Trumpet

From New World Encyclopedia
B trumpet

A trumpet is a brass instrument commonly used in classical and jazz ensembles. The trumpet group contains the instruments with the highest register in the brass family. Trumpet-like instruments have historically been used as signaling devices in battle or hunting, with examples dating back to at least 1500 B.C.E.; they began to be used as musical instruments only in the late fourteenth or early fifteenth century.[1]

Trumpets are used in orchestras, concert bands, and jazz ensembles, as well as in popular music bands. They are played by blowing air through nearly-closed lips (called the player's embouchure), producing a "buzzing" sound that starts a standing wave vibration in the air column inside the instrument. Since the late fifteenth century they have primarily been constructed of brass tubing, usually bent twice into a rounded rectangular shape.[2] There are many distinct types of trumpet, with the most common being pitched in B (a transposing instrument). A musician who plays the trumpet is called a trumpet player or trumpeter.[3]

The adaptation of a simple animal horn into the sophisticated contemporary trumpet reflects human ingenuity and desire to express and evoke emotion through music. Today, adding its unique flare, which derives both from the instrument's construction and the creativity and talent of its player, the trumpet is featured in musical performances to the delight of audiences around the world.

Trumpet written range

Etymology

The English word "trumpet" was first used in the late fourteenth century. The word came from Old French "trompette", which is a diminutive of trompe.[4]

The word "trump", meaning "trumpet," was first used in English in 1300. The word comes from Old French trompe "long, tube-like musical wind instrument" (12c.), cognate with Provençal tromba, Italian tromba, all probably from a Germanic source (compare Old High German trumpa, Old Norse trumba "trumpet"), of imitative origin." [5]

History

Silver and gold plated trumpet and its wooden mute from the tomb of Tutankhamun (1326–1336 B.C.E.)
Ceramic trumpet, 300 C.E., Larco Museum Collection Lima, Peru.
Trumpet, seventeenth century.

The earliest trumpets were signaling instruments used for military or religious purposes, rather than music in the modern sense; and the modern bugle continues this signaling tradition.

Trumpets date back to 1500 B.C.E. and earlier. The bronze and silver trumpets from Tutankhamun's grave in Egypt, bronze lurs from Scandinavia, and metal trumpets from China date back to this period.[6]

Trumpets from the Oxus civilization (third millennium B.C.E.) of Central Asia have decorated swellings in the middle, yet are made out of one sheet of metal, which is considered a technical wonder.[7]

The Shofar, made from a ram horn and the Hatzotzeroth, made of metal, are both mentioned in the Bible. They were both played in Solomon's Temple around 3000 years ago. They were said to be used to blow down the walls of Jericho. They are still used on certain religious days. The Salpinx was a straight trumpet 62 inches (1,600 mm) long, made of bone or bronze. Salpinx contests were a part of the original Olympic Games.

Playing trumpet at Palace Temple. Mandi, Himachal Pradesh, India

The Moche people of ancient Peru depicted trumpets in their art going back to 300 C.E.[8]

Reproduction baroque trumpet by Michael Laird

Improvements to instrument design and metal making in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance led to an increased usefulness of the trumpet as a musical instrument. The natural trumpets of this era consisted of a single coiled tube without valves and therefore could only produce the notes of a single overtone series. Changing keys required the player to change crooks of the instrument. The development of the upper, "clarino" register by specialist trumpeters—notably Cesare Bendinelli—would lend itself well to the Baroque era, also known as the "Golden Age of the natural trumpet." During this period, a vast body of music was written for virtuoso trumpeters. The art was revived in the mid-twentieth century and natural trumpet playing is again a thriving art around the world. Many modern players in Germany and the UK who perform Baroque music use a version of the natural trumpet fitted with three or four vent holes to aid in correcting out-of-tune notes in the harmonic series.[9]

The melody-dominated homophony of the classical and romantic periods relegated the trumpet to a secondary role by most major composers owing to the limitations of the natural trumpet. Berlioz wrote in 1844:

Notwithstanding the real loftiness and distinguished nature of its quality of tone, there are few instruments that have been more degraded (than the trumpet). Down to Beethoven and Weber, every composer – not excepting Mozart – persisted in confining it to the unworthy function of filling up, or in causing it to sound two or three commonplace rhythmical formulae.[10]

Construction

B trumpet, disassembled
Trumpet valve bypass (depressed)

The trumpet is constructed of brass tubing bent twice into a rounded oblong shape.[11]

Modern trumpets have three (or, infrequently, four) piston valves, each of which increases the length of tubing when engaged, thereby lowering the pitch. The first valve lowers the instrument's pitch by a whole step (two semitones), the second valve by a half step (one semitone), and the third valve by one and a half steps (three semitones). When a fourth valve is present, as with some piccolo trumpets, it usually lowers the pitch a perfect fourth (five semitones). Used singly and in combination these valves make the instrument fully chromatic, i.e., able to play all twelve pitches of classical music.

