The Thibouville-Lamy old euphonium horn
March 31, 2009 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass, Instruments
Mr. Boyette has acquired a euphonium horn marked Thibouville-Lamy Paris and has asked us to help with the identification. Langwills index of wind instrument makers 6th edition lists the following about Jerome Thibouville Lamy; Born 1 Feb. 1833 Firm claims to have been founded in 1790 and is still active. Before 1867 he owned woodwind factories at La Couture and from 1864 for brass and stringed instruments at Grenelle In Paris the address was and still is 68-70 rue Reaumur and in 1894 in London 7 Charterhouse Street E.C.

Horns by this maker are represented in many collections in the U.S. and throughout Europe. This maker was the first to make a F/Bflat horn with ascending third valve, as designed by Louis Vuillermoz circa 1928.
If you have more information concerning this, please feel free to post it in a comment below.
looking for a picture of a Windsor cornet
I am looking for a picture of a Windsor cornet. I don’t have a year for the instrument but I picked it up with another instrument and am intrigued by its design. It has a problem with the leadpipe and bell tubing being offset and what looks like a piece missing between the lead pipe and the tuning slide. I am looking for a picture to use as a reference as I rebuild this horn. It is very heavy and has a unique art deco type of post system particularly around the valve casings. It is silver with a satin finish. Any information about the horn would be appreciated. Thank you.
John McBride
When Regimental Bands were discontinued
December 28, 2008 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass
When the general order went out to discontinue Regimental Bands and to use Brigade Bands instead, What effect did it have on the troops, and to what lengths did the individual Regiments go to to conceal their band?
Some Regiments did discontinue their band and relied on the Brigade Band instead to furnish their field music. The 3rd Wisconsin Regiment is a good example of what happened. The original 3rd Regimental band that accompanied the troops to the field was the town of Brodheads city band, known then as the Brodhead Brass Band. The Band enlisted en mass and marched off to war when the Regiment mustered in and left for the field.
When the order came to disband the Regimental bands, the band mustered out and returned to Wisconsin. A short time later they mustered in again as the 1st Brigade Band and served to the end of the war, providing music for many regiments in the 1st Brigade.
Other Regiments took different measures to disguise their band within the Regiment with the officers footing the bill for music, instruments, etc. and the musicians were listed as soldiers within the Regiment. Many of them worked as corpsmen, recovering wounded troops and helping to treat them.
When looking at a Regimental roster, only a few soldiers were listed as "musicians". These were the Drummers and Fifers, sometimes mere boys who accompanied the Regiment to the field and provided a cadience for the troops when they marched from place to place. Another use of the designation "musician" was the bugler who provided calls to the troops to advance, retreat, charge, and the well known call of "taps" when the troops retired. The music for taps was written by or for General Dan Butterfield.
Occasionally a "corp of music", consisting of massed bugles was formed.
Music was an important part of a soldiers life during the Civil War, providing entertainment, inspiration, and information at a time when the toils of soliering must have been very taxing to a young lad, away from his farm home for the first time in his life.
Comments about music from the Generals ranged from U.S. Grants "I only know two toons, one is Yankee Doodle and the other is’nt" To Lee and Custer who provided bands for the troops entertainment.
1907 Conn double-belled baritone
November 26, 2008 by michael.keller
Filed under Brass
Occasionally, we are fortunate enough to obtain instruments which were owned by famous musicians, and have a defined history, which is possible to research further. This is just such an instrument.

By the serial number, and according to charts which are still available, this horn was built in 1907. However, compared to other instruments of it’s type, it was obviously a very special instrument. Gold plated with inset jewels in the bell lock screws, it also has large jewels on top of the finger buttons, which are engraved as leaves in relief on the sides. It has a specially made fifth valve lock as part of the valve cap, which will hold the valve in the down position in order to utilize the trombone bell full time. It also has a slotting mechanism to lock the large bell into place.


You will note the tuning loop in the leadpipe, which often identifies a horn as a baritone rather than a euphonium. In addition, this horn has an "S", or small bore. The top bell collar is above the topmost main tubing curves, unlike the later bell-front Wonderphones. The trombone bell is larger and lower. The Low Pitch tuning slides, which are used in the pictures above, actually lower the horn to A=435, which was the earliest International Pitch. I had to remake High Pitch tuning slides in order to perform with this horn in both High and Modern Pitch. The details of its construction are inconsistent with any earlier or later tenors. Regardless, this horn is a ball to play!

