honestly i think its still pretty good. your recording of it sounds echo-y and sort of a natural reverb when the og recording sounded round and very...not echo-y. but yeah the ending is sudden lol
You know you have a high range, when musescore paints the notes yellow, but you can still do it. Would have been nice to get a link to the mscz, so I can transpose it for me into treble clef. I'm not used to Bass clef as trumpet, but I would still like to play this. Right now it would be easier for me to learn the notes and play from memory.
@Enzo Lescure @xchinbrown 1. "Not that high but ok" Yeah, how dare they be impressed right?? How pretentious can you be... 2. Interesting note, the yellow note heads in musescore are relative to the skill level setting in the program. They could be black if someone were to put in a wider expected range. 3. Sousaphones are pretty unstable relative to concert horns, but the right musician barely has to worry about the limitations of the horn. 4. The tuba is a VERY flexible instrument, which our tuba "expert" over here can confirm. The highest I've seen written for F tuba is like a C5 and the lowest I've seen written is G0. Your view is relative. Your skills are relative. Let people enjoy the video. Side note to both of you, on the best day of playing a sousaphone, the highest I've hit is Ab4, yes the second space on a treble clef. I'm not that good, but again, skill is relative.
Interestingly enough, it is a little less "busy" because of the means of tone production on the tuba and subconscious familiarity of the ear to bass lines. If it was more complicated, it would start to sound unrecognizable or even unhearable to a point since the pitches would not have enough time to sound through the instrument, out the bell, and into the room in time for the next note to be played. * Physics * Fr tho, this pretty much just fit the style and the instrument. Granted it wasn't the most flashy or "in", it was improvised rather than in a studio. I see where you're coming from.