My son dropped his compensation slide from his baritone from the top seat on the football bleachers. Ka tink a tink a TINK!
Luckily he found it after the game and I managed to bend it so it fit back in.
I'm hoping he gets a scholarship to Stanford so I can get tickets to the games.
Most horns that we call "baritones" are actually small bore euphoniums.
If the tubing is mostly tapered, it is a euphonium. If a large portion of the tubing is non-tapered (cylindrical), then it is likely a true baritone (which you VERY RARELY see in the US).
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It is beautiful.
But my first impulse is to be glad that at least you didn't spend your money on an ophicleide.
Thus, my question would be: is this perhaps not the first brass instrument that you own? Perhaps you already own one or two (or more!) brass instruments of a more conventional nature...
A French Horn, or a Tuba; a Trumpet, a Bugle, a Cornet or even a Flugelhorn; a Trombone or a Saxophone.
Or perhaps you play in a marching band rather than an orchestra, where the Euphonium is still quite commonly used.
Going to Wikipedia, I see that the fact that it's a "3+1 compensating euphonium" means that it's one of the good ones. It has the standard three valves that you see on many brass instruments - and an extra valve off to the side to make the pitches of some notes more accurate.
And reading more about this, I learn that trumpets and cornets compensate by having a tiny little slide (like a trombone) that I never noticed on the extension that one of the valves switches in... but the compensating valve on a Euphonium instead moves the whole instrument down a perfect fourth, so you only need to use the good finger combinations.
I have been a euphonium player since 8th grade. Was, briefly, a euphonium performance major in college (before I, basically, drank myself out of college).
I also played tuba, trombone, and trumpet. I started back up when my kids started playing trumpet and needed some help practicing. Then I got the itch to start playing in an organized group again...which will start later this summer.
Euphonium (or "baritone" as it is most often incorrectly identified as) is quite common. Not at all as obscure as you think.