Brass Instruments
Brass instruments all operate on the same basic principle.
They are metal tubes with a cup-shaped mouthpiece into which
the player vibrates his or her lips. The metal tube acts as
an amplifier and adds harmonic resonance to the vibration,
and a note is formed. A full symphony orchestra usually includes
about 105 players, playing anything between 18 and 25 instruments.
Of these, the brass section typically numbers 14 or 15: four
trumpets, five or six french horns, four trombones, and a
tuba. This is the basic brass of the orchestra.
Trumpet and B-Flat Cornet
The very earliest trumpets were made from conch shells or
animal horns. Bronze trumpets were excavated from the tomb
of Tutankhamun, where they had lain silent for more than three
thousand years. The brilliant, blazing tone of the trumpet
is ideal for fanfares. For thousands of years it has inspired
people to battle and struck fear into the hearts of their
enemies. For many of those thousands of years, the trumpet
was a simple tube, and its range was limited. Changes in pitch
were made by adjusting the lips and breath. During late-medieval
times, the tube was bent, curved, and looped to make the instrument
more manageable. In the seventeenth century, the baroque trumpet
evolved as a looped instrument, like the post horn, and holes
were bored into the tube. This enables the player to produce
more pitches by uncovering the holes and thereby shortening
the solid tube, then covering holes to lengthen it. Henry
Purcell (1659-1691), Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767), and
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) composed the first substantial
music for trumpet and ensemble. Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
wrote fanfares for the trumpet in the third movement of his
Symphony No. 9.
Between 1820 and 1850, the trumpet was revolutionized by
the introduction of valves and gradually evolved into the
modern three-valve instrument. By pressing the valves either
singly or in various combinations to shorten or lengthen the
tube, and by adjusting of the lips and breath, the modern
trumpet is capable of the full chromatic scale and covers
about three octaves. The earliest music for the valve trumpet
includes the operas William Tell by Gioacchino Rossini
(1792-1868) and Rienzi and Lohengrin by Richard
Wagner (1813-1883). With its stability of pitch, its agility,
and its tonal variety that ranges from the strident to the
richly mellow, the modern trumpet leads the brass section
as an integral part of the texture of the modern orchestra.
But the trumpet also shines as a solo instrument. Maurice
André (b. 1933) and Wynton Marsalis (b. 1961) are good examples
of successful modern-day trumpet soloists. Today the trumpet
plays a major part in jazz, too. Louis Armstrong (1901-1971),
Miles Davis (1926-1991), and Clifford Brown (1930-1956) revolutionized
the trumpet as a jazz solo instrument.
The B-flat cornet was invented around 1830. Smaller and
pitched higher than the trumpet, the cornet is so nimble that
many nineteenth century composers, especially in France, began
to orchestrate for cornet rather than trumpet. But technical
improvements in the trumpet enabled it to achieve ascendancy
over its relative. Most trumpeters double on cornet and use
the instrument when a score demands agility in the upper registers.
French Horn
The French horn is a tube of about 12 feet in length, coiled
into a circular shape and flaring into a wide bell. Like the
trumpet, it has three valves, but on the French horn they
are mounted laterally as levers in the center of the coil.
The valves are usually manipulated with the fingers of the
left hand, while the right hand is placed in the bell, enabling
subtle variations of tone and changes in pitch. The French
horn has a wide range of tone, varying from sweet and mellow
to ferocious and braying-a reminder of its early history as
a hunting horn.
The small hunting horn developed during the 1650s into a
larger and more versatile instrument, and entered the orchestra
around 1700. This instrument came with a set of "crooks" of
various lengths which enabled the player to play in a variety
of keys. The player kept these crooks close when playing and
changed them when changing keys. Like the trumpet, the French
horn was fitted with valves in the first part of the nineteenth
century, making it much easier to play and allowing for a
chromatic scale.
