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{{short description|Brass instrument played with a slide}} {{Multiple issues| {{more citations needed|date=December 2018}} {{Original research|date=September 2024}} }} {{Infobox instrument | name = Trombone | image = File:Yamaha Tenor trombone YSL-891Z (re-crop).jpg | image_capt = A tenor trombone | background = brass | classification = {{hlist | [[Wind instrument|Wind]] | [[Brass instrument|Brass]] | [[Aerophone]] }} | hornbostel_sachs = 423.22 | hornbostel_sachs_desc = Sliding [[aerophone]] sounded by lip vibration | developed = Originated mid 15th century, [[sackbut]] in English until the early 18th century. | range = <div style="text-align: center; background-color: white;"><score lang="lilypond"> \layout { ragged-right = ##t \context { \Score \omit BarNumber } } { \new Staff \with { \remove "Time_signature_engraver" } \clef bass \key c \major \cadenzaOn e,,1 ^ \finger \markup \text "pedals" \glissando bes,,1 e,1 \glissando \clef tenor bes'1 \tweak font-size #-2 d''1 ^ \finger \markup \text "poss." \clef bass \ottava #-1 \tweak font-size #-2 c,,1 ^ \finger \markup \text "F poss." \glissando \tweak font-size #-2 ees,,1 \ottava #0 \tweak font-size #-2 b,,1 ^ \finger \markup \text "E*" \tweak font-size #-2 c,1 ^ \finger \markup \text "F" \glissando \tweak font-size #-2 ees,1 } </score><br>Range of the tenor trombone. Ranges marked "F" are only possible with an [[F attachment]]; low B is only possible if the tuning slide of the F attachment is pulled out to E. For other trombones, see [[#Types|§ Types]].</div> | related = {{hlist | [[Sackbut]] | [[Buccin]] | [[Trumpet]] | [[Bass trumpet|Bass Trumpet]] | [[Cimbasso]] }} | builders = | musicians = {{hlist | [[List of classical trombonists]] | [[List of jazz trombonists]] }} | articles = }} {{Brass}} The '''trombone''' ({{langx|de|Posaune}}, Italian, French: ''trombone'') is a [[musical instrument]] in the [[Brass instrument|brass family]]. As with all brass instruments, sound is produced when the player's lips vibrate inside a mouthpiece, causing the [[Standing wave|air column inside the instrument to vibrate]]. Nearly all trombones use a telescoping slide mechanism to alter the [[Pitch (music)|pitch]] instead of the [[brass instrument valve|valves]] used by other brass instruments. The [[valve trombone]] is an exception, using three valves similar to those on a [[trumpet]], and the [[superbone]] has valves and a slide. The word "trombone" derives from Italian ''tromba'' (trumpet) and ''-one'' (a suffix meaning "large"), so the name means "large trumpet". The trombone has a predominantly cylindrical bore like the [[trumpet]], in contrast to the more conical brass instruments like the [[cornet]], the [[flugelhorn]], the [[Baritone horn|baritone]], and the [[euphonium]]. The most frequently encountered trombones are the [[tenor trombone]] and [[bass trombone]]. These are treated as [[transposing instrument|non-transposing instruments]], reading at concert pitch in bass clef, with higher notes sometimes being notated in tenor clef. They are pitched in B{{Music|flat}}, an octave below the B{{Music|flat}} trumpet and an octave above the B{{Music|flat}} bass [[tuba]]. The once common E{{Music|flat}} [[alto trombone]] became less common as improvements in technique extended the upper range of the tenor, but it is regaining popularity for its lighter sonority. In British brass-band music the tenor trombone is treated as a B{{Music|flat}} [[transposing instrument]], written in treble clef, and the alto trombone is written at concert pitch, usually in alto clef. A person who plays the trombone is called a trombonist or trombone player. <!--If you are here to change "trombonist" to something else, know that it is not at all original, and not all that funny. Don't be that guy.--> == History == === Etymology === "Trombone" comes from the [[Italian (language)|Italian]] word ''tromba'' (trumpet) plus the suffix ''-one'' (large), meaning "large trumpet". During the Renaissance, the equivalent English term was "[[sackbut]]". The word first appears in court records in 1495 as "''shakbusshe''". "''Shakbusshe''" is similar to "''sacabuche''", attested in [[Spain]] as early as 1478. The French equivalent "''saqueboute''" appears in 1466.<ref name="Michault">{{cite book |last1=Michault |first1=Pierre |title=Le doctrinal du temps présent , compilé par maistre Pierre Michault, secrétaire du très puissant duc de Bourgoingne |url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k70431s/f17.item |via=Gallica, [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]] |access-date=4 December 2018 |page=16 |language=fr}}</ref> The German "''Posaune''" long predates the invention of the slide and could refer to a natural trumpet as late as the early fifteenth century.{{sfn|Guion|2010|p=22}} === Origin === {{See also|Sackbut}} [[File:MIMEd 6111. Tenor sackbut in A, Monk model.png|thumb|Renaissance era tenor sackbut (replica by Frank Tomes, London)]] The sackbut appeared in the 15th century and was used extensively across Europe, declining in most places by the mid to late 17th century. It was used in outdoor events, in concert, and in liturgical settings. Its principal role was as the [[Countertenor|contratenor]] part in a dance band.{{sfn|Herbert|2006|p=59}} It was also used, along with [[shawm]]s, in bands sponsored by towns and courts. Trumpeters and trombonists were employed in German city-states to stand watch [[tower music|in the city towers]] and herald the arrival of important people to the city, an activity that signified wealth and strength in 16th-century German cities. These heralding trombonists were often viewed separately from the more skilled trombonists who played in groups such as the [[alta capella]] wind ensembles and the first orchestral ensembles, which performed in religious settings such as [[St Mark's Basilica]] in [[Venice]] in the early 17th century.<ref name="Green">{{cite journal |last1=Green |first1=Helen |title=Defining the City 'Trumpeter': German Civic Identity and the Employment of Brass Instruments, c. 1500 |journal=Journal of the Royal Musical Association |date=2011|doi=10.1080/02690403.2011.562714 |s2cid=144303968 }}</ref> The 17th-century trombone had slightly smaller dimensions than a modern trombone, with a bell that was more conical and less flared. Modern [[Historically informed performance|period performers]] use the term "sackbut" to distinguish this earlier version of the trombone from the modern instrument. Composers who wrote for trombone during this period include [[Claudio Monteverdi]], [[Heinrich Schütz]], [[Giovanni Gabrieli]] and his uncle [[Andrea Gabrieli]]. The trombone doubled voice parts in sacred works, but there are also solo pieces written for trombone in the early 17th century. When the sackbut returned to common use in England in the 18th century, Italian music was so influential that the instrument became known by its Italian name, "trombone".{{sfn|Guion|1988|loc=p. 3: "Many modern musicians prefer to use the word 'sackbut' when referring to the Baroque trombone. All other instruments in constant use since the Baroque have changed more...In response to the number of times people including musicians, have asked if the sackbut is something like a trombone, I have stopped using this misleading word."}} Its name remained constant in Italy ([[:it:trombone|''trombone'']]) and in Germany ([[:de:Posaune|''Posaune'']]). During the later Baroque period, [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] and [[George Frideric Handel]] used trombones on a few occasions. Bach called for a ''tromba di tirarsi'', which may have been a form of the closely related [[slide trumpet]], to double the [[cantus firmus]] in some liturgical [[cantata]]s.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Lewis |first1=Horace Monroe |date=May 1975 |title=The Problem of the ''Tromba Da Tirarsi'' in the Works of J. S. Bach. |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=Louisiana State University |doi=10.31390/gradschool_disstheses.2799 |s2cid=249667805 |url=https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/2799 |access-date=18 June 2020|doi-access=free }}</ref> He also employed a choir of four trombones to double the chorus in three of his cantatas ([[Ach Gott, vom Himmel sieh darein, BWV 2|BWV 2]], [[Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis, BWV 21|BWV 21]] and [[Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir, BWV 38|BWV 38]]),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Weiner |first1=Harold |title=The Soprano Trombone Hoax |journal=Historical Brass Society Journal |url=https://www.historicbrass.org/edocman/hbj-2001/HBSJ_2001_JL01_008_Weiner.pdf |access-date=18 June 2020 |archive-date=27 November 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211127232731/https://historicbrass.org/edocman/hbj-2001/HBSJ_2001_JL01_008_Weiner.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> and used three trombones and a cornett in the cantata [[Es ist nichts Gesundes an meinem Leibe, BWV 25|BWV 25]]. Handel used it in ''[[Samson (oratorio)|Samson]]'', in ''[[Israel in Egypt (oratorio)|Israel in Egypt]]'', and in the ''Death March'' from ''[[Saul (Handel)|Saul]]''. All were examples of an [[oratorio]] style popular during the early 18th century. Score notations are rare because only a few professional "Stadtpfeiffer" or [[alta cappella]] musicians were available. Handel, for instance, had to import trombones to England from a Royal court in Hanover, Germany, to perform one of his larger compositions.