This horn was owned for a time by William C. Hoffman, of Cranbury, N.J., who’s family owned a funeral home, and was rather flush during the Depression. Bill and I frequently discussed veteran horns, and he allowed me to acquire it upon his passing with the proceeds going to his widow. Bill related to me that he took this horn back to the Elkhart, Ind. Conn plant for repair following an auto accident. He said that the employees recognized this horn and gathered around it, and they told him that it was originally made as a presentation horn for Simone Mantia while he was soloist with Arthur Pryor’s band. Mantia was a long-time Conn endorser.

Keyed Brass
What tonal characteristics have been lost since the demise of the keyed instruments?
A discussion between Michael Keller and Kenton Scott
Kenton
I’ve not really gotten it figured out, but it seems to me that the smaller keyed horns use only the middle and upper register of the instrument. [My old orchestration book by Cecil Forsyth gives approximately 2 octaves for the keyed bugle, but 3 for the ophicleides.] Only the Ophicleide is called upon to play its lower register. And, in the middle and upper registers it have a sweet legato sound with only a few notes that are thin. The lower range used by the Ophicleide is another story. It is sometimes a challenge to keep it from resembling a tone deaf bovine. (There was a double bass ophicleide and if it worked, it should have put typical bass ranged parts in its middle and upper register.)
Michael
For keyed bugles, the "sound" is not at all like that a modern bugle. The tone is much more like that of a flugelhorn. Dark, with fewer prominent overtones.
However, I’m not so sure that it’s the sound per se, but rather the attacks and articulations. Although the mechanism is most like a modern saxophone, rather than starting and stopping a reed, the same tonguing of a cupped mouthpiece on any brass instrument is used.
However, the associated ‘pop’ that accompanies many note changes is lost, as valves change the instrument length with any associated pressure. Keys merely change the physics involved, shortening the instrument without any implications. With a modern trumpet, from the initial tone the use of valves makes the tone played LOWER. In contrast, with a keyed bugle, from the same initial tone the use of keys usually makes the tone played HIGHER. (there is one exception to this; the very last key is normally open, and used by itself closes off even more horn and makes the tone a half-step lower).
The articulated last key that is open at rest on an ophicleide.

Thus. a modern horn ONLY plays lower, while a keyed instrument plays higher. This makes the keyed instrument far more nimble than a modern horn, which requires a player to ascend to ever higher fundamental partials to play the same music.
Kenton
It does seem to make sense to compare it with the fluglehorn, as the US bugle is not nearly so conical as some European bugles, fluglehorns or keyed brass. I also agree that much of the sound we associate with modern valved instruments comes from the nature of the attack on the notes and while it has more similarity with the saxophone – the attack is even less pronounced than it is on the saxophone. The saxophone at rest has most of its keys lifted. The keyed horns have their keys mostly closing the holes. So the attack on the notes is softer than on the saxophone where the keys are pressed down with some force. On keyed brass they are lifted off the hole.
I’m not sure about the nimbleness assertion. Maybe I don’t understand it. I would think nimbleness would come from a combination of ‘user-friendly-ness’ of the fingering system and certainty of the note to sound. On the keyed brass, while the fingering system does take advantage of using finger on both hands, it does so in less than intuitive patterns – some of which are not at all convenient to use. And, only some notes sound easily and comfortably, others the player has to convince to come out.
Michael
Unless the listener is within a few feet and can actually hear the mechanical noise, I submit that it makes no difference. You are usually using some combination in both cases. What I was talking about was the "feel" to the player, which is of the same magnitude as a player comparing the feel of piston valves vs. rotary valves. The net effect is that the change in notes is easier to accomplish without such a pronounced difference. Flutists, clarinetists, oboists and bassoonists should know exactly what I mean.
[regarding nimbleness]
One needs to learn the key pattern on a par with any wind instrument. I would assert that bassoon fingerings are far from intuitive for a brass player, but that doesn’t stop thousands of people from taking up the bassoon every year! The nimbleness does not so much come from the use of keys instead of the use of valves mechanically (although it does, marginally), rather, from the fact that a keyed brass is an ascending instrument. Thus, while players of valved instruments struggle hitting high notes consistently, a keyed brass player can easily hit an octave higher than the played note just by hitting a lever. A bugle, if you will excuse the expression, becomes just as easy to master as a saxophone in it’s own way. Contrast the number of really good jazz saxophonists with the number of really good jazz trumpeters whose forte is NOT playing high only, and you may get some idea of what I mean!
To take another approach, take your trombone, for example. You have to hit Bb in the bass clef, F in the bass clef, and Bb just above it. You can do that very early on in your trombone career. How long must you practice to hit the Bb an octave above that and higher with any certainty? How long must you learn slide positions, proper distance, alternate positions, and wrist flexibility to play all the notes? Now contrast that with a Bb ophicleide. Almost immediately you have the full range required, and all you need to do to properly hit a note is push a key lever down. Your attention is therefore directed toward intonation and sound. Much the same as a wind player’s is now. It changes the whole character and challenge of playing a brass instrument!
Kenton
Here is a chart of the ranges of the keyed brass family. Please note that the range for the ophicleides is one octave greater than the bugles.

