Subcontrabass saxophone
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Classification | Aerophone |
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Playing range | |
Written range In B♭: sounds three octaves and a major second lower than written. | |
Related instruments | |
Military band family:
Orchestral family: Other saxophones:
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Musicians | |
More articles or information | |
The subcontrabass saxophone is a type of saxophone that Adolphe Sax patented and planned to build but never constructed. Sax called this imagined instrument saxophone bourdon (named after a low pitch stop found on many pipe organs). It is a transposing instrument pitched in B♭, one octave below the bass saxophone, two octaves below the tenor saxophone, and three octaves and a major second below its written pitch.
History[]
Until 1999, no genuine, playable subcontrabass saxophones were made, though at least two gigantic saxophones were built.[1] Although the smaller of the two (constructed in the mid-1960s) was able to produce musical tones, with assistants opening and closing its pads due to the instrument's lack of keywork, witnesses stated that it was incapable of playing even a simple scale.
The B♭ subcontrabass tubax,[2] which was developed in 1999 by instrument manufacturer Benedikt Eppelsheim of Munich, Germany, is described by Eppelsheim as a "subcontrabass saxophone". This instrument is available in both C and B♭, with the B♭ model providing the same pitch range as the saxophone bourdon would have. A contrabass-range tubax in E♭ is also available.
The question of whether or not the tubax is truly a saxophone is debatable: it has the same fingering as a contrabass saxophone, but its bore, though conical, is narrower (relative to its length) than that of a regular saxophone. This makes for a more compact instrument with a "reedier" and "fatter" timbre. While some[who?] argue that the tubax is akin to the double-reed sarrusophone, the tubax's bore is much larger than that of the corresponding size of sarrusophone. Since several conical single-reed instruments with bores narrower than the saxophone are known (Octavin, Tarogato, Heckelclarina), analogies to a double-reed instruments can only relate to range and overall dimensions. Some authorities[who?] regard the tubax as a separate family of instruments rather than as a type of saxophone.
A Brazilian company, , produced a working compact subcontrabass in 2010, which was shown at 2010.[3]
In September 2012, instrument manufacturer Benedikt Eppelsheim of Munich, Germany completed building the first full-size subcontrabass saxophone. This instrument stands 2.25 meters (7 feet 5 inches) tall.[citation needed]
In July 2013,[citation needed] of Brazil completed building a 2.8-meter (9-foot-2-inch) full-size subcontrabass saxophone.[4]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "Subcontrabass Saxophones (?)". Contrabass.com. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
- ^ "Tubax B♭ subcontrabass saxophone". Eppelsheim.com. Retrieved 2013-07-11.
- ^ "Elle Stainer". Below65-4hz.com. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
- ^ Attilio Berni plays the giant J'Elle Stainer sub-contrabass saxophone, , Moonlight big band, conductor: , accessed 2020-02-01
External links[]
- MP3 sound recording of the first movement of "Duet for Basses" by Walter Hartley, played as a B♭ Tubax duet (one instrument, overdubbed), performed by
- Saxophones
- Contrabass instruments
- B-flat instruments