In this readable, well-researched history, a distinguished authority on
musical instruments offers a concise survey of the evolution of
trumpets, trombones, bugles, cornets, French horns, tubas, and other
brass wind instruments. The story begins with such primitive
contrivances as bark trumpets, conch shells and perforated animal horns,
bronze trumpets used by the ancient Danes and Celts, large Roman horns,
and other devices.
During the medieval period, a large number of
curved instruments or horns of various shapes and sizes developed,
including trumpets, looped horns, the sackbut (forerunner of the
trombone) and others, while the Renaissance saw the introduction of the
slide trumpet. In the nineteenth century, the advent of valved
instruments ushered in yet another new era.
In this extensively
revised and updated edition, Mr. Baines documents the various states of
the evolution of brass instruments with immense learning and a wealth of
detail. The text is supplemented by over 140 black-and-white
illustrations as well as 48 music examples. The result is a scholarly
yet accessible account that remains an indispensable resource for any
brass player or music historian.