Subcontrabass saxophone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image:None | ||||||||||
|
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 the lowest stop on the pipe organ). It would have been a transposing instrument pitched in BBB♭, one octave below the bass saxophone and two octaves below the tenor saxophone.
Until 1999, no genuine, playable subcontrabass saxophones were made, though at least two gigantic saxophones seem to have been built solely for show.[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 have stated that it was incapable of playing even a simple scale.
[edit] Tubax
The B♭ subcontrabass Tubax(tm),[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.
Whether the Tubax is indeed a saxophone is, however, a matter of dispute. 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, making for a more compact instrument with a "reedier" and "fatter" timbre (akin to the double-reed sarrusophone).
[edit] Notes
- ^ Subcontrabass Saxophones (?). Retrieved on 2007-03-17.
- ^ Tubax B♭ subcontrabass saxophone. Retrieved on 2007-03-17.
[edit] 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 Jay C. Easton
Members of the Saxophone family |
---|
True saxophones: †Soprillo saxophone • Sopranino saxophone • Soprano saxophone • Alto saxophone • Tenor saxophone • Baritone saxophone • Bass saxophone • Contrabass saxophone • ‡Subcontrabass saxophone |
Tubaxes: †Contrabass tubax • †Subcontrabass tubax |
† denotes saxophone not designed by Adolphe Sax• ‡ denotes saxophone proposed by Adolphe Sax |