{{Citation needed|date=August 2016}} Because of the relative scarcity of trombones, their solo parts were generally interchangeable with other instruments. === Classical period === The construction of the trombone did not change very much between the Baroque and Classical period, but the bell became slightly more flared. [[Christoph Willibald Gluck]] was the first major composer to use the trombone in an opera overture, in the opera ''[[Alceste (Gluck)|Alceste]] ''(1767). He also used it in the operas ''[[Orfeo ed Euridice]]'', ''[[Iphigénie en Tauride]] ''(1779), and ''[[Echo et Narcisse]]''. Early Classical composers occasionally included concertante movements with alto trombone as a solo instrument in [[Divertimento|divertimenti]] and [[Serenade|serenades]]; these movements are often extracted from the multi-movement works and performed as standalone alto trombone concerti. Examples include the Serenade in E{{Music|flat}} (1755) by [[Leopold Mozart]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=March |first1=Ivan |title=Albrechtsberger; Mozart, L.: Trombone Concertos |url=http://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/albrechtsberger-mozart-l-trombone-concertos |website=Gramophone}}</ref> and Divertimento in D major (1764)<ref>{{cite web |title=Haydn, M.: Concerto per Trombone Alto in D |url=http://www.stretta-music.at/haydn-concerto-per-trombone-alto-in-d-nr-675861.html |website=Stretta Music}}</ref> by [[Michael Haydn]]. The earliest known independent trombone concerto is probably the Concerto for Alto Trombone and Strings in B{{Music|flat}} (1769)<ref>{{cite web |title=Albrechtsberger, J.G.: Concerto per trombone alto ed archi |url=http://www.stretta-music.at/albrechtsberger-concerto-per-trombone-alto-ed-archi-nr-198464.html |website=Stretta Music}}</ref> by [[Johann Georg Albrechtsberger]]. [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]] used the trombone in operas (notably in scenes featuring the Commendatore in ''[[Don Giovanni]]'') and in sacred music. The prominent solo part in the ''Tuba Mirum'' section of his [[Requiem (Mozart)|Requiem]] became a staple audition piece for the instrument. Aside from solo parts, Mozart's orchestration usually features a trio of alto, tenor and bass trombones, doubling the respective voices in the choir. The earliest known symphony featuring a trombone section is Symphony in C minor by [[Anton Zimmermann]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Threasher |first1=David |title=A. Zimmermann: Symphonies (Ehrhardt) |url=http://www.gramophone.co.uk/reviews/review?slug=a-zimmermann-symphonies-ehrhardt |website=Gramophone}}</ref> The date is uncertain but it is most probably from the peak of the composer's activity in the 1770s. The earliest confident date for introducing the trombone to the symphony is therefore Zimmermann's death in 1781. ==== Transition to Romantic period ==== Symphony in E{{Music|flat}} (1807) by Swedish composer [[Joachim Nicolas Eggert]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kallai |first1=Avishai |title=Biography of Joachim Nikolas Eggert |url=http://musicalics.com/fr/compositeur/Joachim-Nikolas-Eggert |website=Musicalics |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141108151031/http://musicalics.com/fr/compositeur/Joachim-Nikolas-Eggert |archive-date=8 November 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> features an independent trombone part. [[Ludwig van Beethoven]] is sometimes mistakenly credited with the trombone's introduction into the orchestra, having used it shortly afterwards in his [[Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven)|Symphony No. 5 in C minor]] (1808), [[Symphony No. 6 (Beethoven)|Symphony No. 6 in F major ("Pastoral")]], and [[Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)|Symphony No. 9 ("Choral")]]. === Romantic period === ==== 19th-century orchestras ==== Trombones were included in operas, symphonies, and other compositions by [[Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy|Felix Mendelssohn]], [[Hector Berlioz]], [[Franz Berwald]], [[Charles Gounod]], [[Franz Liszt]], [[Gioacchino Rossini]], [[Franz Schubert]], [[Robert Schumann]], [[Giuseppe Verdi]], and [[Richard Wagner]], and others. The trombone trio was combined with one or two [[cornett]]s during the Renaissance and early Baroque periods. The replacement of cornetts with oboes and clarinets did not change the trombone's role as a support to the alto, tenor, and bass voices of the chorus (usually in ecclesiastical settings), whose moving harmonic lines were more difficult to pick out than the melodic soprano line. The introduction of trombones into the orchestra allied them more closely with trumpets, and soon a tenor trombone replaced the alto. The Germans and Austrians kept alto trombone somewhat longer than the French, who preferred a section of three tenor trombones until after the [[Second World War]]. In other countries, the trio of two tenor trombones and one bass became standard by about the mid-19th century. Trombonists were employed less by court orchestras and cathedrals, who had been providing the instruments. Military musicians were provided with instruments, and instruments like the long F or E{{Music|flat}} bass trombone remained in military use until around the [[First World War]]. Orchestral musicians adopted the tenor trombone, as it could generally play any of the three trombone parts in orchestral scores.{{vague|date=December 2018}} Valve trombones in the mid-19th century did little to alter the make-up of the orchestral trombone section. While its use declined in German and French orchestras, the valve trombone remained popular in some countries, including Italy and [[Bohemia]], almost to the exclusion of the slide instrument. Composers such as Giuseppe Verdi, [[Giacomo Puccini]], [[Bedřich Smetana]], and [[Antonín Dvořák]] scored for a valve trombone section. {{listen|type=music|title=Trombone solo|description=from [[Symphony No. 3 (Mahler)|Mahler's 3rd Symphony]], 1st movement (composed 1893–1896) |filename=Gustav Mahler - Trombone Solo from 3rd Symphony, 1st movement.ogg}} As the [[ophicleide]] or the tuba was added to the orchestra during the 19th century, bass trombone parts were scored in a higher register than previously.{{vague|date=December 2018}} The bass trombone regained some independence in the early 20th century. Experiments with the trombone section included Richard Wagner's addition of a [[contrabass trombone]] in ''[[Der Ring des Nibelungen]]'' and Gustav Mahler's and Richard Strauss' addition of a second bass trombone to the usual trio of two tenors and one bass. The majority of orchestral works are still scored for the usual mid- to late-19th-century low brass section of two tenor trombones, one bass trombone, and one tuba. ==== 19th-century wind bands ==== Wind bands began during the French Revolution of 1791 and have always included trombones. They became more established in the 19th century and included circus bands, military bands, brass bands (primarily in the UK), and town bands (primarily in the US). Some of these, especially military bands in Europe, used rear-facing trombones with the bell pointing behind the player's left shoulder. These bands played a limited repertoire that consisted mainly of orchestral transcriptions, arrangements of popular and patriotic tunes, and feature pieces for soloists (usually cornetists, singers, and violinists). A notable work for wind band is Berlioz's 1840 ''[[Grande symphonie funèbre et triomphale]]'', which uses a trombone solo for the entire second movement. Toward the end of the 19th century, trombone virtuosi began appearing as soloists in American wind bands. [[Arthur Pryor]], who played with the [[John Philip Sousa]] band and formed his own band, was one of the most famous of these trombonists. ==== 19th-century pedagogy ==== In the Romantic era, [[Leipzig]] became a center of trombone pedagogy, and the instrument was taught at the [[University of Music and Theatre Leipzig|Musikhochschule]] founded by [[Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy]]. The [[Paris Conservatory]] and its yearly exhibition also contributed to trombone education. At the Leipzig academy, Mendelssohn's bass trombonist, [[Karl Traugott Queisser]], was the first in a long line of distinguished professors of the trombone. Several composers wrote works for Queisser, including Mendelssohn's concertmaster [[Ferdinand David (musician)|Ferdinand David]], Ernst Sachse, and [[Friedrich August Belcke]]. David wrote his ''[[Trombone Concertino (David)|Concertino for Trombone and Orchestra]]'' in 1837, and Sachse's solo works remain popular in Germany. Queisser championed and popularized [[Christian Friedrich Sattler]]'s tenor-bass trombone during the 1840s, leading to its widespread use in orchestras throughout Germany and Austria. ==== 19th-century construction ==== Sattler had a great influence on trombone design, introducing a significantly larger bore (the most important innovation since the Renaissance), ''Schlangenverzierungen'' (snake decorations), the bell garland, and the wide bell flare. These features were widely copied during the 19th century and are still found on German made trombones. The trombone was improved in the 19th century with the addition of "stockings" at the end of the inner slide to reduce friction, the development of the water key to expel condensation from the horn, and the occasional addition of [[F attachment tenor trombone|a valve]] that was designed to be set in a single position but later became the modern F-valve. The valve trombone appeared around the 1850s shortly after the invention of valves, and was in common use in Italy and Austria in the second half of the century. === Twentieth century === {{listen|type=music|title="Miss Trombone" |description=1908 ragtime by [[Henry Fillmore]]; played by The Indestructible Military Band |filename=Fillmore, Henry - Miss Trombone (1911).ogg}} [[File:Newsboy Military Band Member with Trombone, Toledo, Ohio - DPLA - 6b52b39cf72038f9058254142eef1e79 (page 1) (cropped).jpg|thumb|right|Newsboy Military Band Member with Trombone, Toledo, Ohio]] With the rise of recorded music and music schools, orchestral trombone sections around the world began to have a more consistent idea of a standard trombone sound. In the 1940s, British orchestras abandoned the use of small bore tenors and G basses in favor of the American/German choice of large bore tenors and B{{Music|flat}} basses. French orchestras did the same in the 1960s. ==== 20th-century wind bands ==== During the first half of the 20th century the popularity of touring and community concert bands in the United States decreased. At the same time, the development of music education in the public school system made high-school and university concert bands and marching bands ubiquitous. A typical concert band trombone section consists of two tenor trombones and one bass trombone, but using multiple players per part is common practice, especially in public-school settings.