The modern French horn is actually made up of two parallel
tubes coiled together, and is really two instruments in one:
one makes it an F horn, and the other, smaller coil makes
it a B-flat horn. This makes it easier for the player to transpose
from one key to another. The French horn also has a fourth
valve (called the "trigger") which is used to switch between
the two sides of the instrument.
The French horn has a large and varied orchestral and chamber
repertoire. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Horn Concertos No. 2
and No. 3 display the instrument's wide range of moods, from
humorous to melancholy. Ludwig van Beethoven and Johannes
Brahms both wrote fine sonatas for French horn. The Blue
Danube waltz by Johann Strauss (1825-1899) is a favorite
that features the French horn. In Beethoven's Symphony No.
7 and Richard Wagner's Ride of the Valkyrie, the French
horns are featured along with other brass instruments. French
horn virtuosos include Barry Tuckwell (b. 1931), Alan Civil
(1928-1989; featured on the Beatles' For No One), and
Arkady Shilkloper (b. 1956).
Trombone
The trombone is the tenor voice of the brass section. It
is basically a nine-foot tube of brass curved into an elongated
S-shape, with a small bell which flares horizontally at the
end of the top section. It has a U-shaped slide that is folded
to overlap in the center, and when this is pulled in and out
(usually with the right hand, while the left hand supports
the instrument), the tube is shortened or lengthened, and
the pitch is raised or lowered. The modern trombone is a direct
descendant of the medieval sackbut, which also had a slide
and resembled the modern instrument in many basic respects.
The sackbut however was made out of thicker metal and had
a very small bell, which together gave it a very soft, mellow
tone. The brass instrument developed in the late seventeenth
century and throughout the eighteenth century was largely
used in military and town brass bands. One of the earliest
compositions featuring the trombone was Mozart's opera, Don
Giovanni (1787), where the instrument is used to intense
and sinister dramatic effect. Beethoven also explored the
dramatic potential of the trombone in his Fifth Symphony.
Nineteenth- and twentieth-century orchestral music uses
the trombone for tonal color, filling out the texture of the
orchestra, and for colorful, grand, or dramatic moods in the
opera orchestra. In jazz and other popular forms the trombone
has become a lyrical solo instrument. The movements of the
player give the trombone a natural tendency to swing; it is
capable of producing easy and relaxed glissandos and a variety
of tone in these styles. Kid Ory (1886-1973) was an early
pioneer of virtuoso trombone technique, and J.J. Johnson (1924-2001)
developed a powerful bebop style of the 1940s and 1950s. Albert
Mangelsdorff (b. 1928) and Steve Swell (b. 1954) have taken
the instrument into new areas, exploring multiphonics (playing
more than one note at a time) and a range of other new timbres.
Tuba, Euphonium, Baritone, and Sousaphone
Tuba is the general name for the newest additions to the
orchestral brass-the instrument was patented in Germany in
1835. Tubas are the largest and deepest brass instruments
in the orchestra. Structurally they are very large bugles
with three or four valves. They are played upright, with the
bell pointing upward and the mouthpiece jutting out at the
side beneath the bell. Tubas form the bass voices of the brass
section.
The euphonium has cone-shaped tubing and a nine-inch bell.
It is an upright brass instrument that has tubing as long
as that of a trombone. It is a standard low-brass instrument
in most concert bands. The baritone horn is like a euphonium
in that its tube is also as long as that of a trombone, but
it has a cylinder-shaped tube and the bell points to the front.
The Concerto for Tuba by Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
is a standard solo for tuba and orchestra.
Orchestral tubas are heavy instruments, and they are hard
to hold and play while marching outside for any distance.
Since the big bell points upward, it was given the name "raincatcher"
when played outdoors. John Philip Sousa (1854-1932), American
composer, bandleader, and patriot, solved the problem in the
1890s by inventing a bass brass instrument that wraps around
the body with the bell pointing to the front. Fiberglass tubing
was developed to make the instrument lighter. The Sousaphone
is a well-loved feature of the marching-band landscape.
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