Current:Home > ScamsIn which we toot the horn of TubaChristmas, celebrating its 50th brassy birthday -MarketStream
In which we toot the horn of TubaChristmas, celebrating its 50th brassy birthday
View
Date:2025-04-19 14:37:17
On the first TubaChristmas, around 300 musicians showed up at the ice skating rink at Rockefeller Plaza in New York City, bearing their giant brass instruments.
A massive, all-tuba holiday concert was the brainchild of Harvey Phillips, a tuba player and enthusiast who would go on to teach in the music school at Indiana University, and start similar tuba-centric traditions such as "Octubafest."
TubaChristmas concerts have since popped up in practically every state. You can now enjoy the holiday stylings of amateur tuba ensembles in 296 U.S. communities, from Anchorage, Alaska to Hilo, Hawaii. In 2018, overachievers in Kansas City set a Guinness World Record.
"We played 'Silent Night' for five straight minutes with 835 tubas," announced Stephanie Brimhall, of the Kansas City Symphony. I asked her what single word might best describe hundreds of caroling tubas.
"Rumbling. That would be one."
"Enveloping," offered Michael Golemo, who directs the band program at Iowa State University. He co-organizes the Ames TubaChristmas. "It's this warm, low organ sound where you can feel food in your lower intestinal tract move because of the vibrations."
Rarely do these big, fat-toned brass instruments get to play the melody. TubaChristmas offers even obscure tuba family members to enjoy the spotlight for a change.
"This year, we had a helicon, which is like a Civil War version of a tuba," Golemo says. "Usually there's a few people with a double-belled euphonium." You might also see what Golemo calls "Tupperware tubas" — those white fiberglass sousaphones played in marching bands.
Tuba humor is inescapable: More than one interviewee called TubaChristmas "the biggest heavy metal concert of the year," among them Charles D. Ortega.
Ortega, the principal tubist with the Colorado Springs Philharmonic, leads TubaChristmas in Pueblo, Colo. The concerts, he says, have been a family tradition since the 1980s, when he lived in Texas. "My first TubaChristmas was when I was in middle school," Ortega says. "I attended with my father, who was a tuba player as well."
Ortega's father was a government employee and accomplished tuba player who loved performing in town bands and polka ensembles across the Southwest. "Even the year he passed, he was still playing," Ortega says.
Some of his favorite TubaChristmas memories, he adds, include performing as part of three generations of Ortega tuba players: himself, his father and his now-18-year-old son.
"That was amazing, to have one on one side, and one on the other side," Ortega says. "Everyone was beaming. It was great."
Multiple generations in TubaChristmas concerts is now not uncommon. That's what happens when a tradition endures and gets bigger, broader and brassier.
veryGood! (424)
Related
- Tony Hawk drops in on Paris skateboarding and pushes for more styles of sport in LA 2028
- I just graduated college. Instead of feeling pride and clarity, I'm fighting hopelessness.
- NYC mayor defends police response after videos show officers punching pro-Palestinian protesters
- Tori Spelling Reveals Multiple Stomach Piercings She Got as a Gift From Her Kids
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- How top congressional aides are addressing increased fears they have for safety of lawmakers and their staff
- The unstoppable duo of Emma Stone and Yorgos Lanthimos
- New safety rules set training standards for train dispatchers and signal repairmen
- Illinois Gov. Pritzker calls for sheriff to resign after Sonya Massey shooting
- Climber found dead on Denali, North America’s tallest peak
Ranking
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- The government wants to buy their flood-prone homes. But these Texans aren’t moving.
- New romance books for a steamy summer: Emily Henry, Abby Jimenez, Kevin Kwan, more
- Tennessee professor swept away by wave during Brazil study-abroad trip has died
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Top Democrat calls for Biden to replace FDIC chairman to fix agency’s ‘toxic culture’
- Pope Francis says social media can be alienating, making young people live in unreal world
- Kanye West, Billie Eilish and the Beatles highlight Apple Music 100 Best Albums Nos. 30-21
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Kristin Chenoweth opens up about being 'severely abused': 'Lowest I've been in my life'
4 killed in Georgia wreck after van plows through median into oncoming traffic
Rep. Elise Stefanik rebukes Biden and praises Trump in address to Israeli parliament
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Fly Stress-Free with These Airplane Travel Essentials for Kids & Babies
Primary ballots give Montana voters a chance to re-think their local government structures
Daycare owner, employees arrested in New Hampshire for secretly feeding children melatonin