{{Citation needed|date=March 2020}} ==== Use in jazz ==== {{further|List of jazz trombonists}} In the 1900s the trombone and the tuba played bass lines and outlined chords to support improvisation by the higher-pitched instruments. It began to be used as a solo instrument during the swing era of the mid-1920s. [[Jack Teagarden]] and [[J. J. Johnson]] were early trombone soloists.<ref name="Bernotas">{{cite web |last1=Bernotas |first1=Bob |title=Trombone |url=https://www.allaboutjazz.com/trombone-by-bob-bernotas |website=All About Jazz |access-date=29 August 2022 |date=7 September 2015 }}</ref><ref name="Wilken">{{cite web |last1=Wilken |first1=David |title=The Evolution of the Jazz Trombone: Part One |url=https://www.trombone.org/articles/view.php?id=89 |website=trombone.org |access-date=29 August 2022 }}</ref> ==== 20th-century construction ==== The trombone's construction changed in the 20th century. Different materials were used, mouthpiece, bore, and bell dimensions increased, and different mutes and valves were developed. Despite the overall trend towards larger bore instruments, many European trombone makers prefer a slightly smaller bore than their American counterparts. One of the most significant changes was the development of the F-attachment trigger. Through the mid-20th century there was no need for orchestral trombonists to use instruments with the F attachment trigger. As contemporary composers such as Mahler began to write lower passages for the trombone, the trigger became necessary. === Contemporary use === The trombone can be found in symphony orchestras, concert bands, [[big bands]], marching bands, military bands, brass bands, and brass choirs. In chamber music, it is used in [[brass quintet]]s, quartets, and trios, and also in trombone groups ranging from trios to choirs. A trombone choir can vary in size from five to twenty or more members. Trombones are also common in swing, jazz, merengue, salsa, R&B, [[ska]], and New Orleans brass bands. == Construction == {| class="wikitable" style="margin-left: 1em; caption: stuff; margin-right: 0; float: right" |+ <big>Basic trombone anatomy</big> | [[File:Trombone-2.svg|120 px]] || # tuning slide # counterweight # mouthpiece # slide lock ring # bell # knob/bumper # water key/spit valve # main slide # second slide brace/stay # first slide brace/stay # bell lock nut |} The trombone is a predominantly cylindrical tube with two U-shaped bends and a flared bell at the end. The tubing is approximately cylindrical but contains a complex series of tapers which affect the instrument's intonation. As with other [[brass instrument]]s, sound is produced by blowing air through pursed lips producing a vibration that creates a [[standing wave]] in the instrument. The detachable cup-shaped [[Mouthpiece (brass)|mouthpiece]] is similar to that of the [[baritone horn]] and closely related to that of the [[trumpet]]. It has a [[Venturi effect|venturi]]:<ref name="Friedman-2003">{{cite web |last1=Friedman |first1=Jay |date=8 November 2003 |title=The German Trombone, by Jay Friedman |url=https://www.jayfriedman.net/articles/the-german-trombone |website=Jay Friedman |access-date=4 December 2018}}</ref> a small constriction of the air column that adds resistance, greatly affecting the tone of the instrument. The slide section consists of a [[leadpipe]], inner and outer slide tubes, and bracing, or "stays". The soldered stays on modern instruments replaced the loose stays found on [[sackbut]]s (medieval precursors to trombones).<ref name="Campbell2004">{{cite book|last1=Campbell|first1=Murray |last2=Greated|first2=Clive A. |last3=Myers|first3=Arnold|title=Musical Instruments: History, Technology, and Performance of Instruments of Western Music|url=https://archive.org/details/musicalinstrumen00dona|url-access=registration|access-date=4 December 2018|year=2004|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-816504-0|pages=[https://archive.org/details/musicalinstrumen00dona/page/201 201]–}}</ref><ref name="Fischer1984">{{cite book|last=Fischer|first=Henry George |title=The Renaissance Sackbut and Its Use Today|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9IMVxu1y9O0C&pg=PA15|access-date=4 December 2018|year=1984|publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art|isbn=978-0-87099-412-8|pages=15–}}</ref> The most distinctive feature of the trombone is the slide that lengthens the tubing and lowers the pitch (cf. [[valve trombone]]). During the [[Renaissance]], sleeves (called "stockings") were developed to decrease friction that would impede the slide's motion. These were soldered onto the ends of the inner slide tubes to slightly increase their diameter. The ends of inner slides on modern instruments are manufactured with a slightly larger diameter to achieve the same end. This part of the slide must be lubricated frequently. The slide section is connected to the bell section by the neckpipe and a U-bend called the bell or back bow. The joint connecting the slide and bell sections has a threaded collar to secure the connection. Prior to the early 20th century this connection was made with friction joints alone. Trombones have a short tuning slide in the U-shaped bend between the neckpipe and the bell, a feature designed by the French maker François Riedlocker in the early 19th century. It was incorporated into French and British designs, and later to German and American models, although German trombones were built without tuning slides well into the 20th century. Many types of trombone also include one or more [[rotary valves]] connected to additional tubing which lengthens the instrument. This extends the low range of the instrument and creates the option of using alternate slide positions for many notes. Like the trumpet, the trombone is considered a cylindrical bore instrument since it has extensive sections of tubing that are of unchanging diameter (the slide section must be cylindrical in order to function). Tenor trombones typically have a bore of {{convert|0.450|in|mm}} (small bore) to {{convert|0.547|in|mm}} (large or ''orchestral'' bore) after the leadpipe and through the slide. The bore expands through the bow to the bell, which is typically between {{convert|7|and|8+1/2|in|cm}}. A number of common variations on trombone construction are noted below. === Bells === Trombone bells (and sometimes slides) may be constructed of different [[brass]] mixtures. The most common material is yellow brass (70% copper, 30% zinc), but other materials include rose brass (85% copper, 15% zinc) and red brass (90% copper, 10% zinc). Some manufacturers offer interchangeable bells. Tenor trombone bells are usually between {{convert|7|and(-)|9|in|cm|abbr=on}} in diameter, with most being between {{convert|7+1/2|and(-)|8+1/2|in|cm|abbr=on}}. The smallest sizes are found on jazz trombones and older narrow-bore instruments, while the larger sizes are common on orchestral models. Bass trombone bells can be {{convert|10+1/2|in|cm|abbr=on}} or more, with most being between {{convert|9+1/2|and|10|in|cm|abbr=on}}. The bell may be made from two separate brass sheets or from one single piece of metal, hammered on a mandrel to shape it. The edge of the bell may be finished with or without a piece of bell wire to secure it, which also affects the tone quality; most bells are built with bell wire. Occasionally, trombone bells are made from solid [[sterling silver]]. === Valve attachments<span class="anchor" id="F-attachment"></span><span class="anchor" id="F attachment"></span><span class="anchor" id="F attachment valve"></span><span class="anchor" id="F valve attachment"></span> === <!--[[F attachment]], [[F attachment valve]], [[F valve attachment]], and [[F-attachment]] redirect and [[Brass instrument#Trombone]] links directly here.--> <!-- Could this be a separate article? Material can/should still be rationalised from [[Brass instrument valve]], [[Axial flow valve]], [[Hagmann valve]], etc. --> {{for|trombones with three or more valves instead of a slide|valve trombone}} [[File:Trombone F slide position pedal tones.png|thumb|right|250px|Trombone with F attachment slide position second harmonics.