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  1. 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.

  2. 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 ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. History. Four sackbuts: two tenors, alto, bass. 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.

  5. Oct 2, 2004 · In this sense, the brass quintets of Victor Ewald, from the early twentieth century, are probably the earliest chamber music that uses trombone. (6.13) Besides brass quintets, now standardized as two trumpets, horn, tenor trombone and either tuba or bass trombone, there is a fairly extensive body of music for brass trio (trumpet, horn, and ...

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

    The trombone ( German: Posaune, Italian, French: trombone) is a musical instrument in the brass family. As with all brass instruments, sound is produced when the player's vibrating lips cause the air column inside the instrument to vibrate. Nearly all trombones use a telescoping slide mechanism to alter the pitch instead of the valves used by ...

  7. 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.

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