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    • Image courtesy of musicologie.org

      musicologie.org

      • The early trombone was known by many different names in different places. In particular, it was known as a sacabuche or saquebute, which means draw-trumpet in Spain. Sacabuche is the combination of two Spanish words: “sacar”, which means to withdraw or pull out, and “buche,” which means inside.
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  2. Nov 25, 2023 · This ‘double slide’ was a later development, thought to occur around 1450. Once the busine was folded, and equipped with a double slide, it has all the features of an early trombone. Therefore, it’s thought that the trombone was invented around 1450 AD although it’s not certain to say exactly when it was first seen.

  3. Until the early eighteenth century, the trombone was called the sackbut in English, a word with various different spellings ranging from sackbut to shagbolt and derived from the Spanish sacabuche or French sacqueboute. The sackbut was built in slightly smaller dimensions than modern trombones, and had a bell that was more conical and less flared.

  4. Oct 2, 2004 · Trombones were a very important part of the music in both churches well into the eighteenth century, but were no longer used at either one after about 1730. San Petronio began to use the trombone again in 1761, and continuously had one trombonist on its payroll from then until 1893. (2.5) Early in the seventeenth century, a new Holy Roman ...

  5. Oct 2, 2004 · (6.1) Music for trombone solo made several flashes in the pan before anything that could truly be called a tradition got started.The earliest trombone solo, "La Hieronyma" by Giulio Martino Cesare, was published in 1621, although Francesco Rognone included divisions on Lasso's song "Suzanne un jour" in an improvisation treatise that appeared in 1620.

  6. The trombone is a 15th-century development of the trumpet and, until approximately 1700, was known as the sackbut. Like a trumpet, it has a cylindrical bore flared to a bell. Its mouthpiece is larger, however, suited to its deeper musical register, and is parabolic in cross section, like a cornet.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. of Nuremberg with the technological advancements to the trombone/ sackbut that occurred in the fifteenth century. (Image of an angel playing trombone.) The Trombone in the Sixteenth Century In 1503, the trombone is first seen in Spain. In 1520, the trombone is first seen in Portugal.

  8. Flashes in the Pan. (8.1) Trombones have occasionally been used in some kinds of music for a sufficiently short time that it can't be called part of a tradition, but certainly ought to be mentioned. (8.2) A small body of works composed at or within the cultural orbit of the Burgundian court some time before 1450, mostly but not exclusively Mass ...

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