<ref name="Orchestration">{{cite Q|Q113561204|author1-first=Kent |author1-last=Kennan |author1-link=Kent Kennan |author2-first=Donald |author2-last=Grantham |author2-link=Donald Grantham |pages=148–9}}</ref>]] Modern trombones often have a valve attachment, an extra loop of tubing attached to the bell section and engaged by a [[brass instrument valve|valve]] operated by the left hand by means of a [[Brass_instrument#Trigger_or_throw|lever or trigger]]. The valve attachment aids in increasing the lower range of the instrument, while also allowing alternate slide positions for difficult music passages. A valve can also make [[Trill (music)|trills]] easier. [[Image:TriggerTrombone.jpg|left|thumb|300px|Tenor trombone with a traditional wrap F attachment]] The valve attachment was originally developed by German instrument maker [[Christian Friedrich Sattler]] in the late 1830s for the {{lang|de|Tenorbaßposaune}} ({{lit.|tenor-bass trombone}}), a B{{Music|flat}} tenor trombone built with the wider bore and larger bell of a bass trombone that Sattler had earlier invented in 1821. Sattler's valve attachment added about {{convert|3|ft|m|1}} of tubing to lower the fundamental pitch from B{{Music|flat}} to F, controlled by a rotary valve, and is essentially unchanged in modern instruments. Valve attachments are most commonly found on tenor and bass trombones, but they can appear on sizes from soprano to contrabass. ;Soprano :In the early 2010s Torbjörn Hultmark of the [[Royal College of Music]] commissioned the first soprano trombone in B{{Music|flat}} with an F valve, built by Thein Brass.<ref name="janesalmon-blog-2016">{{Cite web |title=The Soprano Trombone Project |first=Jane |last=Salmon |work=Jane Salmon (blog) |date=23 June 2016 |url= https://janesalmon.info/2016/06/23/the-soprano-trombone-project/ |access-date=20 May 2022 }}</ref> ;Alto :Although rare on the E{{Music|flat}} alto trombone, a valve attachment usually lowers the instrument a perfect fourth into B{{Music|flat}}, providing the first five or six positions from the tenor trombone slide. Some alto models have what is called a ''trill valve'', providing a small loop of tubing that lowers the instrument by only a minor or major second, into D or D{{Music|flat}} respectively.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|page=10|loc="alto trombone"}} ;Tenor :Tenor trombones, especially the larger bore symphonic models, commonly have a valve attachment which lowers the instrument from B{{Music|flat}} to F. :It provides access to the otherwise missing notes between the [[pedal tone|pedal]] B{{Music|flat}}{{sub|1}} in first position, and the second partial E{{sub|2}} in seventh, as well as providing alternate slide positions for other notes in long (sixth and seventh) positions. Because the attachment tubing increases the length of the overall instrument by one-third, the distances between slide positions must also be one-third longer when the valve is engaged, resulting in only six positions available on the F slide, to low C{{sub|2}}. Thus, the F attachment cannot provide the low B{{Music|natural}}{{sub|1}}, but it usually has a sufficiently long tuning slide to lower it into E as required, which will provide B{{Music|natural}}{{sub|1}} in a very long position.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|page=55|loc="F-attachment"}} :Tenor trombones without a valve are sometimes known as ''straight'' trombones. ;Bass :{{further | Bass trombone#Construction }} :The modern bass trombone usually has two valve attachments to provide all of the notes that are absent on an instrument with no valves (B{{Music|natural}}{{sub|1}} – E{{sub|2}}). This allows the player to produce a complete [[chromatic scale|chromatic range]] upwards from the pedal register. :The first valve is an F attachment the same as that found on a tenor trombone and extends the range down to C{{sub|2}}. The second valve, engaged together with the first, lowers the instrument to D (or less commonly, E{{Music|flat}}) and provides the low B{{sub|1}}. The second valve can be ''dependent'', where it serves to lower the F attachment to D and has no effect alone. More commonly the second valve is ''independent'', where it can be engaged separately to lower the instrument to G{{Music|flat}}, or to D when both are engaged.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=73|loc="independent valves"}} :Single-valve B{{Music|flat}} bass trombones with an F attachment are still made but are now less common than two-valve bass trombones. They are essentially very large bore tenor trombones, and likewise cannot provide the low B{{Music|natural}}{{sub|1}} without lowering the valve to E with a long tuning slide.{{sfn|Guion|2010|p=61}} ;Contrabass :{{further | Contrabass trombone#Construction}} :Contrabass trombones in F typically have two independent valves, tuned either to C and D{{Music|flat}} combining to A, or in European models tuned to D and B{{Music|flat}} combining to A{{Music|flat}}. Contrabass trombones in low B{{Music|flat}} usually have only one valve in F, although Miraphone make a model in C with two independent valves in G and A{{Music|flat}}, which combine to E.<ref name="contra-manufacturers-Bb">{{Cite web |title=Contrabass Trombone in Bb with Double Slide |work=Thein Brass |url=https://thein-brass.de/en/instrument/contrabass-trombone-in-bb-with-double-slide/ |access-date=7 March 2022 }} {{Cite web |title=Bb contrabass slide trombone |work=Miraphone eG |url=https://www.miraphone.de/bb-contrabass-slide-trombone-4.html |access-date=7 March 2022 }}</ref> ==== Valve types ==== {{See also|Axial flow valve|Hagmann valve}} {{Multiple image | total_width = 400px | align = right | image1 = Rotary valve on tenor trombone.jpg | image2 = Axial flow valve on tenor trombone.jpg | image3 = Hagmann valve on tenor trombone.jpg | alt1 = Trombone with rotary valve | alt2 = Trombone with axial flow valve | alt3 = Trombone with Hagmann valve | footer = Trombone valve attachments. Standard rotary valve, ''left''; Thayer [[axial flow valve]], ''center''; [[Hagmann valve]], ''right''. | footer_align = center }} The most common type of valve seen for valve attachments is the [[rotary valve]], appearing on most band instruments, as well as most student and intermediate model trombones. Many improvements of the rotary valve, as well as entirely new and radically different valve designs, have been invented since the mid 20th century to give the trombone a more open, free sound than the tight bends in conventional rotary valve designs would allow. Many of these new valve designs have been widely adopted by players, especially in symphony orchestras. The Thayer [[axial flow valve]] is offered on professional models from most trombone manufacturers, and the [[Hagmann valve]] particularly from European manufacturers. Some trombones have three [[piston valve|piston]] or [[rotary valve|rotary]] valves instead of a slide; see [[valve trombone]]. ==== Tubing ==== [[File:Yamaha Trombone comparison of open and traditional wrap.jpg|thumb|F attachment tubing: open wrap, ''left''; traditional wrap, ''right''.]] [[F attachment]] tubing usually has a larger bore through the attachment than through the rest of the instrument. A typical slide bore for an orchestral tenor trombone is {{convert|0.547|in|mm|abbr=on}} while the bore in the attachment is {{convert|0.562|in|mm|abbr=on}}. The attachment tubing also incorporates a tuning slide to tune the valve separately from the rest of the instrument, usually long enough to lower the pitch by a semitone when fully extended (from F to E on tenor and bass trombones, to reach the missing low B{{sub|1}}). Valve attachment tubing is often coiled tightly to keep within the bell section (''closed wrap '' or ''traditional wrap''). A less coiled configuration, called ''open wrap'', is found on some 19th and early 20th century instruments.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bass trombone |author=[[Boosey & Hawkes]] |publisher=[[Horniman Museum|Horniman Museum & Gardens]] |publication-place=London |via=Musical Instrument Museums Online |date=1933 |id=Accession number 2004.1171 |url= https://mimo-international.com/MIMO/doc/IFD/MINIM_UK_22302 |access-date=20 November 2024 }}</ref> In the early 1980s, American instrument manufacturers began producing open wrap instruments after Californian instrument technician Larry Minick introduced open wraps around the same time that the [[axial flow valve|Thayer valve]] began to emerge among orchestral players.<ref>{{cite web| last=Tanner |first=K |date=January 1999 |title=Larry David Minick Passes |type=obituary |work=The Cambrian |url=https://trombone.org/articles/view.php?id=76 |access-date=26 April 2024 |via=The Online Trombone Journal}}</ref> Open wrap F attachment tubing is shaped in a single loop free of tight bends, resulting in a freer response and more "open" sound through the valve.