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Trumpet
During the Middle Ages, the
trumpet, more than any other instrument, was associated with pomp and
pageantry. It was known as the "nobleman" among musical instruments,
because trumpet performers stood at the king's right hand. In English
manuscripts of the thirteen century, the trumpet appears as a straight
cylindrical tube, made of metal with a flaring bell at one end.
Because of its length (over 6') and its normal tendency to bend, the
instrument was eventually folded into a wide, flattened S.
By the beginning of the sixteenth century,
the trumpet evolved three straight lengths of tubing which lay
parallel to each other and were united by pieces of U-shaped tubing.

Early in the seventeenth century the
Trompeterkameradschaft, a professional trumpeters' union was formed.
Each member of the union was identified by the part they played. The
trumpet in this century was known as the natural trumpet because it
had no valves, slides, or pistons. The art of playing the natural
trumpet was known as "clarino" playing, which reached its peak in the
works of Bach and Handel.
During the eighteenth century crooks and
tuning slides became popular. Crooks consisted of coiled brass tubes
that could be inserted into the main tube to increase its length. By
inserting a crook trumpeters were able to change their instrument's
length to accommodate the keys of the music they were playing. In 1788
Charles Clogget invented the first valve, and in 1801 Widinger of
Vienna improved it by putting five keys on his trumpet, enabling him
to play the chromatic scale. The development of the valve made
possible the modern-day trumpet. In 1813 Frederick Bluehmel added the
rotary valve to brass instruments, and in 1815 Stolzel, a German,
added improvements. Perinet of Paris and Antoine (Adolph) Sax brought
numerous mechanical improvements to our present-day instrument.



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Double Bass

Research
into the evolution of the double bass reveals a tangled web of
several hundred years of changes in design and fashion in the
dimensions of the instrument and consequently in its stringing and
tuning. The picture is further complicated by the simultaneous use
during any one period of different forms of bass in different
countries. The earliest known illustration of a double bass type of
instrument dates from 1516 but in 1493 Prospero wrote of 'viols as
big as myself.' Planyavsky (1970) pointed out that it is more
important to look for an early double bass tuning rather than for
any particular instrument by shape or name. A deep (double- or
contra-) bass voice is first found among the viols. There existed
simultaneously two methods of tuning - one using 4ths alone, the
other using a combination of 3rds and 4ths ('3rd-4th' tuning).
Agricola wrote of the contrabasso di viola as being the deepest
voice available. He was referring to an instrument comparable with
that made by Hanns Vogel in 1563 and now in the Germanisches
Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg. This ornately and beautifully decorated
bass is fitted with gut frets like other viols and tuned
G'-C-F-A-d-g. This high '3rd-4th' tuning was given by Praetorius (Syntagma
musicum, 2/1619) for a six-string violone (a name also confusingly
used in the 16th century to denote the bass of the viol family). He
listed several other tunings, both high and low, for five- and
six-string violoni. Most interesting of all is the low tuning
D'-E'-A'-D-G, only one step removed from the modern E'-A'-D'-G
instrument. Orlando Gibbons scored for the 'great dooble base' in
two viol fantasias. Whether a low '3rd-4th' tuning was used or a
higher one cannot be certain.
Some fine basses, many of which
were probably converted from their original form in to three- or
later four-string instruments, date from the late 16th century and
early 17th. A notable three-string bass, originally built as such,
is that by Gasparo da Salò, owned by Dragonetti and now in the
museum of St. Mark's, Venice. A beautiful six-string violone of much
lighter construction by Da Salò's apprentice Giovanni Paolo Maggini
is in the Horniman Museum, London. This is of violin shape, with a
flat back, and makes interesting comparison with the viol shaped
violone by Ventura Linarol (Padua, 1585) in the Kunsthistorisches
Museum, Vienna.

