The tuba was developed to provide a low-pitched brass instrument suitable for use in the
brass sections of bands and orchestras. Before the emergence of the first
valves in the 1820s, unmodified brass instruments like the
natural horn or
bugle were restricted to a single
harmonic series. To expand the selection of notes available, either a
slide (as on a
trombone) or
tone holes (as on a
keyed bugle or
serpent) were employed. Each of these options presented a problem for a low-pitched brass instrument. Natural instruments can only produce
diatonic or
chromatic scales in their high register,
bass trombones of that era had long, unwieldy slides with handles, and the
timbre of the serpent was often criticized.
Origins To replace the serpent and its various
upright derivatives, the Paris-based maker
Jean Hilaire Asté invented the
ophicleide in 1817, extending the
keyed bugle into the bass register with a folded,
bassoon-like form. It was enough of an improvement to be widely adopted in brass and military bands, and also in French orchestras, most notably by the composer
Hector Berlioz. Although the ophicleide was initially successful, and serpents were still being used in bands and church ensembles, neither instrument could play much below
C₂ into the contrabass range.
The first tubas In the 1820s, soon after the invention of valves, valved ophicleides quickly appeared (, in Vienna; , and in Italy, the
bombardone or
pelittone). They had the same overall layout as the ophicleide, but were built with valves instead of keys and tone holes. The
Prussian military bandmaster
Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht required an instrument capable of a secure contrabass compass for his bands. He and the Berlin-based instrument maker
Johann Gottfried Moritz invented the in F (Prussian patent 9121, granted 12 September 1835). It used five valves (forerunners of the modern Périnet
piston valves) to provide a
chromatic compass down to F, its first fundamental or
pedal tone. Berlin valves, invented by Wieprecht two years earlier, were better suited than the earlier Stölzel and Vienna valve designs for the larger bore tubing of these instruments, making the
Baß-Tuba the first successful contrabass valved brass instrument. In Paris, the instrument maker
Adolphe Sax, like Wieprecht, was interested in marketing families of instruments ranging from soprano to bass, and developed his
saxhorn series of brass instruments, pitched in E and B. Sax's instruments gained dominance in French military bands, and later in Britain and America. Their widespread success was a result of some popular instrument makers moving their operations, notably
Gustave Auguste Besson, who moved from Paris to London, and
Henry Distin, who started manufacturing them in London and later moved his business to the United States. The saxhorns, with the addition of trombones, came to constitute almost the whole instrumentation of the modern
British brass band. The modern E and B band tubas with top-action piston valves are little-changed from their 19th-century contrabass saxhorn ancestors, aside from a wider bore and the addition of a fourth compensating valve. The
helicon is thought to have first appeared in Russia in the mid-1840s and was first patented in 1848 by the Vienna-based maker Stowasser. Like the Ancient Roman
buccina, its tubing is wrapped under the right arm with the
bell resting on the player's left shoulder. The helicon became popular throughout Europe and North America, particularly for its suitability in
marching and
mounted bands. By the 1850s, the Czech maker
Václav František Červený was making families of band instruments with rotary valves in
Austria-Hungary, including instruments in the bass and contrabass range. He introduced his
Kaiserbass C and B contrabass tubas in the early 1880s, characterised by the much wider bore still used by modern instruments. By this time, Červený was one of the largest manufacturers in Europe and was supplying thousands of instruments to the
Imperial Russian Army.
Russian nationalist composers and others in the late
Romantic and
20th century periods began writing for these tubas.