The pitch of the trumpet can be raised or lowered by the use of the tuning slide. Pulling the slide out lowers the pitch; pushing the slide in raises it. To overcome the problems of intonation and reduce the use of the slide, Renold Schilke designed the tuning-bell trumpet. Removing the usual brace between the bell and a valve body allows the use of a sliding bell; the player may then tune the horn with the bell while leaving the slide pushed in, or nearly so, thereby improving intonation and overall response.[12]

A trumpet becomes a closed tube when the player presses it to the lips; therefore, the instrument only naturally produces every other overtone of the harmonic series. The shape of the bell makes the missing overtones audible.[13] Most notes in the series are slightly out of tune and modern trumpets have slide mechanisms for the first and third valves with which the player can compensate by throwing (extending) or retracting one or both slides, using the left thumb and ring finger for the first and third valve slides respectively.

Types

There are many distinct types of trumpet. Early trumpets did not provide means to change the length of tubing, whereas modern instruments generally have three (or sometimes four) valves in order to change their pitch. There are eight combinations of three valves, making seven different tubing lengths, with the third valve sometimes used as an alternate fingering equivalent to the 1–2 combination. Most trumpets have valves of the piston type, while some have the rotary type. The use of rotary-valved trumpets is more common in orchestral settings, although this practice varies by country. Each valve, when engaged, increases the length of tubing, lowering the pitch of the instrument.

The most common type is the B trumpet, but A, C, D, E, E, low F, and G trumpets are also available. The C trumpet is most common in American orchestral playing, where it is used alongside the B trumpet. Orchestral trumpet players are adept at transposing music at sight, frequently playing music written for the A, B, D, E, E, or F trumpet on the C trumpet or B trumpet.

Piccolo trumpet in B, with swappable leadpipes to tune the instrument to B (shorter) or A (longer)

The smallest trumpets are referred to as piccolo trumpets. The most common of these are built to play in both B and A, with separate leadpipes for each key. The tubing in the B piccolo trumpet is one-half the length of that in a standard B trumpet. Piccolo trumpets in G, F and C are also manufactured, but are less common. Many players use a smaller mouthpiece on the piccolo trumpet, which requires a different sound production technique from the B trumpet and can limit endurance. Almost all piccolo trumpets have four valves instead of the usual three — the fourth valve lowers the pitch, usually by a fourth, to assist in the playing of lower notes and to create alternate fingerings that facilitate certain trills. Maurice André, Håkan Hardenberger, David Mason, and Wynton Marsalis are some well-known trumpet players known for their additional virtuosity on the piccolo trumpet.

Trumpet in C with rotary valves

Trumpets pitched in the key of low G are also called sopranos, or soprano bugles, after their adaptation from military bugles. Traditionally used in drum and bugle corps, sopranos have featured both rotary valves and piston valves.

The bass trumpet is usually played by a trombone player, being at the same pitch.[3] It is played with a shallower trombone mouthpiece, and music for it is written in treble clef. The most common keys for bass trumpets are C and B. Both C and B bass trumpets are transposing instruments sounding an octave (C) or a major ninth (B) lower than written.

The historical slide trumpet was probably first developed in the late fourteenth century for use in alta cappella wind bands. Deriving from early straight trumpets, the Renaissance slide trumpet was essentially a natural trumpet with a sliding leadpipe. This single slide was rather awkward, as the entire corpus of the instrument moved, and the range of the slide was probably no more than a major third. Originals were probably pitched in D, to fit with shawms in D and G, probably at a typical pitch standard near A=466 Hz. As no known instruments from this period survive, the details—and even the existence—of a Renaissance slide trumpet is a matter of conjecture and debate among scholars.[14]

Some slide trumpet designs saw use in England in the eighteenth century.[15]

The pocket trumpet is a compact B trumpet. The bell is usually smaller than a standard trumpet and the tubing is more tightly wound to reduce the instrument size without reducing the total tube length. Its design is not standardized, and the quality of various models varies greatly. It can have a tone quality and projection unique in the trumpet world: a warm sound and a voice-like articulation. Since many pocket trumpet models suffer from poor design as well as cheap and imprecise manufacturing, the intonation, tone color, and dynamic range of such instruments are severely hindered. Professional-standard instruments are, however, available. While they are not a substitute for the full-sized instrument, they can be useful in certain contexts. The jazz musician Don Cherry was renowned for his playing of the pocket instrument.

The herald trumpet has an elongated bell extending far in front of the player, allowing a standard length of tubing from which a flag may be hung; the instrument is mostly used for ceremonial events such as parades and fanfares.

Monette designed the "flumpet" in 1989 for jazz musician Art Farmer. It is a hybrid instrument with elements of trumpet and flugelhorn, sharing the three piston valve design and with a pitch of B.[16]

There are also rotary-valve, or German, trumpets (which are commonly used in professional European orchestras) as well as alto and Baroque trumpets.

The trumpet is often confused with its close relative the cornet, which has a more conical tubing shape compared to the trumpet's more cylindrical tube. This, along with additional bends in the cornet's tubing, gives the cornet a slightly mellower tone, but the instruments are otherwise nearly identical. They have the same length of tubing and, therefore, the same pitch, so music written for cornet and trumpet is interchangeable. Another relative, the flugelhorn, has tubing that is even more conical than that of the cornet, and an even richer tone. It is sometimes augmented with a fourth valve to improve the intonation of some lower notes.

Playing

As with all brass instruments, sound is produced by blowing air through closed lips, producing a "buzzing" sound into the mouthpiece and starting a standing wave vibration in the air column inside the trumpet. The player can select the pitch from a range of overtones or harmonics by changing the lip aperture and tension (known as the embouchure).

The mouthpiece has a circular rim, which provides a comfortable environment for the lips' vibration. Directly behind the rim is the cup, which channels the air into a much smaller opening (the back bore or shank) that tapers out slightly to match the diameter of the trumpet's lead pipe. The dimensions of these parts of the mouthpiece affect the timbre or quality of sound, the ease of playability, and player comfort. Generally, the wider and deeper the cup, the darker the sound and timbre.

Fingering

On any modern trumpet, cornet, or flugelhorn, pressing the valves indicated by the numbers below produces the written notes shown. "Open" means all valves up, "1" means first valve, "1–2" means first and second valve simultaneously, and so on. The sounding pitch depends on the transposition of the instrument. Engaging the fourth valve, if present, usually drops any of these pitches by a perfect fourth as well. Within each overtone series, the different pitches are attained by changing the embouchure. Standard fingerings above high C are the same as for the notes an octave below (C is 1–2, D is 1, etc.)

A step = a tone; a half step = a semitone

Each overtone series on the trumpet begins with the first overtone—the fundamental of each overtone series cannot be produced except as a pedal tone. Notes in parentheses are the sixth overtone, representing a pitch with a frequency of seven times that of the fundamental; while this pitch is close to the note shown, it is slightly flat relative to equal temperament, and use of those fingerings is generally avoided.

The fingering schema arises from the length of each valve's tubing (a longer tube produces a lower pitch). Valve "1" increases the tubing length enough to lower the pitch by one whole step, valve "2" by one half step, and valve "3" by one and a half steps. This scheme and the nature of the overtone series create the possibility of alternate fingerings for certain notes. For example, third-space "C" can be produced with no valves engaged (standard fingering) or with valves 2–3. Also, any note produced with 1–2 as its standard fingering can also be produced with valve 3 – each drops the pitch by 1+12 steps. Alternate fingerings may be used to improve facility in certain passages, or to aid in intonation. Extending the third valve slide when using the fingerings 1–3 or 1-2-3 further lowers the pitch slightly to improve intonation.

Mute

Trumpet with "stonelined" straight mute inserted. Below, left to right: straight, wah-wah (harmon), and cup mutes.

Various types of mutes can be used to alter the sound of the instrument when placed in or over the bell. While most types of mutes do decrease the volume the instrument produces, as the name implies, the sound modification is typically the primary reason for their use. Types of mutes most commonly used to alter the sound of the instrument are: Straight Mutes, Harmon Mutes (aka "Wah-Wah" Mutes), Plunger Mutes, Bucket Mutes, and Cup Mutes. A description of their construction and sound quality are below:

Straight Mute: Constructed of either aluminum, which produces a bright piercing sound, or stone lined with cardboard, which produces a stuffy sound.

Harmon Mute: Constructed of aluminum and consists of two parts called the "stem" and the "body". The stem can be extended or removed to produce different timbres of sound. This mute is also called the "Wah-Wah" mute due to its distinctive sound created by the player placing their hand over the stem opening and waving it back and forth.

Plunger Mute: Most often made of a rubber bathroom plunger without the stick. This is used to manipulate sound by the player holding it over the bell with their left hand.

Bucket Mute: Constructed from cardboard and cloth, this mute is clipped to the end of the bell and used to muffle the sound almost completely.

Cup Mute: Also constructed of cardboard, this mute is shaped exactly like a straight mute but includes a cup at the end. In many models the cup is adjustable much like the stem on the harmon mute and produces a softer more muffled sound than a traditional straight mute.

Range

The standard trumpet range extends from the written F immediately below Middle C up to about three octaves higher (F3 – F6). Traditional trumpet repertoire rarely calls for notes beyond this range, and the fingering tables of most method books peak at the high C, two octaves above middle C. Several trumpeters have achieved fame for their proficiency in the extreme high register, among them Maynard Ferguson, Cat Anderson, Dizzy Gillespie, Doc Severinsen, and more recently Wayne Bergeron, Thomas Gansch, James Morrison, Jon Faddis, and Arturo Sandoval. It is also possible to produce pedal tones below the low F, which is a device commonly employed in contemporary repertoire for the instrument.

Extended technique

Contemporary music for the trumpet makes wide uses of extended trumpet techniques.

Flutter tonguing: The trumpeter rolls the tip of the tongue to produce a 'growling like' tone. It is achieved as if one were rolling an R in the Spanish language. This technique is widely employed by composers like Berio and Stockhausen.

Growling: Simultaneously playing tone while using the back of the tongue to vibrate the uvula creating a distinct sound. Most trumpet players will use a plunger with this technique to achieve a particular sound heard in a lot of Chicago Jazz of the 1950s.

Double tonguing: The player articulates using the syllables ta-ka ta-ka ta-ka

Triple tonguing: The same as double tonguing, but with the syllables ta-ta-ka ta-ta-ka ta-ta-ka or ta-ka-ta ta-ka-ta.

Doodle tongue: The trumpeter tongues as if saying the word doodle. This is a very faint tonguing similar in sound to a valve tremolo.

Glissando: Trumpeters can slide between notes by depressing the valves halfway and changing the lip tension. Modern repertoire makes extensive use of this technique.

Vibrato: It is often regulated in contemporary repertoire through specific notation. Composers can call for everything from fast, slow or no vibrato to actual rhythmic patterns played with vibrato.

Pedal tone: Composers have written for two-and-a-half octaves below the low F, which is at the bottom of the standard range. Extreme low pedals are produced by slipping the lower lip out of the mouthpiece. Claude Gordon assigned pedals as part of his trumpet practice routines, that were a systematic expansion on his lessons with Herbert L. Clarke. The technique was pioneered by Bohumir Kryl.[17]

Microtones: Composers such as Scelsi and Stockhausen have made wide use of the trumpet's ability to play microtonally. Some instruments feature a fourth valve that provides a quarter-tone step between each note. The jazz musician Ibrahim Maalouf uses such a trumpet, invented by his father to make it possible to play Arab maqams.

Valve tremolo: Many notes on the trumpet can be played in several different valve combinations. By alternating between valve combinations on the same note, a tremolo effect can be created. Berio makes extended use of this technique in his Sequenza X.

Noises: By hissing, clicking, or breathing through the instrument, the trumpet can be made to resonate in ways that do not sound at all like a trumpet. Noises may require amplification.

Preparation: Composers have called for trumpeters to play under water, or with certain slides removed. It is increasingly common for composers to specify all sorts of preparations for trumpet. Extreme preparations involve alternate constructions, such as double bells and extra valves.

Split tone: Trumpeters can produce more than one tone simultaneously by vibrating the two lips at different speeds. The interval produced is usually an octave or a fifth.

Lip-trill or shake: Also known as "lip-slurs". By rapidly varying air speed, but not changing the depressed valves, the pitch varies quickly between adjacent harmonic partials. Shakes and lip-trills can vary in speed and the distance between the partials can be as large or small as the musicians' desires. Traditionally, however, lip-trills and shakes are usually the next partial up from the written note.

Multi-phonics: Playing a note and "humming" a different note simultaneously. For example, sustaining a middle C and humming a major 3rd "E" at the same time.

Circular breathing: A technique wind players use to produce uninterrupted tone, without pauses for breaths. The player puffs up the cheeks, storing air, then breathes in rapidly through the nose while using the cheeks to continue pushing air outwards.

Instruction and method books

One trumpet method is Jean-Baptiste Arban's Complete Conservatory Method for Trumpet (Cornet).[18] Other well-known method books include Technical Studies by Herbert L. Clarke,[19] Grand Method by Louis Saint-Jacome, Daily Drills and Technical Studies by Max Schlossberg, and methods by Ernest S. Williams, Claude Gordon, Charles Colin, James Stamp, and Louis Davidson.[20] A common method book for beginners is the Walter Beeler's Method for the Cornet, and there have been several instruction books written by virtuoso Allen Vizzutti. Merri Franquin wrote a Complete Method for Modern Trumpet,[21] which fell into obscurity for much of the twentieth century until public endorsements by Maurice André revived interest in this work.[22]

Notable Trumpet Players

Gottfried Reiche, chief trumpeter for Johann Sebastian Bach in Leipzig
Louis Armstrong

In early jazz, Louis Armstrong was well known for his virtuosity and his improvisations on the Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings, and his switch from cornet to trumpet is often cited as heralding the trumpet's dominance over the cornet in jazz.[3][23]

Dizzy Gillespie was a gifted improviser with an extremely high (but musical) range, building on the style of Roy Eldridge but adding new layers of harmonic complexity. Gillespie had an enormous impact on virtually every subsequent trumpeter, both by the example of his playing and as a mentor to younger musicians. Miles Davis is widely considered one of the most influential musicians of the twentieth century—his style was distinctive and widely imitated. Davis' phrasing and sense of space in his solos have been models for generations of jazz musicians. Cat Anderson was a trumpet player, who played with Duke Ellington's Big Band, was known for his ability to play extremely high with an even more extreme volume. Maynard Ferguson came to prominence playing in Stan Kenton's orchestra, before forming his own band in 1957. He was noted for being able to play accurately in a remarkably high register.[24]

Musical pieces

Anton Weidinger developed in the 1790s the first successful keyed trumpet, capable of playing all the chromatic notes in its range. Joseph Haydn's Trumpet Concerto was written for him in 1796 and startled contemporary audiences by its novelty, a fact shown off by some stepwise melodies played low in the instrument's range: "At the first performance of the new concerto in Vienna in 1800 a trumpet melody was heard in a lower register than had hitherto been practicable."[25]

Other popular classical pieces for trumpet include: Antonio Vivaldi's Concerto for two trumpets and strings in C major, Paul Hindemith's Trumpet Sonata, Georg Philipp Telemann's Concerto in D Major, Giuseppe Torelli's Trumpet Concerto in D Major, and many more.

Many jazz pieces have notable trumpet performances, including Louis Armstrong's West End Blues, Miles Davis' Kind of Blue (album), and Georges Enescu's Legende.

In art

Notes

  1. New Harvard Dictionary of Music, History of the Trumpet (According to the New Harvard Dictionary of Music) (2008). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  2. Clint McLaughlin, The No Nonsense Trumpet From A-Z (Dallas, TX: Trumpet College, 1995), 7–10.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Elisa Koehler, A Dictionary for the Modern Trumpet Player (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015, ISBN 978-0810886575).
  4. Trumpet Online Etymology Dictionary (2014). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  5. Trump Online Etymology Dictionary (2014). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  6. Edward Tarr, The Trumpet (Portland, OR: Amadeus Press, 1988, ISBN 978-0713454635), 20–30.
  7. Trumpet with a swelling decorated with a human head Musée du Louvre. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  8. Katherine Berrin, The Spirit of Ancient Peru:Treasures from the Museo Arqueologico Rafael Larco Herrera (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1997, ISBN 978-0500018026).
  9. Alexander McGrattan, The Trumpet (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012, ISBN 0300112300), 239.
  10. Hector Berlioz and Richard Strauss, Treatise on Instrumentation (Dover, NY: Edwin F. Kalmus, 1991, ISBN 978-0486269030).
  11. Trumpet, Brass Instrument Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  12. Dr. Colin Bloch, The Bell-Tuned Trumpet (2008) Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  13. D.J. Blaikley, How a Trumpet Is Made. I. The Natural Trumpet and Horn The Musical Times 51(803) (Jan. 1, 1910): 14-16. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  14. Patrick Tröster, More about Renaissance slide trumpets: fact or fiction? Early Music 32(2) (May 2004): 252-270. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  15. Martin Lessen, Reviewed Work: The Last Trumpet: A History of the English Slide Trumpet by Art Brownlow Notes, Second Series 54(2) (1997): 484–485. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  16. Elisa Koehler, Fanfares and Finesse : A Performer's Guide to Trumpet History and Literature (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2014, ASIN B00I4PI5IW), 55.
  17. Joseph Wheeler, "Review: Edward H. Tarr, Die Trompete" The Galpin Society Journal 31 (May, 1978): 167.
  18. Jean-Baptiste Arban, Arban's complete conservatory method for Trumpet (New York, NY: Carl Fischer, 1982, ISBN 978-0825802560).
  19. Herbert L. Clarke, Technical Studies for the Cornet (New York, NY: Carl Fischer, 1934, ISBN 978-0825802560).
  20. Charles Colin, Advanced Lip Flexibilities for Trumpet (New York: Charles Colin Music, 1980).
  21. Merri Franquin, Complete Method for Modern Trumpet (Victoria, British Columbia: qPress, 2016). Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  22. Geoffrey Shamu, Merri Franquin and His Contribution to the Art of Trumpet Playing (Boston, MA: Boston University, 2009), 20. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  23. Michael J. West, The Cornet: Secrets of the Little Big Horn (2017). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  24. Maynard Ferguson The Canadian Encyclopedia (2017). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  25. Keith Anderson, liner notes for Naxos CD 8.550243, Famous Trumpet Concertos, "Haydn's concerto, written for Weidinger in 1796.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Arban, Jean-Baptiste. Arban's complete conservatory method for Trumpet New York, NY: Carl Fischer, 1982. ISBN 978-0825802560
  • Barclay, Robert. The Art of the Trumpet-Maker: The Materials, Tools and Techniques of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries in Nuremberg . Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0198162235
  • Bate, Philip. The Trumpet and Trombone: An Outline of Their History, Development, and Construction. Ernest Benn, 1978. ISBN 0393021297
  • Berrin, Katherine. The Spirit of Ancient Peru:Treasures from the Museo Arqueologico Rafael Larco Herrera. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1997. ISBN 978-0500018026
  • Brownlow, James Arthur. The Last Trumpet: A History of the English Slide Trumpet. Pendragon Press, 1996. ISBN 0945193815
  • Campos, Frank Gabriel. Trumpet Technique. Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 0195166922
  • Cassone, Gabriele. The Trumpet Book. Zecchini Editore, 2009. ISBN 8887203806
  • Clarke, Herbert L. Technical Studies for the Cornet New York, NY: Carl Fischer, 1934. ISBN 978-0825802560
  • Colin, Charles. Advanced Lip Flexibilities for Trumpet New York: Charles Colin Music, 1980. ASIN B000JSM5QU
  • English, Betty Lou. You Can't Be Timid With a Trumpet: Notes from the Orchestra, Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1980. ISBN 0688519636
  • Franquin, Merri. Complete Method for Modern Trumpet Victoria, British Columbia: qPress, 2016.
  • Koehler, Elisa. A Dictionary for the Modern Trumpet Player. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015. ISBN 978-0810886575
  • McGrattan, Alexander. The Trumpet New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012. ISBN 0300112300
  • McLaughlin, Clint. The No Nonsense Trumpet From A-Z. Dallas, TX: Trumpet College, 1995.
  • Shamu, Geoffrey. Merri Franquin and His Contribution to the Art of Trumpet Playing Boston, MA: Boston University, 2009.
  • Sherman, Roger. Trumpeter's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Playing and Teaching the Trumpet. Accura Music, 1979. ISBN 0918194024
  • Smithers, Don L. The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet Before 1721. Syracuse University Press, 1973. ISBN 0815621574
  • Tarr, Edward. The Trumpet. Portland, OR: Amadeus Press, 1988. ISBN 978-0713454635

External links

All links retrieved June 22, 2023.

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