Just as a point of reference, here is how the Bb cornet’s range is listed.

Do you think that the keyed mechanism adds to the darker sound of the keyed brasses. i.e. if you start with the same natural instrument, and put valves on one and keyed on another, will the keyed version still have a darker sound?
Michael
I think that for instruments of the same bore, the resulting over-all sound would be very similar. However, two additional circumstances come into play with keyed brass, though. One, the change length is not accomplished by a sudden valve change, rather, I perceive the node of the note as shifting back/forward as a key is open/closed. Second, I think that conical bore instruments are much more receptive to pitch "adjustments" made by the embouchure. At a time when computer modeling, mathematics, measurement standards, and production process were far off , I think that a more conical bore lent itself to the process making an approximation, and then refining.
Kenton
Something else that strikes the (brass) player, but probably not the listener is that different notes sound from a different part of the horn. This may be true for other keyed instruments, I don’t know (bassoon, bass clarinet, etc.) I would suspect that the effect is less noticeable on keyed bugles where all the holes are closer to the player’s ear, than is the case on the ophicleide. The more resonate notes seems to come from the bell, while the more troublesome notes seem to sound from a hole.
Part II – Using Bb/C ophicleides
Are there settings where one pitched ophicleide is preferable over the other or is the music better covered by having a mix of differently pitched instruments?
Michael
In the orchestral music that I have performed, C/Bb ophicleides are definitely the way to go.
I have performed with two instruments of the same key when necessar
y, but using a set of both C/Bb in a work like the Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique, where the composer obviously knew what he was doing, makes the most sense.
In tutti passages, the stronger notes of one compensate for the weaker notes of the other.
Passages in the March to the Scaffold, which can be challenging on tuba, are easy and characteristic played on the C Ophicleide.
The Dies Irae in the Witches Sabbath sounds much spookier and like serpents in a church, taking advantage of the raspier sound of the ophicleide.
I would imagine that military music would enjoy the same advantage if both Bb and C ophicleides were available.
Kenton
In the music you referenced, were the original parts designated for C and Bb ophicleides, or was that a conclusion made by players that that was the way to go?
Michael
I believe, in some instances, doing research does indicate that composers such as Berlioz indicated their preference in correspondence, at the very least, that Bb AND C ophicleides were preferred. But one does not often perform from facsimile parts in an orchestra, because the repertoire has had a multiple century life. Corrections, additions, and edition changes have been made over all of these works. One thing that has NOT changed is the human ear. And it is my assumption that, when available, the use of both were to be encourage, whether specified or not, because it certainly sounds more advantageous to my ear.
Kenton
You have heard, I suppose, how to make two oboes play in tune??? One might be tempted to try a similar remedy on multiple ophicleides, except that don’t burn so well! Grin
Michael
Well, I can say from practical experience the it takes too long to burn an oboe. A shredder would be much more effective and satisfying. A stout shredder would probably work on ophicleidi, as well! Grin
What to you have to relearn/unlearn to play a keyed instrument?
Michael
Personally, I needed to learn to rely on my fingers instead of my chops. In a modern brass instrument, with the exception of the lowest registers, a very few fingers are needed in a small set of variations. Most of the changes occur in concert with embouchure changes. On a keyed instrument, suddenly many fingers on both hands are responsible for making the required pitch. The emphasis changes from a physical orientation to a mental one. Because of the possible combinations of keys/partials, I found that for each horn I had to make up my own fingering charts for each instrument containing all of the alternate fingering possibilities that I found, including lower key shadings. By studying a work for orchestra, for example, I was then best able to identify the best pitch by cents to be used in a performance.
Kenton
The fingering always struck me as a blend between playing a woodwind, and a brass instrument. In one respect, you did have to use both hands like a woodwind, but like a brass instrument, most of the notes were fingered with a simpler set of fingering combinations. Unlike a woodwind, certain combinations were used repeatedly. The left hand works much harder than does the right hand on an ophicleide – except when playing the low octave. And, it is the right hand notes that are much more of a struggle to sound satisfactorily.

