Brass Instruments Through History
What is a brass instrument?
Before getting into the history of how brass instruments and
music originated and developed it is necessary to be clear on
what a brass instrument actual is. The technical term for a
brass instrument is aerophone, which means it is an instrument
which means the musician must blow air into the instrument. The
musician produces the tone by buzzing the lips into what is
generally a cup-shaped mouthpiece. It does not mean that the
instrument is necessarily made of brass, since instruments that
are made of other metals, wood, horn, or even animal bone are
included in the family of brass instruments. Likewise, other
instruments that are made of brass or metals, such as the flute
or saxophone, do not constitute members of the brass family of
instruments.
Brass instruments, like all other pitched
musical instruments, are dependent on the overtone series which
was first studied and analyzed by the Greek philosopher
Pythagoras. It basically states that a string, or the vibrating
air column in the case of a brass instrument, will tend to
vibrate at certain frequencies based on the length of the
string or tube. The fundamental pitch is the lowest natural
note. Other possible notes are then follow Pathagorus' formula,
one octave above the fundamental, followed by a perfect fifth
above that, followed by a perfect fourth, and on up.
Because the overtone series leaves a lot of
gaps between pitches musicians and instrument manufacturers
developed ways of playing the notes in between. Modern brass
instruments usually alter the length of the tubing through
valves. The slide, still used by trombonists today, was one of
the earliest methods of changing the length of tubing. Other
methods of producing additional pitches include replacing
different lengthened crooks in the instrument and placing the
hand deep into the bell, in the case of early horns, to alter
the pitch.
Brass Instruments and Music in Antiquity and
the RenaissanceBrass instruments have been around for a
long time. Some of the earliest examples of brass instruments
were straight trumpets made of wood, bronze, and silver, such
as the salpinx found in Greece, and the Roman tuba, lituus, and
buccina. Other early brass instruments were horns made of
bronze and animal horns. The Scandinavian lur was one such
instrument, as was the Roman, cornu. The schofar is an ancient
Hebrew brass instrument which is still used in Jewish
ceremonies today.
During the Renaissance brass instruments began
to develop that more resemble the instruments used today.
Around 1400-1413 the earliest known S-shaped trumpet was
developed, which was later followed by the folded trumpet and
slide trumpet. It was out of the slide trumpet that the
trombone developed around 1450. This new instrument, commonly
referred to as a sackbut, was a vast improvement over the
awkward to play slide trumpet. Instrument designers developed a
system of connected double tubes which reduced the distance the
slide needed to move between notes and therefore improved the
musician's performance technique. Improved slide design also
allowed a practical tenor range instrument, which has become
the most common instrument of the trombone family.
Also during this time, around 1500, large
European courts would maintain corps of trumpeters used mainly
for heralding. This early trumpet ensembles eventually
progressed to include five part music, but there was little
harmonic variety. Players tended to specialize in either the
high range or low range.
The horn had yet to develop into an instrument
for strictly musical purposes yet, although curved and helical
horns were commonly used for hunting.
In 1597 Italian composer Giovanni Gabrieli,
then the organist at Saint Mark's Cathedral in Venice, composed
the earliest known piece to call for specific brass
instruments, Sonate pian'forte.
Developments of the 17th CenturyThe
17th Century began to see some major innovations in the design
of brass instruments. Around 1600 some instrument makers in
Nuremberg improved the design of the natural valveless trumpet
to function better in the upper overtones. The pitch of the
instrument was changed by inserting terminal crooks for lower
keys and tuning was accomplished by inserting small lengths of
tubing to extend the mouthpiece. Music composed for these
instruments was written in the upper register where the
overtone series are closer together and capable of playing more
scale-like passages. This is generally referred to as the
clarino register.
This clarino style of playing reached it's peak
near the end of the 1600s with solo concertos composed by
Guiseppe Torelli, Domenico Gabrielli, and Giacomo Perti. Many
of these pieces, along with music by Maurizio Cazzati and other
composers associated with the basilica of San Petronio in
Balogna, are still performed today.
Trombones continued to be widely used during
the 17th Century. Sackbuts were regularly employed in a variety
of ensembles, such as court and municipal bands, where it was
common to combine them with shawms. The sackbut was also used
frequently in ensembles where they were to blend with softer
instruments. One of most influential situations for the
trombones to be called for were in the churches, where they
were frequently used to double the voices. A vocal-like style
of playing developed for the trombones that was in contrast to
the contemporary trumpet style. It can be in part attributed to
the sacred associations of the trombone of this period for the
lack of secular trombone literature for centuries later.
The horn was still not frequently heard as a
purely musical instrument during this time, although hunting
horns were used on stage in some operas to help depict a
hunting scene. The hoop-shaped cor de chasse became a common
feature in the French hunting tradition.
Developments of the 18th CenturyIn the
18th Century the horn began to develop as an instrument capable
of high musical expression, rather than as a mere novelty.
Around 1700-1710 a Viennese instrument maker named Michael
Leichnambschneider may have been the first person to put
terminal crooks on horns in order to play them in different
keys. During this time horns were performed mostly in the upper
portion of the overtone series and were played without the hand
in the bell. Around 1750 a hornist from Dresden, Germany
developed the technique of adding pitches to the overtone
series of the horn through various degrees of hand stopping,
which soon became standard practice for horn players.
