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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BrassBrass - Wikipedia

    Attributed to Aert van Tricht, Limburg (Netherlands), c. 1500. Brass is an alloy of copper (Cu) and zinc (Zn), in proportions which can be varied to achieve different colours and mechanical, electrical, acoustic, and chemical properties, [1] but copper typically has the larger proportion. In use since prehistoric times, it is a substitutional ...

  2. Jul 16, 2023 · 1400-1600. Soprano, Alto, Tenor, and Bass Sackbuts. During the Renaissance, brass instruments began to develop into the instruments we know and recognize today. The earliest known curved trumpets were developed in the early 15th century, which was followed by the folded and slide trumpets.

  3. The earliest brass instruments were straight or curved open horns made from wood, bone and animal horns. These usually consisted of a mouthpiece affixed to a cylindrical tube that produced only one note. They existed in the earliest cultures of Egypt, India, New Guinea, Brazil and Australia.

  4. But “brass instruments” remains the name in common usage. The history of brass instruments can be divided neatly, if broadly, into two phases, separated at about 1800. From this time, new mechanisms (first keys and then valves) were applied to facilitate easy access to a chromatic compass.

  5. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments. hirty-two experts from iteen countries join three of the world’s leading authorities on the design, manufacture, performance and history of brass musical instruments in this irst major encyclopedia on the subject.

  6. trumpet, brass wind musical instrument sounded by lip vibration against a cup mouthpiece. Ethnologists and ethnomusicologists use the word trumpet for any lip-vibrated instrument, whether of horn, conch, reed, or wood, with a horn or gourd bell, as well as for the Western brass instrument.

  7. Mar 8, 2010 · Technology and music have been closely associated since the very first musical instruments were constructed, and in the 19th century an explosion of invention revolutionised the way brass instruments could be played.

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