Michael
It is simpler because one has less keys… but one’s fingers have direct control over the use. One can easily see the relationship between opening notes further up the horn, and a higher pitch. Also, there is no automatic key opening/closure, so if you need to close these pads to make this higher note more in tune, you see that.
Kenton
Learning how to finger the instrument does seem to be an individual endeavor. And, while some notes are fingered the same on every model, others will require some experimentation to determine the characteristics of the horn, the effect of the mouthpiece, and presumably the character and preferences of the player.
Michael
I’ve found that alternate fingerings can be invaluable, in tone color, intonation, and especially fast passages.
Tell me about the mouthpieces that work best on keyed brass instruments?
Kenton
Nick Byrne’s wonderful playing is mostly in the upper register of the horn and he is marketing and presumably using a mouthpiece with these dimensions: Mouthpiece vital dimensions are:
- Inner rim diameter=25.5mm
- Rim width=5.30mm
- Rim contour=Flat
- Cup depth=c.30mm
- Total length=66.0mm
Which seems to make it a very short mouthpiece with characteristics otherwise much like a Schilke 51D
Michael
Most contemporary ophicleide mouthpieces that I remember are on the smaller side, and shallow. Look at the bore of the instrument: almost a baritone profile (and not a euphonium!). For ophicleides I’ve used an unmarked (probably Austrian or such) baritone-sized mouthpiece for keyed ensembles. For use with modern ensembles, I’ve used an early Bach 6 1/2 AL with the small shank for orchestra, and a Mount Vernon Bach 3 for smaller ensembles. These give the tone enough of a bite to compete with more recent horns. The throat in the 6 1/2 let me push enough volume to compete with the trombones in Berlioz. For keyed bugle, a good flugelhorn mouthpiece does the same thing. The one thing to remember about keyed brass is that the mouthpiece is more about sound and pitch flexibility, not playing high. And just like modern instruments, it’s the relationship between THAT player and THAT horn that makes all the difference.
Kenton
I agree with what you are saying, with maybe an exception for the ophicleide. Unlike the other voices, the ophicleide is asked to be – in a sense – two instruments in one, due the fact that it has an extra low range not available on other keyed brass. Because of the fact that its lowest octave – actually provides a acceptable sound that is not in the range of any other keyed instrument, using a single mouthpiece is not ideal for its full range.
Michael
I don’t disagree with you. My experience has been primarily orchestral, and I’ve know in advance the range and facility required for a particular part, and chosen a mouthpiece accordingly. Much the same is true for tuba parts in general for the symphony. The instrument "tuba" had meant so many things to so many composers that until the middle of the twentieth century, it is not standard to play a single instrument or mouthpiece for all parts that you may encounter, even if one has the extended range required.
Are there some characteristics of keyed brass that are lost on modern valved brass instruments? What flaws distracted from their overall success?
Michael
Listening to a keyed brass ensemble sounds to me very much like listening to an group of flugelhorns and baritone horns. Although we have the general capability to approximate the sound now, it remains lost for a number of reasons. Even before one gets to the instruments, the popular music and marches that they played has mutated so much as to be unrecognizable. The events and reasons that these instruments were used has changed. And the instruments themselves evolved in an entirely different direction. The highest instruments themselves tend to be a mellower, darker sound than equivalent brasses today. Part of that has to do with the need to bend a fixed pitch into tune in any key. The bass instruments, however, more approximate cornet or baritone bore- remember that there were limits to pad size, especially back when these instruments were popular. The maximum size was the same, whether for a bugle or a bass. Upper notes tended to be very much brighter, due to the shortness of effective tube length. For classical music, keyed trumpets were but a brief fling. For military use (which as important for keeping a steady march) the key mechanisms and pa
