Thumper wrote:... are going for 200-400 bucks.
Swift wrote:Thumper wrote:... are going for 200-400 bucks.
And that's before they hit you for food.
Thumper wrote:Went to a triple bill at our local cozy outdoor venue. The headliner is a band The Kid really likes. I think she's seen them 3-4 times already. Tickets to the show were one of her birthday presents. A couple of her school mates were going so she was going to meet up with them, ditch the old parents and have a good time. Mrs. T and roamed around the venue as the opening act took the stage. We end up down in the pit off to the side for the second act. Then the headliner came on. I'm warm to them but they're not my favorite. When I told people we were heading to a concert this weekend, every single one said the same thing, "Who?, never heard of them."
Yet there we were shoulder to shoulder with hundreds of screaming, jumping fans, having the time of their lives, singing every single word of every single song. I could feel the power of the music, even when it's not my music. That was a new revelation for me.
Oh, The Kid and her friends had a blast.
Swift wrote::rockon:
Of course now I'm going to be re-running "25 or 6 to 4" in my brain for the rest of the afternoon.
pumpkinpi wrote:Swift wrote::rockon:
Of course now I'm going to be re-running "25 or 6 to 4" in my brain for the rest of the afternoon.
The first time I heard that song was my senior year in high school, when we played it in marching band. We had a whole set of Chicago songs. Later in the season we played songs by Styx.
It was a new band director. We could easily tell what genre of music he listed to. In 1993, that was sooooo lame.
Swift wrote:pumpkinpi wrote:Swift wrote::rockon:
Of course now I'm going to be re-running "25 or 6 to 4" in my brain for the rest of the afternoon.
The first time I heard that song was my senior year in high school, when we played it in marching band. We had a whole set of Chicago songs. Later in the season we played songs by Styx.
It was a new band director. We could easily tell what genre of music he listed to. In 1993, that was sooooo lame.
Funny you should say that. When I was in high school band (this would be '72 to '76), we got probably the same set of Chicago songs for band. And since that album came out in 1970, I don't think it was lame yet.
I particularly liked "25 or 6 to 4" because the beginning da-da, da-da, da was all tuba and trombones (I played the tuba).
pumpkinpi wrote:Tuba--awesome. But was it actually a tuba, or the really big sousaphone that everyone calls a tuba?
The difference between sousaphones and tubas is very small. They both play the same notes and use the same valve configuration. Other than the obvious shape difference, the other difference is similar to the difference between a trumpet and cornet. The tubing of the tuba and cornet are more cone shaped or “conical” than the sousaphone and trumpet.
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Professional level tubas include different sizes and different pitched instruments. They usually include four or even five valves compared to the three valves of a beginning tuba. These include “CC” tubas, Eb (“E” flat) tubas and F tubas. Beginners should start with a BBb (double B flat) tuba or sousaphone.
Thumper wrote:Two weeks ago she came home with the sousaphone that she's going to learn over the summer. I asked her why. She said she's going to play it in pep band. "But what about flute and piccolo?" Nobody can here those at a football game. They'll hear me playing this.
Swift wrote:pumpkinpi wrote:Tuba--awesome. But was it actually a tuba, or the really big sousaphone that everyone calls a tuba?
I was never any kind of musician, but other than shape, what is the difference? I played the double B flat tuba and the double B flat Sousaphone (when I needed to march) and they had the same fingering and pretty much the same sound. Our marching band could barely play music, let alone walk and play at the same time, so our marching was limited, as was my use of the Sousaphone.
google, google, google.... I love the Internet
http://www.beginband.com/tuba.shtmlThe difference between sousaphones and tubas is very small. They both play the same notes and use the same valve configuration. Other than the obvious shape difference, the other difference is similar to the difference between a trumpet and cornet. The tubing of the tuba and cornet are more cone shaped or “conical” than the sousaphone and trumpet.
...
Professional level tubas include different sizes and different pitched instruments. They usually include four or even five valves compared to the three valves of a beginning tuba. These include “CC” tubas, Eb (“E” flat) tubas and F tubas. Beginners should start with a BBb (double B flat) tuba or sousaphone.
I guess I played a beginners three valve BBb tuba or Sousaphone.
Thumper wrote:You probably get that way about Mass vs. Weight, and Speed vs. Velocity too.
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