{{sfn|Yeo|2021|p=34|loc="closed wrap"}} In marching bands and other situations where the trombone may be more prone to damage, the confined traditional wrap is more common, since open wrap tubing protrudes behind the bell section. === Tuning === [[File:Conn 70H bass trombone in-slide tuning.jpg|thumb|In-slide tuning on a Conn 70H bass trombone]] Some trombones are tuned using a mechanism in the slide section instead of a tuning slide in the bell section. Having the tuning slide in the bell section (the more typical setup) requires two sections of cylindrical tubing in an otherwise conical part of the instrument, which affects the tone quality. Placing the tuning mechanism in the cylindrical slide section allows the bell section to remain conical. === Slides === Common and popular bore sizes for trombone slides are {{convert|0.500|,|0.508|,|0.525|and|0.547|in|mm|abbr=on}} for tenor trombones, and {{convert|0.562|in|mm|abbr=on}} for bass trombones. The slide may also be built with a ''dual-bore'' configuration, in which the bore of the second leg of the slide is slightly larger than the bore of the first leg, producing a stepwise conical effect. The most common dual-bore combinations are {{convert|0.481|–|0.491|in|mm|abbr=on}}, {{convert|0.500|–|0.508|in|mm|abbr=on}}, {{convert|0.508|–|0.525|in|mm|abbr=on}}, {{convert|0.525|–|0.547|in|mm|abbr=on}}, {{convert|0.547|–|0.562|in|mm|abbr=on}} for tenor trombones, and {{convert|0.562|–|0.578|in|mm|abbr=on}} for bass trombones. === Mouthpiece === [[File:Schilke 51C4 Trombone Mouthpiece.jpg|thumb|right|A tenor trombone mouthpiece]] The mouthpiece is a separate part of the trombone and can be interchanged between similarly sized trombones from different manufacturers. Available mouthpieces for trombone (as with all brass instruments) vary in material composition, length, diameter, rim shape, cup depth, throat entrance, venturi aperture, venturi profile, outside design and other factors. Variations in mouthpiece construction affect the individual player's ability to make a lip seal and produce a reliable tone, the [[timbre]] of that tone, its [[Loudness|volume]], the instrument's [[Intonation (music)|intonation]] tendencies, the player's subjective level of comfort, and the instrument's playability in a given pitch range. Mouthpiece selection is a highly personal decision. Thus, a symphonic trombonist might prefer a mouthpiece with a deeper cup and sharper inner rim shape in order to produce a rich symphonic tone quality, while a [[jazz]] trombonist might choose a shallower cup for brighter tone and easier production of higher notes. Further, for certain compositions, these choices between two such performers could easily be reversed. Some mouthpiece makers now offer mouthpieces that feature removable rims, cups, and shanks allowing players to further customize and adjust their mouthpieces to their preference. === Plastic === [[File:WANZ Instrument 2024-09 IMG 7761 pBone plastic trombone (crop).jpg|thumb|Trombone "pBone" made from ABS plastic]] Instruments made mostly from plastic, including the pBone and the Tromba plastic trombone, emerged in the 2010s as a cheaper and more robust alternative to brass.<ref name="pBone">{{cite web |last1=Flynn |first1=Mike |title=pBone plastic trombone |url=https://www.jazzwise.com/review/article/pbone-plastic-trombone |website=Jazzwise Magazine |access-date=16 October 2016 |date=20 June 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mi-pro.co.uk/news/read/korg-uk-takes-on-distribution-of-tromba/017677 |date=2 May 2013 |title=Korg UK takes on distribution of Tromba |access-date=12 July 2013 |website=Musical Instrument Professional |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130505114137/http://www.mi-pro.co.uk/news/read/korg-uk-takes-on-distribution-of-tromba/017677 |archive-date=5 May 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all}}</ref> Plastic instruments could come in almost any colour but the sound plastic instruments produce is different from that of brass. While originally seen as a gimmick, these plastic models have found increasing popularity of the last decade and are now viewed as practice tools that make for more convenient travel as well as a cheaper option for beginning players not wishing to invest so much money in a trombone right away. Manufacturers now produce large-bore models with triggers as well as smaller alto models. === Regional variations === ==== Germany and Austria ==== [[File:Kruspe-Tenor-02.02.2023-2.jpg|thumb|Kruspe Virtuosa tenor trombone bell with ''Kranz'' (wreath)]] German trombones have been built in a wide variety of bore and bell sizes. The traditional German ''Konzertposaune'' can differ substantially from American designs in many aspects. The mouthpiece is typically rather small and is placed into a slide section with a very long leadpipe of at least {{convert|12|to(-)|24|in|cm|-1}}. The whole instrument is typically made of gold brass. They are constructed using very thin metal (especially in the bell section), and many have a metal ring called a {{lang|de|Kranz}} ({{lit.|wreath}}) on the rim of the bell. Their sound is very even across dynamic levels but it can be difficult to play at louder volumes.<ref name="Friedman-2003"/> While their bore sizes were considered large in the 19th century, German trombones have altered very little over the last 150 years and are now typically somewhat smaller than their American counterparts. Bell sizes remain very large in all sizes of German trombone and a bass trombone bell may exceed {{convert|10|in|cm}} in diameter. Valve attachments in tenor and bass trombones were first seen in the mid 19th century, originally on the tenor B{{Music|flat}} trombone. Before 1850, bass trombone parts were mostly played on a slightly longer F-bass trombone (a fourth lower). The first valve was simply a fourth-valve, or in German "Quart-Ventil", built onto a B{{Music|flat}} tenor trombone, to allow playing in low F. This valve was first built without a return spring, and was only intended to set the instrument in B{{Music|flat}} or F for extended passages.<ref>{{Cite Grove |title=Trombone |last1=Baines |first1=Anthony C. |last2=Myers |first2=Arnold |last3=Herbert |first3=Trevor |id=40576 }}</ref> Since the mid-20th century, modern instruments use a trigger to engage the valve while playing. [[File:Thein-SpainKruspe-Tenor-29.04.2023-9.jpg|thumb|Tuning slide of a trombone with a traditional {{lang|de|Schlangenverzierungen}} snake ornament, by Thein Brass]] As with other traditional German and Austrian brass instruments, rotary valves are used to the exclusion of almost all other types of valve, even in valve trombones. Other features often found on German trombones include long [[water key]]s as well as ''Schlangenverzierungen'' (snake decorations) on the slide and bell U-bows to help protect the tubing from damage. Since around 1925, when jazz music became popular, Germany has been selling "American trombones" as well. Most trombones made and/or played in Germany today, especially by amateurs, are built in the American fashion, as those are much more widely available, and thus far cheaper. However, some higher-end manufacturers such as Thein make modern iterations of the classic German ''Konzertposaune'', as well as American-style trombones with German features like the ''Kranz'' and snake decorations. ==== France ==== French trombones were built in the very smallest bore sizes up to the end of the [[World War II|Second World War]] and whilst other sizes were made there, the French usually preferred the tenor trombone to any other size. French music, therefore, usually employed a section of three tenor trombones up to the mid–20th century. Tenor trombones produced in France during the 19th and early 20th centuries featured bore sizes of around {{convert|0.450|in|mm|abbr=on}}, small bells of not more than {{convert|6|in|cm|abbr=on}} in diameter, as well as a funnel-shaped mouthpiece slightly larger than that of the [[cornet]] or [[French horn|horn]]. French tenor trombones were built in both C and B{{Music|flat}}, altos in D{{Music|flat}}, sopranos in F, piccolos in B{{Music|flat}}, basses in G and E{{Music|flat}}, and contrabasses in B{{Music|flat}}. == Types == The most frequently encountered types of trombone today are the [[tenor trombone|tenor]] and [[bass trombone|bass]], though as with many other instrument families such as the [[clarinet]], the trombone has been built in sizes from [[piccolo trombone|piccolo]] to [[contrabass trombone|contrabass]]. Although trombones are usually constructed with a slide to change the pitch, [[valve trombone]]s instead use the set of three valves common on other brass instruments. === Slide trombones === [[File:Trombone family composite 3.jpg|thumb|center|upright=2|Trombones (''top'' to ''bottom''): [[piccolo trombone|piccolo]] in B{{Music|flat}}, [[soprano trombone|soprano]] in B{{Music|flat}}, [[alto trombone|alto]] in E{{Music|flat}}, [[tenor trombone|tenor]] in B{{Music|flat}}, [[bass trombone|bass]] in B{{Music|flat}} with F and G{{Music|flat}} valves, [[contrabass trombone|contrabass]] in F with D and B{{Music|flat}} valves. ]] ==== Contrabass trombone ==== {{Main|Contrabass trombone}} The contrabass trombone is the lowest trombone, first appearing in BB{{Music|flat}} an octave below the tenor with a double slide. This design was commissioned by [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]] in the 1870s for his ''[[Der Ring des Nibelungen]]'' opera cycle. Since the late 20th century however, it has largely been supplanted by a less cumbersome single-slide bass-contrabass instrument pitched in 12' F. With two valve attachments to provide the same full range as its predecessor, this design is effectively a modern bass trombone built down a [[perfect fourth]]. Although the contrabass has only appeared occasionally in orchestral repertoire and is not a permanent member of the modern orchestra, it has enjoyed a revival in the 21st century, particularly in film and video game soundtracks. ==== Bass trombone ==== {{Main|Bass trombone}} Although early instruments were pitched in G, F or E{{Music|flat}} below the tenor trombone, the modern bass trombone is pitched in the same B{{music|flat}} as the tenor but with a wider bore, a larger bell, and a larger mouthpiece. These features facilitate playing in the lower register of the instrument. Modern bass trombones have valves that allow a fully chromatic range down to the pedal register (B{{music|flat}}{{sub|1}}). In Britain, the bass trombone in G was used in orchestras from the mid-19th century and survived into the 1950s, particularly in [[British brass band]]s. ==== Tenor trombone ==== The tenor trombone has a [[Fundamental frequency|fundamental]] [[Musical note|note]] of B{{music|flat}} and is usually treated as a [[nontransposing instrument|non-transposing instrument]] (see below). Tenor trombones with C as their fundamental note were almost equally popular in the