Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Lip-vibrated instruments of the ancient and non-western world
- 2 How brass instruments work
- 3 Design, technology and manufacture before 1800
- 4 Brass instruments in art music in the Middle Ages
- 5 The cornett
- 6 ‘Sackbut’: the early trombone
- 7 The trumpet before 1800
- 8 The horn in the Baroque and Classical periods
- 9 Design, technology and manufacture since 1800
- 10 Keyed brass
- 11 The low brass
- 12 Brass in the modern orchestra
- 13 Brass bands and other vernacular brass traditions
- 14 Playing, learning and teaching brass
- 15 The post-classical horn
- 16 Jazz, improvisation and brass
- 17 Brass solo and chamber music from 1800
- 18 Frontiers or byways? Brass instruments in avant-garde music
- Glossary
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Lip-vibrated instruments of the ancient and non-western world
- 2 How brass instruments work
- 3 Design, technology and manufacture before 1800
- 4 Brass instruments in art music in the Middle Ages
- 5 The cornett
- 6 ‘Sackbut’: the early trombone
- 7 The trumpet before 1800
- 8 The horn in the Baroque and Classical periods
- 9 Design, technology and manufacture since 1800
- 10 Keyed brass
- 11 The low brass
- 12 Brass in the modern orchestra
- 13 Brass bands and other vernacular brass traditions
- 14 Playing, learning and teaching brass
- 15 The post-classical horn
- 16 Jazz, improvisation and brass
- 17 Brass solo and chamber music from 1800
- 18 Frontiers or byways? Brass instruments in avant-garde music
- Glossary
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
This book provides a broad overview of the story of brass instruments in western, and, to a lesser extent, non-western, music. Neither the book as a whole, nor any of the individual chapters contained in it, lays claim to being a comprehensive survey of its subject. Indeed, this is the first volume in the Cambridge Companion series to be devoted to a family of instruments rather than a single instrument type. Though it was a close-run decision, we felt that it was most helpful to look at the family of brass as a whole, because, though individual brass instruments have their own special histories, the merits of considering the family – particularly with respect to the way that brass instruments relate to each other – outweigh the benefits of dealing with just individual members of it.
There is probably no other family of instruments which has been more affected by the progress of history, with its attendant social changes, technical inventions and musical fashions. These changes have resulted in each instrument having not one, but several idioms. Such diversities are exemplified by the dilemma of modern performers who, on any day of any week, maybe required to imitate the style of the seventeenth century, the nineteenth century, 1920s Broadway, modern jazz, the Second Viennese school, or play the music of their own time within current parameters of taste and style.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Brass Instruments , pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997