ds proved to be very delicate in the field. Almost as soon as valves were invented, despite their initial drawbacks, they were much easier to maintain and allowed brighter, more treble-sounding bore horns to be developed. Valves also allowed the over-the-shoulder construction which made larger horns more practical, more audible, and aided in the band’s mission of providing transportation direction and movement in unison.
Kenton
I have to ask about: Quote: Even before one gets to the instruments, the popular music and marches that they played has mutated so much as to be unrecognizable. . I’m not understanding this statement. Certainly what constituted popular music then is nothing like popular music now. But, they style of military music for example, is still very similar to traditional marches played by bands of today. Certainly some of the way that the music was classified then – hop waltzes come to mind – are not generally recognized, but the music itself has a comfortable and recognizable form. I would be interested in hearing more about the orchestral role played by the keyed trumpet. My sense is that the orchestra never wanted nor accepted the more mellow voice of the cornet, and therefore it makes sense that the orchestra would not want the even darker sound of the keyed bugle.
I was thinking more in terms of the military bands that existed before the use of keyed brass… which was much more limited. Until brasses became chromatic, there was a very different kind of march sound… and one without much bass! (Where did I put that contra-bass fife!?)
Kenton
n lieu of the contra-bass fife, they did use a bassoon. (I wonder when the bass clarinet showed up?) Have you ever seen a contrabass Ophicleide? I haven’t but, there were ones made in Eb and F and probably would have been useful for overcoming some of the shortcomings of the lower range of the ophcleide.
What needs to be done, other than brushing off the dust, to an ophicleide to make certain that it plays at least as the manufacturer intended?
Michael
(Skipping the obvious joke about what the manufacturer thought an ophicleide should sound like) While in a best-case scenario, all that you may need to do is blow the dust off, I think that this depends on the intention of the player to leave the instrument in original condition. Certainly the pads need to be brought back to playing condition at the very least. My view is that no matter how you try to re-moisten the century-and-a-half-year-old leather pads, you will damage them in using the instrument. Just blowing into the horn will introduce long-absent moisture. Therefor, if one intends to perform, in order to preserve the originality, the pads should be removed, cataloged, and saved. New, modern saxophone-type pads may be mounted temporarily, are available in a variety of sizes, and will remove at least one variable as you start to play. You also have no guarantee that the pads were maintained in an acceptable condition, even if they look OK. New pads will also give you the proper resonance for open notes. The same principals which have evolved 150 years for saxophones are true for keyed brasses. The mechanisms need to be regulated, as does the distance for the final (open) key. There is no guarantee that the key shafts/screws will disassemble after all this time, and care must be taken not to damage them. For an ophicleide, one must be sure that a proper neck strap and holding spacer is available for proper space and key access.