mid-19th century in Britain and France. As the trombone in its simplest form has neither crooks, valves nor keys to lower the pitch by a specific interval, trombonists use seven chromatic ''slide positions''. Each position progressively increases the length of the air column, thus lowering the pitch. Extending the slide from one position to the next lowers the pitch by one [[semitone]]. Thus, each note in the [[harmonic series (music)|harmonic series]] can be lowered by an [[interval (music)|interval]] of up to a [[tritone]]. The lowest note of the standard instrument is therefore an E{{music|natural}} – a tritone below B{{music|flat}}. Most experienced trombonists can play lower "[[falset (music)|falset]]" notes and much lower pedal notes (first partials or fundamentals, which have a peculiar metallic rumbling sound). Slide positions are subject to adjustment, compensating for imperfections in the tuning of different harmonics. The fifth partial is rather flat on most trombones and usually requires a minute shortening of the slide position to compensate; other small adjustments are also normally required throughout the range. Trombonists make frequent use of alternate positions to minimize slide movement in rapid passages; for instance, [[Scientific pitch notation|B{{music|flat}}<sub>3</sub>]] may be played in first or fifth position. Alternate positions are also needed to allow a player to produce a [[glissando]] to or from a higher note on the same partial. While the lowest note of the tenor trombone's range (excluding fundamentals or pedal notes) is E<sub>2</sub>, the trombone's upper range is theoretically open-ended. The practical top of the range is sometimes considered to be F<sub>5</sub>, or more conservatively D<sub>5</sub>. The range of the C tenor trombone is F{{sharp}}<sub>2</sub> to G<sub>5</sub>. ==== Alto trombone ==== {{Main|Alto trombone}} The [[alto trombone]] is smaller than the tenor trombone and almost always pitched in E{{Music|flat}} a fourth higher than the tenor, although examples pitched in F are occasionally found. Modern instruments are sometimes fitted with a valve to lower the pitch, either by a semitone to D (known as a "trill" valve), or by a fourth into B{{Music|flat}}. The alto trombone was commonly used in the 16th to the 18th centuries in [[church music]] to strengthen the alto voice, particularly in the [[Mass (music)|Mass]]. Early 19th century composers such as [[Beethoven]], [[Brahms]], and [[Schumann]] began writing for alto trombone in their [[symphony|symphonies]], but the subsequent use and popularity of tenor trombones in the orchestra largely eclipsed their use until a modern revival that began in the late 20th century. ==== Soprano trombone ==== {{Main|Soprano trombone}} The [[soprano trombone]] is usually pitched in B{{music|flat}} an octave above the tenor, and has seldom been used since its first known appearance in 1677 outside of trombone choirs in [[Moravian Church music]]. Built with mouthpiece, bore and bell dimensions similar to the B{{music|flat}} [[trumpet]], it tends to be played by trumpet players. During the 20th century some soprano trombones—dubbed ''slide cornets''—were made as novelties or for use by jazz players including [[Louis Armstrong]] and [[Dizzy Gillespie]]. A small number of contemporary proponents of the instrument include jazz artists [[Wycliffe Gordon]] and [[Christian Scott (musician)|Christian Scott]], and classical trumpeter Torbjörn Hultmark, who advocates for its use as an instrument for young children to learn music. ==== Sopranino and piccolo trombones ==== {{Main|Soprano trombone#Sopranino and piccolo trombones}} The sopranino and piccolo trombones appeared in the 1950s as novelty instruments, and are even smaller and higher than the soprano. They are pitched in high E{{music|flat}} and B{{music|flat}} respectively, one octave above the alto and soprano trombones. Owing to being essentially a slide variant of the [[piccolo trumpet]], they are played primarily by trumpet players. === Trombones with valves === ==== Valve trombone ==== [[File:Yamaha YSL-354 V valve trombone.png|thumb|left|Valve (tenor) trombone in B{{Music|flat}}]] {{Main|Valve trombone}} In the 19th century as soon as [[brass instrument valve]]s were invented, trombones with valves instead of slides were adopted widely in orchestras, and remain popular in some parts of Europe and in [[military band]]s. ==== Cimbasso ==== {{Main|Cimbasso}} [[File:WANZ Instrument 2024-09 IMG 7815 (white crop).png|thumb|upright|A modern cimbasso in F]] The cimbasso covers the same range as a [[tuba]] or a [[contrabass trombone]]. The term {{lang|it|cimbasso}} first appeared in early 19th century [[Italian opera]] scores, and originally referred to an [[upright serpent]] or an [[ophicleide]]. The modern cimbasso first appeared as the ''trombone basso Verdi'' in the 1880s and has three to six [[piston valve|piston]] or [[rotary valve]]s and a predominantly cylindrical [[bore (wind instruments)|bore]]. They are most often pitched in 12' F, although models are available in E{{Music|flat}} and occasionally 16' C and 18' B{{Music|flat}}. The cimbasso is most commonly used in performances of late [[Romanticism|Romantic]] Italian operas by [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]] and [[Giacomo Puccini|Puccini]], but has also experienced a 21st-century revival in film, television and video game soundtracks. ==== Superbone ==== {{Main|Superbone}} [[File:MIMEd 3596. Holton TR-395 Superbone (white).png|thumb|left|Holton TR-395 Superbone]] A hybrid, "duplex" or "double" trombone is a design of trombone that has both a slide and a set of three valves for altering the pitch. It has been reinvented several times since first appearing in the 19th century by [[Gustave Auguste Besson|Besson]], and later [[Charles G. Conn|Conn]]. Jazz trombonist and machinist [[Brad Gowans]] invented his "[[valide trombone]]" in the 1940s with a short four-position slide. In the 1970s [[Maynard Ferguson]] and [[Holton (Leblanc)|Holton]] produced the "Superbone", very similar to the earlier Conn. In 2013 Schagerl in collaboration with [[James Morrison (jazz musician)|James Morrison]] announced a larger bore variant with rotary valves. ==== Flugabone ==== [[File:F.E. Olds Flugabone.jpg|thumb|upright|Flugabone in B{{Music|flat}} by Olds]] The "flugabone" (or sometimes "flugelbone"), portmanteau of "[[flugelhorn]]" and "trombone", also known as the "marching trombone", is a [[marching brass]] instrument, essentially a [[valve trombone]] wrapped into a compact flugelhorn shape.<ref name="flugabone-mfrs">{{Cite web |title=Model 955 Bb Flugelbone |work=Kanstul Musical Instruments |url= https://www.kanstul.com/instruments/trombones/955-flugelbone-in-bb/ |access-date=21 July 2022 }} {{Cite web |title=FB124 Bb Flugabone (Marching Trombone) |work=Wessex Tubas |url= https://www.wessex-tubas.com/products/flugabone-marching-trombone-fb124 |access-date=21 July 2022 }}</ref> It retains the [[bore (wind instruments)|cylindrical bore]] of the trombone, rather than the conical bore of either the [[flugelhorn]] or [[bugle]], and thus is similar in playing characteristics to a [[valve trombone]]. A similar marching trombone is the "[[trombonium]]" first produced by [[King Musical Instruments]], wrapped and held vertically like a [[euphonium]]. === Other variants === ==== Sackbut ==== [[File:Sacabutxs, conjunt al Museu de la Música.jpg|thumb|left|Alto, tenor and bass sackbuts, [[Museu de la Música de Barcelona]]]] {{Main|Sackbut}} The term "sackbut" refers to the early forms of the trombone commonly used during the [[Renaissance music|Renaissance]] and [[Baroque music|Baroque]] eras, with a characteristically smaller, more cylindrically proportioned [[bore (wind instruments)|bore]], and a less-flared [[bell (wind instrument)|bell]]. ==== Buccin ==== [[File:Detall de buccén.jpg|thumb|Bell of a buccin, Museu de la Música de Barcelona]] {{Main|Buccin}} A distinctive form of tenor trombone was popularized in France in the early 19th century. Called the [[buccin]], it featured a tenor trombone slide and a bell that ended in a zoomorphic (serpent or dragon) head. It sounds like a cross between a trombone and a [[French horn]], with a very wide dynamic range but a limited and variable range of pitch. [[Hector Berlioz]] wrote for the buccin in his ''[[Messe solennelle (Berlioz)|Messe solennelle]]'' of 1824. ==== Tromboon ==== A [[portmanteau]] of "trombone" and "bassoon", the "tromboon" was created by musical parodist [[Peter Schickele]] by replacing a trombone's [[mouthpiece (brass)|mouthpiece]] with the [[double reed|reed]] and [[bocal]] of a [[bassoon]]. It appears in several humorous works of Schickele's fictional composer, [[P. D. Q. Bach]]. {{clear}} == Technique == === Basic slide positions === [[File:Wirth trombone slide position chart.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Slide position chart (new system); most trombones are tenor trombones, like the valveless one in the middle.]] The modern system has seven chromatic [[Position (music)#Trombone position|slide positions]] on a tenor trombone in B{{music|b}}. It was first described by Andre Braun circa 1795.<ref name="Weiner">{{cite journal |last1=Weiner |first1=H. |title=André Braun's Gamme et Méthode pour les Trombonnes: The Earliest Modern Trombone Method Rediscovered |journal=Historic Brass Society Journal |date=1993 |volume=5 |pages=288–308 |url=https://www.historicbrass.org/component/edocman/hbj-public/hbj-05-1993/hbsj-1993-jl01-019-weiner-pdf |access-date=29 August 2022 }}</ref> In 1811 Joseph Fröhlich wrote on the differences between the modern system and an old system where four diatonic slide positions were used and the trombone was usually keyed to A.