Early American tubas In the United States, saxhorns had become popular by the mid-19th century, particularly in military and brass bands. In 1838, the New York maker Allen Dodworth patented his "over-the-shoulder" (OTS) instruments, with bells pointing backwards over the player's left shoulder, that included an E bass model. This design allowed soldiers, usually marching behind the band, to better hear the music. Demand for bugles and OTS saxhorns grew, particularly in the 1860s during the
American Civil War, and tens of thousands were made in the United States or imported from Europe. After the war, the bands and their music remained popular, and manufacturing demand remained strong. From these ensembles and musicians emerged the American
drum and bugle corps tradition, and the mixed-winds concert music popularised by the band leaders
Patrick Gilmore and
John Philip Sousa. In 1893, Sousa, unhappy with the sound from his B contrabass helicon tubas, had the Philadelphia instrument maker
J. W. Pepper build a helicon with the bell pointing upwards, to better diffuse the sound. This
sousaphone model, known as a "rain catcher", was later made by the American manufacturers
Holton and
C. G. Conn, who some time in the early 20th century turned the bell forward to create the iconic modern sousaphone form. An alumni of Sousa's band, the Danish-born
August Helleberg was the founding tubist with the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1891 and with the
Philharmonic Society of New York in 1897. He became renowned in his day as a member of the Sousa Band, and developed a tuba mouthpiece with a particular funnel-shaped profile. Helleberg's mouthpiece design, later manufactured by
C. G. Conn, became very popular with tuba players and has been widely copied by many other makers.
The tuba in Italy The Italian word is thought to be a contraction of the term (), which first appeared in scores as
c. basso or
c. in basso in the 1820s. Initially, the
cimbasso was a form of
upright serpent or bass horn, but over the course of the 19th century the term was used loosely to refer to the lowest bass instrument available in the brass family, including the ophicleide and early Italian valved instruments such as the
pelittone and
bombardone. The
Italian opera composer
Giuseppe Verdi, dissatisfied with the sound of these instruments, commissioned a valved
contrabass trombone, built in the 1880s for his late operas. By the early 20th century, this instrument, which Verdi and
Giacomo Puccini called simply the
trombone basso in their opera scores, had disappeared from Italian orchestras, replaced by the tuba.
Twentieth-century developments In Britain, the English F tuba was first produced in 1887 with five non-compensating piston valves. Harry Barlow, appointed to
Hallé Orchestra in 1894, had his F tuba built by Higham of Manchester (this instrument is now in the University of Edinburgh collection). By the 1960s these "Barlow" tubas were scarce and expensive, and there were legal restrictions on importing instruments, so British orchestral players switched to the readily available brass band E tuba with four compensating valves. From the late 19th century until around the 1950s in France, the orchestral tuba was the small French tuba built in 8′ C with six piston valves. It was based on the euphonium-sized bass saxhorn, which had been built since the 1850s. It quickly became standard in French orchestras and was the tuba used by French composers of that time. The difficult high orchestral excerpts for tuba are often from these French tuba parts. One example is the "Bydło" tuba solo in
Maurice Ravel's 1922 orchestration of
Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition, although the part descends to low F in other movements. {{Image frame | align = center | width = 620 | innerstyle = background:white;padding:0.4em | caption = Tuba solo from the "Bydlo" movement of
Maurice Ravel's 1922 orchestration of
Modest Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition; the part was written for the small French C tuba | content = \layout { ragged-right = ##t \context { \Score \omit BarNumber } } \relative c { \time 2/4 \tempo "Sempre moderato pesante" \clef bass \key gis \minor r4 dis~( \pp ^ "Solo" | dis8 _ \markup {\italic "poco a poco cresc." } fis16 e) dis8-- e-- dis8-- gis-- ais-- b-- | ais4--( gis8--) r | cis4--( gis'8) r | cis,4--( gis'8--) gis-- dis4-- cis-- \break b8( dis ais4) | gis4-- fis8( e | \mark \markup { \box \small \bold "38" } dis) r dis4~( dis8 fis16 e) dis8-- e-- | dis8-- gis-- ais-- b-- | ais4--( gis8) r | cis4( e8) r | \break e4 e-- | d2~( \ }} In the early days of recorded music in the 1920s, '''' were made with the bell pointing forward () so that the sound could be directed towards the recording microphone. Extra players with recording tubas were sometimes brought in to play string section
double bass parts.