Composers soon began taking advantage of the
new technical facility developed by horn players and instrument
manufacturers. Reinhard Keiser may have been the first composer
to call for the horn with the orchestra in his 1705 opera
Octavia. George Frederick Handel called for two horns on his
1717 composition Water Music. Franz Joseph Haydn composed his
first horn concerto in 1762.
Composers also began writing solo works for the
trombone during this time. Christoph Wagenseil, Johann
Albrechtsberger, Michael Haydn, and Leopold Mozart all wrote
solo pieces for alto trombone, which was the preferred solo
trombone of the time. With the sacred associations of the
trombone from the previous century it was natural from
composers to utilize trombones to help portray religious or
supernatural effects in their operas of the late 18th Century.
Two of the most easily recognizable examples of this were
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute.
In the first half of the 18th Century Baroque
trumpet works reach its peak through the compositions of J.S.
Bach, who wrote for trumpet virtuoso Gottgried Reiche. By 1760
the clarino style of trumpet playing began to decline due to
changes of musical tastes and compositional styles. Ernst
Altenburg wrote a treatise on natural and clarino trumpet
playing called Trumpeter's and Kettledrummer's Art in 1795. The
trumpet concerto by Haydn was composed in 1796 for the Viennese
trumpet player Anton Weidinger.
In 1788 instrument maker Charles Clagget
achieved a patent for a chromatic trumpet, which consisted of
two instruments with different fundamentals and a switching
mechanism to direct the single mouthpiece to one side or
another. This instrument did not achieve much acceptance,
however.
Developments of the 19th CenturyThe
19th Century was the period of the greatest amount of
literature and design developments for brass instruments up to
this time. Although there is some controversy over exactly who
developed valved brass instruments it was around 1826 when a
German valve trumpet was brought to Paris where it was copied
and began to gain wide acceptance. Hector Berlioz was the first
known composer to use this instrument in his overture to Les
frans-juges in 1826. In 1835 Halevy's La juive was the first
score to call for valve horns. The custom of the period began
to be to score for two valved horns and two hand horns. The
cornet was developed around 1828 by Jean-Louis Antoine. This
new instrument quickly gained popularity for its chromatic
agility. The valve trombone was developed around 1828 and
gained wide use in bands, but little use in orchestras. In 1835
the first tuba, a five-valved instrument pitched in F, was
invented by Berlin instrument makers Wilhelm Wieprecht and
Johann Gottfried Moritz. A tenor tuba was produced by Moritz in
1838 and the euphonium was invented by Sommer of Weimar in
1843.
By around 1890 the modern form of the
orchestral trumpet became established. In France, England, and
the United States piston valves were generally used, but rotary
valves were more common in Germany, Austria, and Italy. It was
around this time that the trumpet pitched in B flat became most
common.
With better designed brass instruments and
improved technical abilities of brass musicians many composers
began writing works that included more brass or solo works for
brass instruments. Ludwig von Beethoven was the first major
composer to include trombones in his symphonic works, scoring
for three trombones in his 5th and 9th symphonies. This
influenced other composers to add trombones to the brass
section in their symphonic works. Beethoven also wrote his Horn
Sonata, Op. 17 for Giovanni Punto in 1800. Carl Maria von Weber
wrote his Concertino for Horn in 1806. The Concertino for
Trombone was composed in 1837 by Ferdinand David. Richard
Wagner and Hector Berlioz begin to champion the use of the tuba
in their works.
In 1864 one of the most influential methods of
brass playing was published, J.B. Arban's Complete Conservatory
Method. Although initially written for trumpet and cornet
students, this method book has been transcribed, published, and
used for almost all members of the modern brass family
today.
The 20th Century and BeyondBrass music
and instruments continued to develop in the 20th century. The
Belgian firm of Mahillon produced a piccolo B flat trumpet
around 1905, developed to assist trumpet players with Bach's
2nd Brandenburg Concerto and other works intended for clarino
trumpet playing. Around 1950 American bass trombonists began
experimenting with adding a second rotor valve to eventually
produce the standard double trigger bass trombone.
Major composers continued to write solo works
from brass instruments. Richard Strauss composed his Second
Concerto for Horn in 1942. In 1954 Ralph Vaughan Williams
composed his Bass Tuba Concerto.
Brass musicians began to establish their
instruments as major solo instruments as well. From around 1950
to 1957 English horn virtuoso Dennis Brain brought the horn to
the forefront before a fatal auto accident cut his career
short. French trumpeter Maurice André began to popularize solo
trumpet music and Swedish trombonist Christian Lindberg has
developed a career as a trombone soloist.
Beginning around 1920 the jazz styles of
trumpet and trombone playing became popular and began to
influence how European art influenced composers began writing
for brass instruments. Trumpeter Louis Armstrong and trombonist
Tommy Dorsey are only two of the jazz brass players who's
technical abilities astounded classical musicians and helped to
raise the standard of technical ability for brass
musicians.
Performers, composers, and instrument designers
continue to innovate brass music today. New instrument designs
come out each year, new works are written for brass
instruments, and many performers continue to stretch the
boundaries of what is considered playable on the brass
instruments. In spite of improvements in electronically
produced sounds brass music continues to grow and thrive.
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