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  1. Nov 25, 2023 · We looked at the mystery of the slide trumpet, the trombone’s heyday in the renaissance, its almost-total disappearance in the eighteenth century, its stardom in the latter nineteenth century, and its versatility in the twentieth century.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TromboneTrombone - Wikipedia

    History. Etymology. "Trombone" comes from the 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.

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  4. May 4, 2016 · "Trombone" is an Italian word for “large trumpet;” the original trombone did not use a slide and was, in fact, a larger version of the trumpet. The modern slide trombone developed from an early English instrument called a "sackbut," and the first known European slide trombone dates from the 1420s.

  5. 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
  6. From: The Trumpet and Trombone in Graphic Arts, 1500-1800. (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 ...

  7. Historical Evolution: The trombone evolved from early instruments with movable parts for pitch alteration. This development predates valves, with the trombone’s unique slide mechanism being refined over time.

  8. The trombone evolved from the trumpet. Its immediate precursor was an instrument that has come to be called the renaissance slide trumpet: it had a single telescopic slide that was capable of playing the notes of about four adjacent harmonic series.

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