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

    Left to right: replica alto, tenor and bass sackbuts, in Museu de la Música de Barcelona. Four sackbuts: two tenors, left & middle; alto, top; bass, right. A sackbut is an early form of the trombone used during the Renaissance and Baroque eras. A sackbut has the characteristic telescopic slide of a trombone, used to vary the length of the tube ...

    • 423.22, (Sliding aerophone sounded by lip vibration)
  2. One of our latest dictionaries has again returned to a French derivation, giving the O.F. “saquier,” to pull, and “boter,” to push, as the source of “Saqueboute,” the French form of the word. But those writers seem to be nearer the truth who look for its origin in Spain, where the name, under the form Sacabuche, first appears.

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  4. sacabuche. musical instrument. Learn about this topic in these articles: development of brass instruments. In wind instrument: Trumpet-type aerophones. …the 14th century, the term sacabuche (Spanish: “drawpipe,” or “pull push”) was used to refer to a lip-vibrated instrument, presumably with a single telescoping slide.

  5. Jul 19, 2023 · There is a quijongo, a carraca, which is a dry equine jaw, and another great mysterious instrument: the sacabuche. Originally from Honduras, it is a close relative of another very similar instrument that we had in Guanacaste and that disappeared many years ago. It was called a juque or juco.

  6. El instrumento evolucionó en lo que hoy conocemos como trombón, pero se le suele describir con un sonido más suave. Fue empleado principalmente en tamaños alto, tenor y bajo. Fue uno de los instrumentos más importantes en los trabajos de la escuela polifónica veneciana del Barroco, junto con la corneta y el órgano.

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  7. The earliest instance yet discovered of the use of sacabuche as a musical instrument seems to be in the 14th century. [5] Fig. 1. The transformation of the busine ( buccina) into the sackbut involved two or three processes, the addition of the slide being accomplished in at least two stages. It was applied first to the straight busine made in ...

  8. 1 "The Sackbut, its Evolution and History," in Proc. Mus. Assoc. London (1906-1907).1907). 2 See Edw. W. Lane, Arabic-English Lexicon (London, 1863), bk. i. pt. i. p. 276. for the 3rd of May 1495,1 and is obviously of Spanish origin. Sackbut appears early in the 16th century, The word sacabuche was at some time applied in Spain to the ship's ...

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