{{sfn|Guion|1988|p=93}} To compare between the two styles the chart below may be helpful (take note for example, in the old system contemporary 1st-position was considered "drawn past" then current 1st).{{sfn|Guion|1988|p=93}} In the modern system, each successive position outward (approximately {{convert|3+1/4|in|cm|0|disp=sqbr}}) will produce a note which is one [[semitone]] lower when played in the same [[harmonic series (music)#partial|partial]]. Tightening and loosening the lips will allow the player to "bend" the note up or down by a semitone without changing position, so a slightly out-of-position slide may be compensated for by ear. {| class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto;" |- ! scope="row" | New system | 1 || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 || 7 |- ! scope="row" | Old system | – || 1 || – || 2 || – || 3 || 4 |} === Partials and intonation === [[File:Trombone first position harmonic series.png|thumb|right|250px|Trombone first position harmonic series, "where additional overtones may be used to stretch the upper range a bit higher."<ref name="Orchestration" />]] [[File:Trombone seventh position harmonic series.png|thumb|right|250px|Trombone seventh position harmonic series.<ref name="Orchestration" />]] As with all brass instruments, progressive tightening of the lips and increased air pressure allow the player to move to different [[harmonic series (music)#partial|partial]] in the [[harmonic series (music)|harmonic series]]. In the first position (also called closed position) on a B{{Music|flat}} trombone, the notes in the harmonic series begin with B{{Music|flat}}<sub>2</sub> (one octave higher than the pedal B{{Music|flat}}<sub>1</sub>), F<sub>3</sub> (a [[perfect fifth]] higher than the previous partial), B{{Music|flat}}<sub>3</sub> (a [[perfect fourth]] higher), D<sub>4</sub> (a [[major third]] higher), and F<sub>4</sub> (a [[minor third]] higher). F<sub>4</sub> marks the sixth partial, or the fifth overtone. Notes on the next partial, for example A{{Music|flat}}<sub>4</sub> (a minor third higher) in first position, tend to be out of tune in regards to the twelve-tone [[equal temperament]] scale. A{{Music|flat}}<sub>4</sub> in particular, which is at the seventh partial (sixth overtone) is nearly always 31 cents, or about one third of a semitone, flat of the minor seventh. On the slide trombone, such deviations from [[intonation (music)|intonation]] are corrected for by slightly adjusting the slide or by using an alternate position.<ref name="Orchestration" /> Although much of Western music has adopted the even-tempered scale, it has been the practice in Germany and Austria to play these notes in position, where they will have [[just intonation]] (see [[harmonic seventh]] as well for A{{Music|flat}}<sub>4</sub>). The next higher partials—B{{Music|flat}}<sub>4</sub> (a [[major second]] higher), C<sub>5</sub> (a major second higher), D<sub>5</sub> (a major second higher)—do not require much adjustment for even-tempered intonation, but E{{Music|flat}}<sub>5</sub> (a [[minor second]] higher) is almost exactly a [[quarter tone]] higher than it would be in twelve-tone equal temperament. E{{Music|flat}}<sub>5</sub> and F<sub>5</sub> (a major second higher) at the next partial are very high notes; a very skilled player with a highly developed [[Embouchure|facial musculature]] and [[Thoracic diaphragm|diaphragm]] can go even higher to G<sub>5</sub>, A{{Music|flat}}<sub>5</sub>, B{{Music|flat}}<sub>5</sub> and beyond. [[File:Trombone F slide position pedal tones.png|thumb|right|250px|Trombone with F attachment slide position second harmonics.<ref name="Orchestration" />]] The higher in the harmonic series any two successive notes are, the closer they tend to be (as evidenced by the progressively smaller intervals noted above). A byproduct of this is the relatively few motions needed to move between notes in the higher ranges of the trombone. In the lower range, significant movement of the slide is required between positions, which becomes more exaggerated on lower pitched trombones, but for higher notes the player need only use the first four positions of the slide since the partials are closer together, allowing higher notes in alternate positions. As an example, F<sub>4</sub> (at the bottom of the treble clef) may be played in first, fourth or sixth position on a B{{Music|flat}} trombone. The note E<sub>1</sub> (or the lowest E on a standard 88-key piano keyboard) is the lowest attainable note on a {{convert|9|ft|adj=on}} B{{Music|flat}} tenor trombone, requiring a full {{convert|2.24|m|order=flip}} of tubing. On trombones without an F attachment, there is a gap between B{{Music|flat}}<sub>1</sub> (the fundamental in first position) and E<sub>2</sub> (the first harmonic in seventh position). Skilled players can produce "[[Falset (music)|falset]]" notes between these, but the sound is relatively weak and not usually used in performance. The addition of an F attachment allows for intermediate notes to be played with more clarity. === Pedal tones === [[File:Trombone slide position pedal tones.png|thumb|right|250px|Trombone slide position "pedal tones".<ref name="Orchestration"/>]] The B{{Music|flat}} [[pedal tone]] is frequently seen in commercial scoring but much less often in symphonic music, while notes below that are called for only rarely as they "become increasingly difficult to produce and insecure in quality" with A{{Music|flat}} or G being the bottom limit for most tenor trombonists.<ref name="Orchestration" /> The trombone's tubing is largely cylindrical, which inhibits the production of the fundamental as a pedal tone pitch. Instead, trombonists use the higher harmonics of the instrument to produce pedal tones, giving them a bright and hollow tone quality.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Myers |first=Arnold |title=Pedal Note |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2001}}</ref> Some contemporary orchestral writing, movie or video game scoring, trombone ensemble and solo works will call for notes as low as a pedal C, B, or even double pedal B{{Music|flat}} on the bass trombone. === Glissando === <!--[[False glissando]], etc., redirect directly here.--> The trombone is one of the few wind instruments that can produce a true [[glissando]], by moving the slide without interrupting the airflow or sound production. Every pitch in a glissando must have the same harmonic number, and a tritone is the largest interval that can be performed as a glissando.<ref name="Orchestration" />{{rp|151}} The trombone glissando can create remarkable effects, and it is used in jazz and popular music, as in the famous song "[[The Stripper]]" by David Rose and his orchestra. 'Harmonic', 'inverted', 'broken' or 'false' glissandos are those that cross one or more harmonic series, requiring a simulated or faked glissando effect.{{sfn|Herbert|2006|p=40}} === Trills === [[Trill (music)|Trills]], though generally simple with valves, are difficult on the slide trombone. Trills tend to be easiest and most effective higher in the harmonic series because the distance between notes is much smaller and slide movement is minimal. For example, a trill on B{{music|b}}<sub>3</sub>/C<sub>4</sub> is virtually impossible as the slide must move two positions (either 1st-to-3rd or 5th-to-3rd), however at an octave higher (B{{music|b}}<sub>4</sub>/C<sub>5</sub>) the notes can both be achieved in 1st position as a lip trill. Thus, the most convincing trills tend to be above the first octave and a half of the tenor's [[range (music)|range]].{{sfn|Herbert|2006|p=43}} Trills are most commonly found in early Baroque and Classical music for the trombone as a means of ornamentation, however, some more modern pieces will call for trills as well. === Notation === Unlike most other brass instruments in an orchestral setting, the trombone is not usually considered a [[transposing instrument]]. Prior to the invention of valve systems, most brass instruments were limited to playing one overtone series at a time; altering the pitch of the instrument required manually replacing a section of tubing (called a "[[Crook (music)|crook]]") or picking up an instrument of different length. Their parts were transposed according to which crook or length-of-instrument they used at any given time, so that a particular note on the staff always corresponded to a particular partial on the instrument. Trombones, on the other hand, have used slides since their inception. As such, they have always been fully chromatic, so no such tradition took hold, and trombone parts have always been notated at concert pitch (with one exception, discussed below). Also, it was quite common for trombones to double choir parts; reading in concert pitch meant there was no need for dedicated trombone parts. Note that while the fundamental sounding pitch (slide fully retracted) has remained quite consistent, the conceptual pitch of trombones has changed since their origin (''e.g.'' Baroque A tenor = modern B-flat tenor).