During the early 17th century
the five-string bass was most commonly used in Austria and Germany.
Leopold Mozart referred in the 1787 edition of his Violinschule to
having heard concertos, trios and solos played with great beauty on
instruments of this kind. The earliest known playing instructions,
by Johann Jacob Prinner (Musicalischer Schlissl, 1677, autograph US-Wc)
are for an instrument tuned F'-A'-D-F#-B. Much more usual, however,
is the tuning F'-A'-D-F#-A cited in 1790 by Albrechtsberger, for a
violone or contrabass with thick strings and frets tied at every
semitone round the fingerboard. Michel Corrette's 1773 Méthode
throws much light on the bass techniques and tunings in use during
the 18th and early 19th centuries when the bass was enjoying some
popularity as a solo instrument. Many of the virtuoso pieces from
the Viennese school of that period and later abound with passages of
double stopping and, in view of the tunings required, were thought
by early 20th-century authorities not to have been written for the
bass at all. Later research revealed that the instrument has in the
past been tuned in some 40 or 50 different ways; although the
repertory is quite practical with the tunings the composers
envisaged (e.g. one of the '3rd-4th' tunings), much is unplayable on
the modern conventionally tuned instruments. There are in fact
numerous solo concertos from this period.
In Italy an early tuning (cited
by Planyavsky, 1970) is Adriano Banchieri's of 1609 for his 'Violone
in contrabasso', D'-G'-C-E-A-d. Later the number of strings was
reduced, and three-string instruments were preferred. Even during
the early 18th century a three-string bass tuned A'-D-G or G'-D-G
was normal. It had no frets and with the growth of the symphony
orchestra it was logical that his more powerful instrument should supersede earlier models. Not
until the 1920s was the additional E' string expected of most
professional players. Until then any passages going below A' were
transposed up an octave, resulting in the temporary disappearance of
the 16' line.


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Theorbo
(French: horbe, German: Theorba, Italian: theorba, Barbitone)
The large double-necked bass lute much used during the 16th
and 17th centuries as general bass in the orchestra.
The body of the theorbo was constructed on the same principles
as that of the lute but larger, and the same scheme of
decoration was followed. The neck, instead of being bent back at
an angle to form the head, was straight, having sufficient pegs
set in the sides of the head for from 12 to 16 strings tuned in
pairs of unisons; on the fingerboards were marked 8 or more
frets for semitones. Above this neck was another without frets,
Curving forwards and slightly to one side to enable the long
bass strings, stretched not over but at the side of the neck, to
escape the pegs of the shorter strings. These free strings,
known as diapason strings (German: Begleitseiten) were plucked d
vide like those of the lyre, each giving but one note; the
number of these strings varied from 8 to II.


The theorbo was made in two
sizes, the ordinary instrument measuring about 3 ft. 6 in., and
the Paduan, also known as archlute, about 5 ft. The chitarrone,
or Roman theorbo, was the largest of all, a contrabass lute in
fact, and frequently stood over 6 ft. high. It differed slightly
from the theorbo; the body was a little smaller than in the
Paduan variety, the whole of the extra length being in the
second neck. The strings over the fingerboard were of steel or
brass, and the diapason strings of spun wire.


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Oboe

The Oboe is a double-reed wind instrument with a
wooden body and narrow conical bore.
In French the oboe is called hautbois which
means 'high, or loud, wood'). The oboe has a body in three sections.
It has a tiny double reed, through which the musician must force air
at a very high pressure. It is traditionally made from Blackwood,
also called grenadille. The instrument has up to 23 holes. The
double reed is fashioned from cane which is usually dried and aged
for several years. The oboe encompasses two octaves.
The oboe was invented in the
17th century by the French musicians Jean Hotteterre and Michel
Danican Philidor, who modified the louder shawm (the prevailing
double-reed instrument). The instrument's scuccess was established
at the court of Louis XIV and spread rapidly all over Europe. By
1700 most orchestras included oboes. In 1700 the French
instrumentalist Jean-Pierre Freillon published the first method for
the instrument: 'Véritable manière d'apprendre à jouer du hautbois'.
The next important development
came in the 1800's and was the use of key mechanisms. There was no
single outline for the key sytems. Generally, the Germans created
simpler systems, and the French more complicated ones. Still today,
the key systems do vary from oboes of one manufacturer to another.
Early oboes had seven
finger-holes and two keys; by the 1700s four-keyed models were also
in use. In the 1800s additional keys were added, reaching 15 or
more, and the bore and sound holes were redesigned. Oboes of the
French school (played in most countries today) have a very narrow
bore and a penetrating, focused sound. Those of the German school
have a wider bore and a more easily blending sound. After Theobald
Boehm invented his key mechanism for the flute, it was French
builders who applied the system to the oboe.
The oboe is the smallest
orchestral double-reed instrument and very important in the
orchestra. Because the oboe's pitch varies little with temperature,
the oboe will play the A-note to which all othe instruments in the
orchestra will tune to. The oboe also is an important soloist.

