User Contributed Dictionary
Derived terms
Verb
tromba- Third-person singular present tense of trombare
Extensive Definition
The trumpet is a musical
instrument with the highest register
in the brass
family, and produces a "bright" sound. Trumpets are among the
oldest musical instruments, dating back to at least 1500 BC. They
are constructed of brass
tubing bent twice into a compact rectangle, and are played by
blowing air through closed lips, producing a "buzzing" sound which
starts a standing
wave vibration in the air column inside the trumpet.
There are several types of trumpet; the most
common being a transposing
instrument pitched in B flat. Older trumpets did not have
valves; however, modern trumpets have either three piston
valves or three rotary
valves, each of which increases the length of tubing when
engaged, thereby lowering the pitch.
The trumpet is used in most forms of music,
including classical
music and jazz; some
notable trumpet players in the latter field include Louis
Armstrong, Miles Davis,
Dizzy
Gillespie, Clifford
Brown, Lee Morgan,
Freddie
Hubbard, Chet Baker,
and Maynard
Ferguson.
History
The earliest trumpets date back to 1500 BC and earlier. The bronze and silver trumpets from Tutankhamun's grave in Egypt, bronze lurs from Scandinavia, and metal trumpets from China date back to this period. Trumpets from the Oxus civilization (3rd millennium BC) of Central Asia have decorated swellings in the middle, yet are made out of one sheet of metal, which is considered a technical wonder. The Moche people of ancient Peru depicted trumpets in their art going back to 300 AD The earliest trumpets were signaling instruments used for military or religious purposes, rather than music in the modern sense; and the modern bugle continues this signaling tradition. In medieval times, trumpet playing was a guarded craft, its instruction occurring only within highly selective guilds. The trumpet players were often among the most heavily guarded members of a troop, as they were relied upon to relay instructions to other sections of the army. Improvements to instrument design and metal making in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance led to an increased usefulness of the trumpet as a musical instrument. The development of the upper, "clarino" register, by specialist trumpeters, would lend itself well to the Baroque era, also known as the "Golden Age of the natural trumpet." The melody-dominated homophony of the classical and romantic periods relegated the trumpet to a secondary role by most major composers. The trumpet was slow to adopt the modern valves (invented around the mid 1830s), and its cousin, the cornet would take the spotlight as solo instrument for the next hundred years. Crooks and shanks (removable tubing of various lengths) as opposed to keys or valves were standard, notably in France, into the first part of the 20th century.Construction
The trumpet is constructed of brass tubing bent twice into a compact rectangle. The trumpet and trombone share a roughly cylindrical bore which results in a bright, loud sound. The bore is actually a complex series of tapers, smaller at the mouthpiece receiver and larger just before the flare of the bell begins; careful design of these tapers is critical to the intonation of the instrument. By comparison, the cornet and flugelhorn have conical bores and produce a more mellow tone.As with all brass instruments, sound is produced
by blowing air through closed lips, producing a "buzzing" sound
into the mouthpiece
and starting a standing
wave vibration in the air column inside the trumpet. The player
can select the pitch from
a range of overtones or
harmonics by changing
the lip aperture and tension (known as the embouchure). Modern trumpets
also have three piston
valves, each of which increases the length of tubing when
engaged, thereby lowering the pitch. The first valve lowers the
instrument's pitch by a whole step (2 semitones), the second valve by
a half step (1 semitone), and the third valve by one-and-a-half
steps (3 semitones). When a fourth valve is present, as with some
piccolo
trumpets, it lowers the pitch a perfect
fourth (5 semitones). Used singly and in combination these
valves make the instrument fully chromatic,
i.e., able to play all twelve pitches of Western
music. The sound is projected outward by the bell.
The trumpet's harmonic series is closely matched
to the musical scale, but there are some notes in the series which
are a compromise and thus slightly off key; these are known as
wolf
tones. Some trumpets have a slide mechanism built in to
compensate.
The mouthpiece has a circular rim which provides
a comfortable environment for the lips' vibration. Directly behind
the rim is the cup, which channels the air into a much smaller
opening (the back bore or shank) which tapers out slightly to match
the diameter of the trumpet's lead pipe. The dimensions of these
parts of the mouthpiece affect the timbre or quality of sound, the
ease of playability, and player comfort. Generally, the wider and
deeper the cup, the darker the sound and timbre.
Types of trumpets
The most common type is the B-flat trumpet, but C, D, E-flat, E, F, G and A trumpets are also available. The most common use of the C trumpet is in American orchestral playing, where it is used alongside the B-flat trumpet. Its slightly smaller size gives it a brighter, more lively sound. Because music written for early trumpets required the use of a different trumpet for each key — they did not have valves and therefore were not chromatic — and also because a player may choose to play a particular passage on a different trumpet from the one indicated on the written music, orchestra trumpet players are generally adept at transposing music at sight, sometimes playing music written for the B-flat trumpet on the C trumpet, and vice versa. Each trumpet's range extends from the written F sharp immediately below Middle C up to about three octaves higher. Standard repertoire rarely calls for notes beyond this range, and the fingering tables of most method books peak at the C (high C) two octaves above middle C. Several trumpeters have achieved fame for their proficiency in the extreme high register, among them Lew Soloff, Andrea Tofanelli, Bill Chase, Roger Ingram, Maynard Ferguson, Wayne Bergeron, Anthony Gorruso, Dizzy Gillespie, Jon Faddis, Cat Anderson, James Morrison, Doc Severinsen and Arturo Sandoval. It is also possible to produce pedal tones below the low F sharp, although this technique is more often encountered as a sound-production exercise than as a written trumpet part.The smallest trumpets are referred to as piccolo
trumpets. The most common of these are built to play in both B
flat and A, with separate leadpipes for each key. The tubing in the
B-flat piccolo trumpet is one-half the length of that in a standard
B-flat trumpet. Piccolo trumpets in G, F and even C are also
manufactured, but are rarer. Many players use a smaller mouthpiece
on the piccolo trumpet, which requires a different sound production
technique from the B-flat trumpet and can limit endurance. Almost
all piccolo trumpets have four valves instead of the usual three —
the fourth valve lowers the pitch, usually by a fourth, to
facilitate the playing of lower notes. Maurice
André, Håkan
Hardenberger, and Wynton
Marsalis are some well-known piccolo trumpet players. Trumpets
pitched in the key of G are also called sopranos, or soprano
bugles, after their adaptation from military bugles.
Traditionally used in drum
and bugle corps, sopranos have featured both rotary
valves and piston
valves.
The bass trumpet
is usually played by a trombone player, being at the
same pitch. Bass trumpet is played with a trombone or euphonium mouthpiece, and
music for it is written in treble
clef.
The modern slide
trumpet is a B-flat trumpet that has a slide instead of valves.
It is similar to a
soprano trombone. The first slide trumpets emerged during the
Renaissance, predating the modern trombone, and are the first
attempts to increase chromaticism
on the instrument. Slide trumpets were the first trumpets allowed
in the Christian church.
The historical slide trumpet was probably first
developed in the late fourteenth century for use in alta capella
wind bands. Deriving from early straight trumpets, the Renaissance
slide trumpet was essentially a natural trumpet with a sliding
leadpipe. This single slide was rather awkward, as the entire
corpus of the instrument moved, and the range of the slide was
probably no more than a major third. Originals were probably
pitched in D, to fit with shawms in D and G, probably at a
typical pitch standard near A=466. As no instruments from this
period are known to survive, the details - and even the existence -
of a Renaissance slide trumpet is a matter of some conjecture, and
there continues to be some debate among scholars.
Some slide trumpet designs saw use in England in
the eighteenth century.
The pocket
trumpet is a compact B-flat trumpet. The bell is usually
smaller than a standard trumpet and the tubing is more tightly
wound to reduce the instrument size without reducing the total tube
length. Its design is not standardized, and the quality of various
models varies greatly. It can have a tone quality and projection
unique in the trumpet world: a warm sound and a voice-like
articulation. Unfortunately, since many pocket trumpet models
suffer from poor design as well as cheap and sloppy manufacturing,
the intonation, tone color and dynamic range of such instruments
are severely hindered. Professional-standard instruments are,
however, available. While they are not a substitute for the
full-sized instrument, they can be useful in certain
contexts.
There are also rotary-valve,
or German, trumpets, as well as alto and Baroque
trumpets.
The trumpet is often confused with its close
relative, the cornet,
which has a more conical
tubing shape compared to the trumpet's more cylindrical
tube. This, along with additional bends in the cornet's tubing,
gives the cornet a slightly mellower tone, but the instruments are
otherwise nearly identical. They have the same length of tubing
and, therefore, the same pitch, so music written for cornet and
trumpet is interchangeable. Another relative, the flugelhorn, has tubing that
is even more conical than that of the cornet, and an even richer
tone. It is sometimes augmented with a fourth valve to improve the
intonation of some lower notes.
Playing
Fingering
On any trumpet, cornet, or flugelhorn, pressing the valves indicated by the numbers below will produce the written notes shown - "OPEN" means all valves up, "1" means first valve, "1-2" means first and second valve simultaneously and so on. The concert pitch which sounds depends on the transposition of the instrument. Engaging the fourth valve, if present, drops any of these pitches by a perfect fourth as well. Within each overtone series, the different pitches are attained by changing the embouchure, or lip position and "firmness". Standard fingerings above high C are the same as for the notes an octave below (C sharp is 1-2, D is 1, etc.)The volume of sound of the trumpet tone is
controlled by the air pressure applied by the player.
Note that the fundamental
of each overtone series
does not exist - the series begins with the first overtone. Notes
in parentheses are the sixth overtone, representing a pitch with a
frequency of seven times that of the fundamental; while this pitch
is close to the note shown, it is slightly flat relative to
equal
temperament, and use of those fingerings is generally
avoided.
The fingering schema arises from the length of
each valve's tubing (longer lengths of tubing produces a lower
pitch). Valve "1" increases the tubing length enough to lower the
pitch by one whole step, valve "2" by one half step, and valve "3"
by one and a half steps. This scheme and the nature of the overtone
series create the possibility of alternate fingerings for certain
notes. For example, third-space "C" can be produced with no valves
engaged (standard fingering) or with valves 2-3. Also, any note
produced with 1-2 as its standard fingering can also be produced
with valve 3 - each drops the pitch by 1-1/2 steps. Alternate
fingerings may be used to improve facility in certain passages.
Extending the third valve slide when using the fingerings 1-3 or
1-2-3 further lowers the pitch slightly to improve
intonation.
Instruction and method books
One trumpet method publication of long-standing
popularity is Jean-Baptiste
Arban's Complete
Conservatory Method for Trumpet (Cornet). Other well-known
method books include "Technical Studies" by Herbert L. Clarke,
"Grand Method" Louis Saint-Jacome, and methods by Claude Gordon and
Charles Colin. Vassily
Brandt's Orchestral Etudes and Last Etudes is used in many
college and conservatory trumpet studios, containing drills on
permutations of standard orchestral trumpet repertoire,
transpositions, and other advanced material. A common method book
for beginners is the "Walter Beeler Method", and there have been
several instruction books written by virtuoso Allen
Vizzutti. The Breeze Eazy method is sometimes used to teach
younger students, as it includes general musical information.
Players
The trumpet is used in many forms of music, though the most recognised players have been in the jazz field. Louis Armstrong, for example, was well known for his virtuosity with the trumpet. Armstrong's improvisations on his Hot Five and Hot Seven records were daring and sophisticated while also often subtle and melodic. Miles Davis is widely considered one of the most influential musicians of the 20th century. His trumpet playing was distinctive, with a vocal, clear tone that has been imitated by many. The phrasing and sense of space in his solos have been models for generations of jazz musicians. Dizzy Gillespie was a trumpet virtuoso and gifted improviser, building on the virtuoso style of Roy Eldridge but adding layers of harmonic complexity previously unknown in jazz. In addition to his instrumental skills, Dizzy had an enormous impact on virtually every subsequent trumpeter, both by the example of his playing and as a mentor to younger musicians. Maynard Ferguson came to prominence playing in Stan Kenton's orchestra, before forming his own band in 1957. He was noted for being able to play accurately in a remarkably high register.. While he was not the first trumpeter to play in the extreme upper register, he had a unique ability to play high notes with full, rich tone, power, and musicality. While regarded by some as showboating, Ferguson's tone, phrasing and vibrato was instantly recognizable and has been influential on and imitated by generations of amateur and professional trumpet players. A direct connection to Ferguson's style of playing continues in the work of the trumpeters who played with him, notably Wayne Bergeron. Although some had believed that Ferguson was endowed with exceptional facial musculature, he often shared in interviews that his command of the upper registers was based mostly on breath control, something he had discovered as a youngster in Montreal.Among the other great modern jazz trumpet players
are Clifford
Brown, Jon Faddis,
Harry
James, Wynton
Marsalis, Freddie
Hubbard, Lee Morgan,
Chet
Baker, James
Morrison, Arturo
Sandoval, and Doc
Severinsen.
Notable classical trumpeters include Maurice
André, Roger
Voisin, William
Vacchiano, Adolph "Bud"
Herseth, Charles
Schlueter, Malcolm
McNab, Allen
Vizzutti, Sergei
Nakariakov, Maurice
Murphy, and Philip
Smith.
A musician who plays the trumpet
is called a trumpet player or trumpeter.
Musical pieces
The trumpet is used in a wide range of musical
styles including classical,
jazz, rock, blues, pop,
ska, polka and funk.
Solos
The chromatic trumpet was first made in the late
1700s, but there were several solos written for the natural
trumpet that are now played on piccolo trumpet.
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet Before 1721, Syracuse University Press, 1973, ISBN 0815621574
- Philip Bate, The Trumpet and Trombone: An Outline of Their History, Development, and Construction, Ernest Benn, 1978, ISBN 0393021297
- Roger Sherman, Trumpeter's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Playing and Teaching the Trumpet, Accura Music, 1979, ISBN 0918194024
- Stan Skardinski, You Can't Be Timid With a Trumpet: Notes from the Orchestra, Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1980, ISBN 0688419631
- Robert Barclay, The Art of the Trumpet-Maker: The Materials, Tools and Techniques of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries in Nuremberg , Oxford University Press, 1992, ISBN 0198162235
- James Arthur Brownlow, The Last Trumpet: A History of the English Slide Trumpet, Pendragon Press, 1996, ISBN 0945193815
- Frank Gabriel Campos, Trumpet Technique, Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 0195166922
External links
commons Trumpet- International Trumpet Guild international trumpet players' association with online library of scholarly journal back issues, news, jobs and other trumpet resources.
- Jay Lichtmann's trumpet studies Scales and technical trumpet studies.
- Dallas Music — a non-profit musical instrument resource site
tromba in Min Nan: Kó͘-chhoe
tromba in Bavarian: Trompetn
tromba in Breton: Trompilh (sonerezh)
tromba in Bulgarian: Тромпет
tromba in Catalan: Trompeta
tromba in Czech: Trubka
tromba in Danish: Trompet
tromba in Pennsylvania German: Drummbett
tromba in German: Trompete
tromba in Estonian: Trompet
tromba in Modern Greek (1453-): Τρομπέτα
tromba in Spanish: Trompeta
tromba in Esperanto: Trumpeto
tromba in Basque: Tronpeta
tromba in Persian: ترومپت
tromba in French: Trompette
tromba in Western Frisian: Trompet
tromba in Irish: Trumpa
tromba in Galician: Trompeta
tromba in Hakka Chinese: La̍p-pá
tromba in Korean: 트럼펫
tromba in Croatian: Truba
tromba in Indonesian: Terompet
tromba in Icelandic: Trompet
tromba in Italian: Tromba
tromba in Hebrew: חצוצרה
tromba in Latvian: Trompete
tromba in Lithuanian: Trimitas
tromba in Hungarian: Trombita
tromba in Dutch: Trompet
tromba in Dutch Low Saxon: Trompet
tromba in Japanese: トランペット
tromba in Norwegian: Trompet
tromba in Norwegian Nynorsk: Trompet
tromba in Occitan (post 1500): Trompeta
tromba in Polish: Trąbka
tromba in Portuguese: Trompete
tromba in Quechua: Q'ipa
tromba in Russian: Труба
tromba in Simple English: Trumpet
tromba in Slovak: Trúbka
tromba in Slovenian: Trobenta
tromba in Serbian: Труба
tromba in Serbo-Croatian: Truba
tromba in Finnish: Trumpetti
tromba in Swedish: Trumpet
tromba in Thai: ทรัมเป็ต
tromba in Vietnamese: Trumpet
tromba in Turkish: Trompet
tromba in Ukrainian: Труба (музика)
tromba in Chinese: 小號