Colby Fahrenbacher wrote: Sun May 03, 2026 3:08 pm
bloke wrote: Sun May 03, 2026 11:02 am
..and Mr. Gershwin may have later reluctantly re-scored that short melody line it for tuba simply because the instrument could cover the lowest C in the motif, and - having to settle for a D in such an exposed solo line - perhaps hurt his musical sensibilities more than handing it off to the tuba hurt his musical sensibilities.
If this were true (and there was confirmed evidence showing this was Gershwin's opinion), then we would have likely seen the tuba solo reverted to the bass clarinet in the critical edition, since this is a non-issue for the ubiquitous modern bass clarinet. It's also possible that this was Gershwin's opinion but the Gershwin Initiative considered the preponderance of performance practice on tuba to outweigh this opinion, or that Gershwin's opinion on the matter changed on the issue over time, so left it in the tuba part. Without consulting the Gershwin Initiative, all of this is purely speculative.
Of course

it's speculative (see
may have
in what you just quoted), and I doubt that anything this unimportant (to anyone but a bunch of us 21st century tuba nerds and a tuba-chat-room e-prairie-dogger) would have ever come up in any interview of Mr. Gershwin prior to 1937 (when his brain tumor became apparent)...the MAIN point being (as the main point always seems to be lost on certain - again - e-prairie-doggers) that - in the first recording in 1929 (whereby the solo line was obviously written for bass clarinet), it didn't occur to the bass clarinetist to be "Mistuh or Miz Jassbo" (as there's nothing in the score indicating that the player of that extended phrase make an ass of themselves...
...' speaking of which: ' got a recording of yourself playing that solo with your orchestra to offer us?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(possibly interesting information for the genuinely curious yet non-argumentative)
Years ago (for rentals), we picked up four REALLY old professional Conn wood bass clarinets which (as Yamaha began doing in the 1960's) replicated the best instruments of their time (Selmer, Paris...which - today - are still preferred by some over Buffet - particularly as far as BASS clarinets are concerned - Selmer, Paris vs. Buffet bass clarinets - a tendency to be more "robust", etc.)
Their serial numbers indicated that they dated back to the 1930's (yeah, the period of time being discussed). These instruments NOT ONLY did NOT feature the extended range to C (concert B-flat), but (additionally) they ONLY featured the (as with soprano clarinets) range to low E (concert D), so - per the Gershwin bass clarinet solo, the (concert) D MAY WELL HAVE BEEN (??) the very lowest pitch available on the instrument played in that 1929 recording.
bloke "destructively-and-irresponsibly speculating YET AGAIN, and - if you need footnotes, see below."

____________________________________________________________
¹
bloke said this stuff
²
because he did.
³
ibid