<ref name="Palm">{{cite thesis |last1=Palm |first1=Paul W. |date=2010 |title=Baroque Solo and Homogeneous Ensemble Trombone Repertoire: A Lecture Recital Supporting and Demonstrating Performance at a Pitch Standard Derived from Primary Sources and Extant Instruments |degree=DMA |publisher=[[University of North Carolina at Greensboro]] |url=http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/listing.aspx?id=4343 |access-date=1 October 2019 }}</ref> Trombone parts are typically notated in [[bass clef]], though sometimes also written in [[tenor clef]] or [[alto clef]]. The use of alto clef is usually confined to orchestral first trombone parts, with the second trombone part written in tenor clef and the third (bass) part in bass clef. As the alto trombone declined in popularity during the 19th century, this practice was gradually abandoned and first trombone parts came to be notated in the tenor or bass clef. Some Russian and Eastern European composers wrote first and second tenor trombone parts on one alto clef staff (the German [[Robert Schumann]] was the first to do this). Examples of this practice are evident in scores by Igor Stravinsky, Sergei Prokofiev, Dmitri Shostakovich. Trombone parts in band music are nearly exclusively notated in bass clef. The rare exceptions are in contemporary works intended for high-level wind bands. An accomplished performer today is expected to be proficient in reading parts notated in bass clef, tenor clef, alto clef, and (more rarely) treble clef in C, with the British brass-band performer expected to handle treble clef in B{{Music|flat}} as well. === Mutes === [[File:Trombone Plunger.jpg|thumb|175px|A plunger in use]] A variety of [[Mute (music)|mutes]] can be used with the trombone to alter its [[timbre]]. Many are held in place with the use of cork grips, including the straight, cup, harmon and pixie mutes. Some fit over the bell, like the bucket mute. In addition to this, mutes can be held in front of the bell and moved to cover more or less area for a [[Wah-wah (music)|wah-wah]] effect. Mutes used in this way include the "hat" (a metal mute shaped like a bowler hat) and plunger (which looks like, and often is, the rubber suction cup from a sink or [[plunger|toilet plunger]]). The "wah-wah" sound of a trombone with a harmon mute is featured as the voices of adults in the ''[[Peanuts]]'' cartoons. == Didactics == Several makers have begun to market compact B{{music|b}}/C trombones that are especially well suited for young children learning to play the trombone who cannot reach the outer slide positions of full-length instruments. The fundamental note of the unenhanced length is C, but the short attachment that puts the instrument in B{{music|b}} has its valve ''open'' when the trigger is ''not'' depressed. While such instruments have no seventh slide position, C and B natural may be comfortably accessed on the first and second positions by using the trigger. A similar design ("Preacher model") was marketed by [[C.G. Conn]] in the 1920s, also under the [[Wurlitzer]] label. Currently, B{{music|b}}/C trombones are available from many manufacturers, including German makers Günter Frost, Thein and Helmut Voigt, as well as the [[Yamaha Corporation]].<ref>[https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20090428193549/https://www.yamaha.com/yamahavgn/CDA/ContentDetail/ModelSeriesDetail.html?CNTID=2265&CTID=242600 Yamaha Catalog YSL-350C] with ascending Bb/C rotor. Wayback.archive-it.org</ref> == Manufacturers == Trombones in slide and valve configuration have been made by a vast array of musical instrument manufacturers. For the brass bands of the late 19th and early 20th century, prominent American manufacturers included Graves and Sons, E. G. Wright and Company, [[Boston Musical Instrument Company]], [[E. A. Couturier]], [[King Musical Instruments|H. N. White Company/King Musical Instruments]], [[James Warren York|J. W. York]], and [[C.G. Conn]]. In the 21st century, leading mainstream manufacturers of trombones include [[Vincent Bach Corporation|Bach]], [[C.G. Conn|Conn]], Courtois, Edwards, [[Getzen]], [[Jupiter Band Instruments|Jupiter]], King, [[Michael Rath Trombones|Rath]], Schilke, S.E. Shires, Thein, Wessex, Willson and [[Yamaha Corporation|Yamaha]]. == See also == * {{annotated link|Aequale}} * {{annotated link|Shout band}} * {{annotated link|Trombone repertoire}} == References == {{Reflist}} == Further reading == {{Refbegin}} * {{cite book |last=Adey |first=Christopher |year=1998 |title=Orchestral Performance |location=London |publisher=Faber & Faber |isbn=0-571-17724-7}} * {{cite book |last=Baines |first=Anthony |year=1980 |title=Brass Instruments: Their History and Development |location=London |publisher=Faber & Faber |isbn=0-571-11571-3}} * {{cite book |last=Bate |first=Philip |year=1978 |title=The Trumpet and Trombone |location=London |publisher=Ernest Benn|isbn=0-510-36413-6}} * {{cite book |last=Blatter |first=Alfred |year=1997 |title=Instrumentation and Orchestration |location=Belmont |publisher=Schirmer |isbn=0-534-25187-0}} * {{cite book|editor=Blüme, Friedrich|year=1962|title=[[Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart]]|location=Kassel |publisher=Bärenreiter}} * Carter, Stewart (2011). ''The Trombone in the Renaissance: A History in Pictures and Documents.'' Bucina: The Historic Brass Society Series. Hillsdale, N.Y.: Pendragon Press. {{ISBN|978-1-57647-206-4}}. * {{cite book |last=Del Mar |first=Norman |year=1983 |title=Anatomy of the Orchestra |location=London |publisher=Faber & Faber |isbn=0-520-05062-2}} * {{cite book |last=Gregory |first=Robin |year=1973 |title=The Trombone: The Instrument and its Music |location=London |publisher=Faber & Faber |isbn=0-571-08816-3}} * {{cite book |last1=Guion |first1=David |title=The Trombone: Its History and Music, 1697–1811 |date=1988 |publisher=Gordon and Breach |isbn=2-88124-211-1 }} * {{Cite book |last=Guion |first=David M. |title=A History of the Trombone |publisher=Scarecrow Press |date=2010 |isbn=9780810874459 |location=Lanham, Maryland}} * {{cite book |editor=Herbert, Trevor |editor2=Wallace, John |date=1997 |title=The Cambridge Companion to Brass Instruments |series=[[Cambridge Companions to Music]] |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=0-521-56522-7 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/cambridgecompani00herb }} * {{cite book |last1=Herbert |first1=Trevor |title=The Trombone |date=2006 |publisher=Yale University Press |publication-place=New Haven |isbn=978-0-300235-75-3}} * {{cite book |last=Kunitz |first=Hans |year=1959 |title=Die Instrumentation: Teil 8 Posaune |location=Leipzig |publisher=Breitkopf & Härtel |isbn=3-7330-0009-9|postscript=. This source is now considered unreliable.}} * {{cite book |editor=[[Albert Lavignac|Lavignac, Albert]] |year=1927 |title=Encyclopédie de la musique et Dictionnaire du Conservatoire |location=Paris |publisher=Delagrave}} * {{cite book |last=Maxted |first=George |year=1970 |title=Talking about the Trombone |location=London |publisher=John Baker |isbn=0-212-98360-1}} * {{cite book |last=Montagu |first=Jeremy |year=1979 |title=The World of Baroque & Classical Musical Instruments |location=New York |publisher=The Overlook Press |isbn=0-87951-089-7}} * {{cite book |last=Montagu |first=Jeremy |year=1976 |title=The World of Medieval & Renaissance Musical Instruments |location=New York |publisher=The Overlook Press |isbn=0-87951-045-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/worldofmedievalr0000mont }} * {{cite book |last=Montagu |first=Jeremy |year=1981 |title=The World of Romantic & Modern Musical Instruments |location=London |publisher=David & Charles |isbn=0-7153-7994-1}} * {{cite Grove |title=Trombone }} * {{cite book |last=Wick |first=Denis |year=1984 |title=Trombone Technique |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-322378-3}} * {{Cite Q|Q111040546|last=Yeo |first=Douglas |author-link=Douglas Yeo |date=2021}} {{Refend}} == External links == {{Commons category|Trombones}} * {{cite EB1911|wstitle=Trombone |volume=27 |short=x}} * [http://www.trombone.net/ International Trombone Association] * [http://www.trombone.org/ Online Trombone Journal] * [http://www.britishtrombonesociety.org/ British Trombone Society] * [http://www.kimballtrombone.com/trombone-history-timeline/ Trombone History Timeline] by Will Kimball, Professor of Trombone at Brigham Young University * [http://newt.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/brassacoustics.html Acoustics of Brass Instruments] from Music Acoustics at the University of New South Wales * [https://web.archive.org/web/20080813021118/http://royalschoolsources.com/brass/trombone/trombone.html Sources for the Prescribed Sheet Music for the ABRSM practical exams] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20060510142822/http://www.twofrequencies.com/scott/instruction/atrombone.pdf Two Frequencies Trombone] * [https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1321215 NPR story about trombone bands] (2003) * [http://www.mimo-international.com/MIMO/search.aspx?SC=DEFAULT&QUERY_LABEL=Trombones#/Search/%28query%3A%28FacetFilter%3A%27%7B%22_36%22%3A%22LEXICON_00004360%22%7D%27%2CForceSearch%3A%21t%2CPage%3A0%2CPageRange%3A3%2CQueryString%3A%27%2A%3A%2A%27%2CResultSize%3A15%2CScenarioCode%3ADEFAULT%2CScenarioDisplayMode%3Adisplay-mosaic%2CSearchLabel%3ATrombones%2CSearchTerms%3A%27%27%2CSortField%3AAuthor_sort%2CSortOrder%3A0%2CTemplateParams%3A%28Scenario%3A%27%27%2CScope%3A%27%27%2CSize%3A%21n%2CSource%3A%27%27%2CSupport%3A%27%27%29%29%29 Overview of trombones on the MIMO (Musical Instrument Museums Online) portal] * [[mwod:trombone|Merriam Webster]] === Slide positions === * Christian E. Waage (2009). [http://www.yeodoug.com/resources/faq/faq_images/slide_chart_03.jpg "Slide Position Chart"], ''YeoDoug.com'' * Antonio J. García. (1997). [http://www.garciamusic.com/educator/articles/alt.positions.html "Choosing Alternate Positions for Bebop Lines"], ''GarciaMusic.com''. {{Brass instruments}}{{Instrument tunings|state=collapsed}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:B-flat instruments]] [[Category:Bass (sound)]] [[Category:Continuous pitch instruments]] [[Category:Jazz instruments]] [[Category:Marching band instruments]] [[Category:Orchestral instruments]] [[Category:Trombones| ]] [[Category:Concert band instruments]]
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