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Bassoon

Bassoons are
usually made of maple, rosewood, ebonite, or plastic. Today,
bassoons are played in bands, orchestras, woodwind quintets, and
other small ensembles.
The bassoon sound is made
by blowing into a double reed. The double reed is made with two
pieces of cane that are tied together and put in a tube. When
air is blown into the double reed, the two pieces of cane
vibrate against each other. Many of the fingerings on the
bassoon are quite complicated.
Double Reed instruments
have existed since ancient times. The origin of the bassoon
itself dates back at least 500 years, where there was in use a
one-pice instrument with a double reed made of cane. One name
for this instrument was the dulcian, which came from the Latin
word meaning "soft and sweet." The English version was call the
curtal.
During the reign of Louis
the XIV (1643-1715), French instrument makers constructed a new
curtal made of four separate pieces similar to today's bassoon.
Its use rapidly spread throughout western Europe. Throughout the
1700's keys were added so that more notes could be played.
In the 1820's Carl
Almenräder redesigned the bassoon, and through a partnership
with Adam Heckel, developed the German bassoon. It is this
bassoon, with minor changes and improvements, that is played
today in the United States, most of Europe, and elsewhere around
the world. A French bassoon also continues to exist, and is
played mostly in France and some parts of Canada.

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Saxophone
The
saxophone was invented by Adolphe Sax, who was born 6 November 1814, in
Belgium. Sax's father manufactured clarinets and brass instruments, so
Sax learnt the skill of instrument making at an early stage. Sax grew up
to be a good clarinetist, but was always struck by the instrument's
shortcomings. He'd redesigned the bass clarinet to a greatly improved
standard, but he also wanted to produce an instrument that played in
octaves rather than twelfths. So, the saxophone was created. It was
first shown at an exhibition in Brussels, 1841. It was reported that the
instrument was 'sent flying with a kick by an unknown person' when Sax
wasn't watching. Sax left for Paris after this incident.
When
settled in Paris, one of the first things Sax did was to play a public
performance at the Paris Conservatoire, where he met and befriended many
of Paris' distinguished musicians. He gathered enough money to form the
'Adolphe Sax Musical Instrument Factory. As a result, he was forever at
war with the established local instrument makers. They issued thefts,
threats, legal battles and possibly even an attempt on his life. One
tactic employed against the saxophone was to oppose it's acceptance into
the orchestra, an example of this was when an Opera orchestra threatened
to walk out when a Sax Bass Clarinet was to be introduced into the
orchestra. The 'United Association of Instrument Makers' was also
established
The
French Revolution was also a problem for Sax, he had previously been
very much involved with the King, and most of the famous players were
part of his court. Without them, the French military bands with Sax's
instruments were revoked by the new government. In 1848 an anonymous
benefactor gave Sax money to pay his workers, without which he would
have become bankrupt. In 1852 this benefactor died, leaving a large sum
of money unaccounted for. Sax was soon demanded to repay the money, he
fled to London and pleaded by mail but soon had to return to Paris and
financial ruin.
Sax
returned to the music scene in 1859, with more legal battles, and the
saxophone began to creep back into the market. Classes for the saxophone
started in the Paris Conservatoire, 1867. But, shortly after a lot of
Sax's colleagues died, his patents expired and the classes stopped. In
1873 Sax faced bankruptcy a second time. Sax died in 1894, so his son
Adolphe Edouard, born 29 September 1859, continued the Sax factory. In
1928 it was sold to the Henri Selmer Company and the rest, as they say,
is history!
in
Paris by these locals, one of their first lawsuits was to oppose Sax's
application for a patent on the Saxophone. As a response, Sax challenged
them to produce the instrument known as the saxophone themselves. They
failed.


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