Here it is: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuba
I've been working on it for a while, but I'm at a point where I'd like to get some opinions on it - helpful suggestions, omissions, and withering criticism welcome, particularly around the tuba in the US of A, which I'm not as familiar with, being from New Zealand. I know the repertoire section is too brief and needs work, and there needs to be more about current notable players. I've also worked on euphonium, tenor horn, and baritone horn, if you have opinions there too.
Wikipedia tuba article
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- jonathanharker
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Wikipedia tuba article
- These users thanked the author jonathanharker for the post (total 4):
- graybach (Sat Feb 28, 2026 11:07 pm) • TxTx (Sun Mar 01, 2026 2:02 am) • Casca Grossa (Sun Mar 01, 2026 9:07 am) • MN_TimTuba (Wed Mar 04, 2026 6:03 pm)
- bloke
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Re: Wikipedia tuba article
Congratulations. I understand it's an encyclopedia, but that's an awfully broad topic for one person to try to cover in an article.
- UncleBeer
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Re: Wikipedia tuba article
Good job! Minor corrections:
- Saxhorns were also built in 8' C from around 1860 onward, so weren't a 20th century development.
- Miles Davis' inspiration for his "Birth of the Cool" band was the Claude Thornhill band in the 1940s.
- Henry Threadgill was using the great Bob Stewart in his groups long before Marcus Rojas was asked to sub. Bob is certainly worthy of mention for his pioneering work with Arthur Blythe.
- Dave Bargeron (Blood, Sweat & Tears) is deserving of mention in the NYC jazz scene.
- Notably missing as well is mention of Ray Draper, who led a band in the 50s using a young John Coltrane as a sideman.
- Saxhorns were also built in 8' C from around 1860 onward, so weren't a 20th century development.
- Miles Davis' inspiration for his "Birth of the Cool" band was the Claude Thornhill band in the 1940s.
- Henry Threadgill was using the great Bob Stewart in his groups long before Marcus Rojas was asked to sub. Bob is certainly worthy of mention for his pioneering work with Arthur Blythe.
- Dave Bargeron (Blood, Sweat & Tears) is deserving of mention in the NYC jazz scene.
- Notably missing as well is mention of Ray Draper, who led a band in the 50s using a young John Coltrane as a sideman.
- These users thanked the author UncleBeer for the post (total 3):
- Casca Grossa (Sun Mar 01, 2026 9:05 am) • TxTx (Sun Mar 01, 2026 10:25 pm) • BopEuph (Fri Mar 06, 2026 7:22 pm)
- jonathanharker
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Re: Wikipedia tuba article
Thank you for these - I'll work through them over the weekend. I'd also like to expand an "orchestral repertoire" section, with score snippets of maybe the top three excerpts. Now there's a poll... top three tuba excerpts? In auditions? By difficulty? Notability? Answers on the back of an envelope...