The Chicago Yorks In 1933, Alfred Johnson, the production chief at the Michigan-based
York Band Instrument Company, made two large C tubas for the conductor
Leopold Stokowski, who wanted an
organ-like tuba sound for the
Philadelphia Orchestra. One of these instruments eventually went to
Arnold Jacobs, a student at the time. Jacobs later became principal tubist at the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra and an influential 20th-century tuba pedagogue and player. Both instruments, known as the "Chicago Yorks", were eventually purchased by the orchestra, and are played by the current principal tubist,
Gene Pokorny. Due to the quality of their sound and ease of playing, they are described by many American players and technicians as "the greatest tubas ever made", and have been the subject of much measurement, analysis, and attempts to recreate them. Replicas include the "Yorkbrunner" HB50 and HBS510 models by the Swiss instrument company Hirsbrunner (now made by the Dutch maker
Adams), the
Yamaha YCB-826 "Yamayork" model, the B&S 3198, and the Wessex TC-695 "Chicago York" tuba. In 2009, samples from old York tubas revealed they were made from a "gold" brass with a high copper content of 80 percent. About 100 York-inspired tubas were built by the California-based producer Kanstul Musical Instruments before the business closed in 2019.
The tuba in jazz (
far left) on sousaphone in
Johnny Bayersdorffer's Novelty Orchestra, New Orleans, 1922 While the
New Orleans Blue Book of
ragtime standards from contained parts for tuba, they were only included as an alternative to the
string bass parts, likely for outdoor performances. The tuba did not appear in early jazz bands until the 1920s, usually as the sousaphone, playing only
oom-pah with occasional short solo breaks. The earliest known recordings with tuba were with the
New Orleans Rhythm Kings in 1923, with
Jelly Roll Morton on piano and
Chink Martin on tuba. This continued to be the main role for jazz tuba through the
dance era of the 1920s and 30s and the
Dixieland and
trad-jazz revival of the 1940s. The poor bass sensitivity of early recording technology meant that many jazz string bass players were expected to also play tuba. In the 1920s, New York musician
Joe Tarto, adept at both, performed and recorded with almost every jazz musician of the time, including
Bix Beiderbecke and
Tommy Dorsey. He later played with the
Paul Whiteman Orchestra and published a jazz bass method,
Basic Rhythms and the Art of Jazz Improvisation. As the recording technology improved in the 1930s, players moved back to string bass. The
big bands that became prevalent in the
swing era during
World War II did not include the tuba in their standard instrumentation of trumpets, trombones,
saxophones and
rhythm. '' (1957) by
Miles Davis are some of the first to use tuba, recorded 1949–50 In the late 1940s, the tuba was reintroduced into
cool jazz by the jazz trumpeter
Miles Davis. Inspired by the band led by
Claude Thornhill, he organised an ensemble of nine players that included
Bill Barber on tuba. Barber plays on several Miles Davis recordings in arrangements by
Gerry Mulligan and
Gil Evans, including the session compilation
Birth of the Cool (1957, recorded 1949–50), and the later albums
Miles Ahead (1957) and
Sketches of Spain (1960). In the 1950s, American band leader
Stan Kenton explored using different instruments like the
mellophonium to create a warm enveloping sound especially in ballads, and in 1955 made his fifth trombonist double on tuba to make use of its distinct timbre. Although still not commonly found as a solo instrument in modern jazz, it has featured in ensembles and recordings since the 1970s. The
Tubajazz Consort was set up in 1976 by the tubist
Harvey Phillips and euphoniumist
Rich Matteson. New York jazz musician
Howard Johnson started in the
Charles Mingus band and became a leading tuba soloist and band leader in his own right, leading the NBC
Saturday Night Live Band.
Bob Stewart, tubist and professor of jazz history at
Juilliard School, has played tuba with many jazz players including Mingus, Gil Evans,
Arthur Blythe, and
Henry Threadgill. Stewart's solo in the title track of Blythe's 1979 album
Lenox Avenue Breakdown was described in
The Penguin Guide to Jazz as "one of the few genuinely important tuba statements in jazz." In the 1980s and 90s, the Los Angeles tubist
Jim Self and
Samuel Pilafian of
The Empire Brass Quintet made several jazz recordings. Since
Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the sousaphone has made a comeback in jazz and contemporary music due to an influx of musicians from
New Orleans to other cities. In 2024, New York tubist
Marcus Rojas stated that there are "two tubas on late-night TV. That would have been unheard of 15 years ago!"
Tuba Gooding Jr. plays in
The Roots on
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, and
Ibanda Ruhumbika appears in
The Late Show Band on
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. == Construction ==