GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
with an iron resolve shrouded in a velvet voice and although he never loses his
cool, if a situation requires a strong and robust intervention, he will always
respond in a respectful yet decisive manner.
When I was preparing this address I was looking for information about tuba
players, whether it be about the instrument, about the role of the tuba player
within the orchestra, and one of the things I came across was an old joke and
being rather old myself I thought I will put it in anyway. I will take any
opportunity to shoe horn a good old joke into an address. It is one that is
wellknown to most musicians and it is about the tuba player. A father enrols
his son for music lessons. After a brief period of discussion and assessment
the teacher assigns his son the tuba. The father goes home while the first
lesson takes place. When the son comes home his father asks, “What did you
do today?” The young boy says, “I learnt how to play the C note”. The next
day when he comes home his father says, “What did you do today?” He says,
“I learnt to play the G note”. The following day when his dad says, “What did
you do today?” he says, “I joined an orchestra”. That obviously went above all
of those apart from myself and John who are skilled and knowledgeable
musicians! But behind that joke it says something kind of interesting. As I say,
it is not about the quantity of content, it is the quality. Just a little addition to
that. What made me laugh about that joke was not so much the joke, it was on
an online forum, but it was the serious musicians who posted following the
comment: “As a tuba player, I am outraged. It would never be C and G. It
would B flat and F” and I thought, “There is a serious side to these guys”!
I have often wondered whether musicians choose their instruments or whether
the instrument chooses them. If so, what are the traits which marry tuba
players to their instrument? Here are a few interesting views and comments
which I came across during my, I have to say, not too in depth research into the
subject. Of the tuba itself: “The tuba is the most important instrument in the
band. It is the largest of wind instruments, and it produces the fundamental
sound upon which all others are built”. Then I looked up about the tuba player,
are there any particular traits? What I came across was that the tuba player’s
13
Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online