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The History Of The French Horn Essay

, Research Paper


In Prehistoric times, the bell was pointed forwards above the head. It was


used to make a lot of noise in battle. It could only produce one or two


notes. Around the 1600s, shells and animal horns used for signalling,


particularly in hunting. These were gradually replaced by metal instruments


which were made longer in order to get more notes to give more


complicated signals. As they increased in length, they were coiled up to


make them easier to handle and to use on horseback. They called them cor


de chasse, trompe de chasse, corno da caccia, jagdhorn or parforce horn.


They were only used outdoors. In 1963, they began to use horns indoors


for special effects in an opera by Rossi. They were used separately from the


rest of the orchestra because of tuning problems and because they were


played very crudely. In between 1640 – 1700 Horns were gradually


accepted into the orchestra, but were still usually only for special effects


and often used on their own. Many aristocrats engage horn players in order


to keep up with French fashion and send their servants away to learn how


to play the “French horn”. In 1690 they began to make horns in Austria


and Bohemia specially for playing in orchestras. It was called a Waldhorn,


to distinguish it from a hunting horn. It is wider and has a more mellow


sound. In 1720, crooks were developed for horns to put them into


different keys. Before this, horns were made in different keys in one piece,


so a set of complete instruments was needed to cover all the keys used. For


lower keys, 2 systems were used – either several shorter crooks were added


to each other to make up the extra length of tubing or one long length of


tubing was coiled up. The second system was easier for the player but more


expensive as one crook was needed for each key. Arou

nd 1740, hand


stopping was “invented” by Hampel, allowing scales and chromatic notes to


be played over nearly the whole range of the instrument. Hampel did not


invent hand stopping but perfected a technique that had been used before


by many brass players to correct out of tune harmonics. Horn players


divided into two types – Corno secondo (who were expert in the use of hand


stopping in the lower register and in big leaps where the harmonics are


further apart) and Corno primo (who were expert in the high register where


there is not much need for hand stopping). Each type of player used a


different mouthpiece (large cup-shaped for corni secondi and small and


shallow for corni primi). From 1790 – 1870 Omnitonic horns developed,


incorporating crooks for all keys in one instrument, usually with some


sliding mechanism to select the appropriate crook. There were problems


with the mechanisms and with air leakage and these instruments do not


seem to have had any real influence on the way composers wrote. In 1830 ,


composers still wrote basically for natural horns, but increasingly added


notes only available on horns with one or more valves. In 1830 valves were


invented. In 1832 rotary valves were developed. In1898 the first double


horn in F and Bb was built. This was developed to give the characteristic


warm tone in the middle register and safety in the high register needed for


the increasingly difficult parts.As with most new developments, there was


some resistance to using double horns as the sound on the Bb side was


reckoned to be inferior. From 1900 – 1945 narrow bore “French”


instruments gradually replaced by wider bore “German” models to give


more weight of sound in the orchestra (trombones and tubas also develop


along the same lines). In 1960 the triple horn in F/Bb/F alto developed.

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