiainen