Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Expand French Template:Infobox person Antoine-Joseph "Adolphe" Sax ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; 6 November 1814 – 7 February 1894)Template:Efn was a Belgian inventor and musician who invented the saxophone in the early 1840s, patenting it in 1846. He also invented the saxotromba, saxhorn and saxtuba, and redesigned the bass clarinet in a fashion still used in the 21st century.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He played the flute and clarinet.

Early lifeEdit

Antoine-Joseph Sax was born on 6 November 1814 in Dinant, in what is now Belgium, to Charles-Joseph Sax and his wife Marie-Joseph (Masson).<ref>Fit for a King: An Ivory Clarinet by Charles Joseph Sax.</ref> While his given name was Antoine-Joseph, he was referred to as Adolphe from childhood.<ref name=hubbard-encycl/><ref name="Ingham1998">Template:Cite book</ref> His father and mother were instrument designers themselves, who made several changes to the design of the French horn. Adolphe began to make his own instruments at an early age, entering two of his flutes and a clarinet into a competition at the age of 15. He subsequently studied performance on those two instruments as well as voice at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels.<ref name=hubbard-encycl/><ref name="Ingham1998"/>

Sax faced many brushes with death. As a child, he once fell from a height of three floors, hit his head on a stone and was believed dead. At the age of three, he drank a bowl full of acidic water, mistaking it for milk,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and later swallowed a pin. He received serious burns from a gunpowder explosion and once fell onto a hot cast-iron frying pan, burning his side. Several times he avoided accidental poisoning and asphyxiation from sleeping in a room where varnished furniture was drying. Another time young Sax was struck on the head by a cobblestone and fell into a river, almost dying.<ref name="Dinant"/>

His mother once said that "he's a child condemned to misfortune; he won't live". His neighbors called him "little Sax, the ghost".<ref name="Dinant">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Career and later lifeEdit

After leaving the Royal Conservatory of Brussels, Sax began to experiment with new instrument designs, while his parents continued their business of making conventional instruments. Sax's first important invention was an improvement in bass clarinet design, which he patented at the age of 24.Template:Sfn He relocated permanently to Paris in 1842 and began working on a new set of valved bugles. While he did not invent this instrument, his examples were much more successful than those of his rivals and became known as saxhorns. Hector Berlioz was so enamoured of these that he arranged in February 1844 for one of his pieces to be played entirely on saxhorns.Template:Sfn They were made in seven different sizes and paved the way for the creation of the flugelhorn. Today saxhorns are sometimes used in concert bands, marching bands, and orchestras. The saxhorn also laid the groundwork for the modern euphonium.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Sax also developed the saxotromba family, valved brass instruments with narrower bore than the saxhorns, in 1845, though they survived only briefly.<ref name=hubbard-encycl>Template:Cite book</ref>

The use of saxhorns spread rapidly. The saxhorn valves were accepted as state-of-the-art in their time and remain largely unchanged today. The advances made by Adolphe Sax were soon followed by the British brass band movement, which exclusively adopted the saxhorn family of instruments.<ref name=Herbert2000>T. Herbert, The British Brass Band: a Musical and Social History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 4–5.</ref> A decade after saxhorns became available, the Jedforest Instrumental Band (1854)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and The Hawick Saxhorn Band (1855)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> were formed in the Scottish Borders.

The period around 1840 saw Sax inventing the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, an early unsuccessful design of contrabass clarinet. On 28 June 1846 he patented the saxophone, intended for use in orchestras and military bands.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> By 1846 Sax had designed saxophones ranging from sopranino to subcontrabass, although not all were built. Composer Hector Berlioz wrote approvingly of the new instrument in 1842, but despite his support, saxophones did not become a standard part of the orchestra. Their ability to play technical passages easily like woodwinds yet project loudly like brass instruments led to their inclusion in military bands in France and elsewhere.<ref name=hemke>Fred L. Hemke, The Early History of the Saxophone, (DMA dissertation), University of Wisconsin, 1975, 249–250. Template:OCLC, Template:OCLC.</ref>

During the Crimean War (1853–1856), Sax made two more inventions, though neither was ever actually built: First, he designed the "Saxotonnerre", a massive, locomotive-powered organ which was supposed to be so loud as to be heard across all of Paris at once.Template:Sfn The second was developed in response to the Crimean War's Siege of Sevastopol where the French military and its allies were locked in a destructive conflict. As a potential solution to such lengthy sieges, Sax thus designed the "Saxocannon", a giant cannon whose half-ton round shots would be powerful enough to completely destroy an "average-sized city".Template:Sfn

Sax's reputation eventually helped secure him a job teaching at the Paris Conservatory in 1857.<ref name=hemke/> He continued to make instruments later in life and presided over the new saxophone course at the Paris Conservatory. Legal troubles involving patents continued for over 20 years, with rival instrument makers attacking the legitimacy of his patents and Sax suing them for patent infringement. He was driven into bankruptcy three times: in 1852, 1873 and 1877.<ref name="Dinant"/>

Sax suffered from lip cancer between 1853 and 1858 but made a full recovery. In 1894 he died of pneumonia in Paris, in poverty,<ref>Template:Cite news Template:Open access</ref> and was interred in section 5 (Avenue de Montebello) at the Cimetière de Montmartre in Paris.

Honors and awardsEdit

In his birthplace Dinant in Belgium, Mr Sax's House is dedicated to his life and saxophones.

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  • 2015: Google Doodle commemorated his 201st birthday.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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