If stuck in, the mouthpiece needs to be removed properly, in order not to damage the mouthpiece or crook/bocal. The crook/bocal itself may have to be unfrozen and lubricated, in order to provide the necessary tuning capability.

Finally, a suitable case or bag need to be constructed for transportation of any kind. In doing this, the key mechanism must be protected from both the weight of the ophicleide and outside interference.
Kenton
An alternative to the neck strap, is the bassoonist’s style of strap that is sat upon and attached to the horn near the bottom crook. The keys on keyed brass seem to be less precisely controlled by their mounts than on say saxophones. Is the issue of air tightness the same as it is to the saxophonist? Or are keyed brass less sensitive to that factor?
Michael
I have not run accross a seat strap, but perhaps I lead a sheltered life :>) As long as no force is put on the key mechanisms, even if one lets go, I can see where that would work well. I would venture to say that it is at the same time less sensitive and more so than a saxophone in sealing issues. Less sensitive, since one is already hearing some raspiness in the sound of an ophicleide, and more so since the key mechanisms are nowhere near as highly developed as even the most poorly manufactured saxophone today. This makes careful regulation all the more critical, not only for the increased time of wear on a vintage instrument, but also due to the lack of rigidity in most key actions.
What do you do differently if you want to use a keyed brass instrument in a modern ensemble as opposed to keeping the horn true to the manufacturer’s intentions?
Michael
Without a doubt, replace the pads with the same size saxophone pads. Vitally important. Technology has advanced more than a century, and, unlike wind instruments, you are dealing with pads that are normally closed. They also allow the notes to resonate properly, require little maintenance, and will allow for slight movement in the mechanism. Put cork wherever there is metal-to-metal contact, so that there is no clicking sound in the action, and reduce wear. Pick a modern bowl and throated mouthpiece, so that you give the horn a fighting chance to be heard. And large enough to be able to make intonation adjustments that will be needed from playing the horn so far from it’s intended dynamic range. If you do change the horn, catalog each change and retain any replaced pieces.
Kenton
At least in military music, there are parts for Ophicleide 1 and Ophicleide 2. Ophicleide 1 takes the baritone role, and Ophicleide 2 takes the tuba role. Playing such parts is facilitated by using different sized mouthpieces.
How are keyed brass used in conjunction with modern instruments, and how does that differ from current use with period instruments? [Is that the question?]
Michael
Perhaps more like "What is practical with modern instruments?" To my ear, I’m not sure that the keyed bugle is, except as a solo instrument. While it can be played forcefully, the tone over much of it’s useful range is dark, and will be overshadowed by the modern large bore trumpet/cornets. The ophicleide, with it’s smaller bore, and using a modern mouthpiece, can hold it’s own as a bass with trombones, but again, in music that was orchestrated for it. The raspy edge of some notes is not successful in sectional work with the low brass, but can be highly effective for those transitional works that use it to their advantage.
Kenton
It would not make much sense to use keyed brass in ensembles using modern instruments and not playing music which specifically had keyed brass parts. In music that had parts written for keyed brass, it seems like keyed brass should be given the first shot at them. And, they should be considered whenever period instruments make up the ensemble, no matter the music. Another issue with mixing modern and keyed instrumentation is intonation. Valved instruments can adjust main and individual valve slide to bring the instrument into tune. keyed brass – like woodwinds – only have a limited ability to adjust pitch. a main adjustment can be made, but all the keys stay in the same position and they are only ideally positioned for one pitch. I believe that one of the reasons
that keyed brass were retired was due to their inability to compete in volume with valved brass. And, while they may be able to be forced to higher volumes, I believe their ability to be played reliably suffers.
Michael
It depends on the player, their facility with the instrument, and the setting they are in. The bass trombone player that was with the symphony I played in could move his slide back and forth to about 4-5th position and still maintain a relatively steady Bb if he wanted to show off. The only thing that suffered was the sound. If the player is strong enough and can play the end of Fantastique clearly, I think that the usage in a modern orchestra is far more appropriate than a modern tuba. An orchestration master like Berlioz was using exactly the sound that he wanted, even if it was rarely available.
An Occasion for a Vintage Horn
The Christmas season will be here soon. This is my favorite time with my old Euphoniums. TUBA Christmas events provide a wonderful venue to break out some of the old instruments I don’t use on a regular basis.
If you have not ever participated in TUBA Christmas, you should give it a try. If you are a cornet player beg, barrow or steal an old euph, baritone or an Eb Tuba to play. The music is available in treble clef so the fingerings are the same as on cornet (even for the Eb Tuba in T.C.). Just make sure your old instrument is tuned to A=440 and you will be all set.
Three frequently asked questions
September 19, 2008 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass, Collecting, Restoration
Most of the inquiries we receive from folks who find a horn in the attic or buy it at a flea market or rummage sale fall into three categories.
1) What is it?
2) Can it be repaired?
3) How much is it worth?
Since we are not in the business of buying instruments, we cannot help with their next question, “how much will you pay me for it.” To help these folks with their questions, we are starting a “Buy and Sell” section where people will be able to list their instrument and deal directly with prospective buyers. This will be done for an low up front fee and the seller and buyer are on their own to hammer out a deal. After you list, we exit the picture and unlike eBay, have nothing further to do with the transaction. We will be happy to answer your first three questions, but please understand, we do not buy instruments.
Stoelzel or Bluhmel Who invented this valve system?
July 27, 2008 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass, Instruments, Manufactures, Pre Civil War
Although Stoelzels name is generally connected to this valve system, some think it was a joint effort of the two “craftsmen” Stoelzel and Bluhmel , working together as a team in Berlin in the first quarter of the 19th century.
Stoelzel was a Saxon and Bluhmel was a Schlesien. The exclusive patent rights to this valve system was ultimately given to or purchased by Stoelzel and to this day it bears his name. The interesting question is, why did the valve system not gain popularity in the German speaking principalities where it was invented, but accepted to a larger extent in Great Britain and France where it was applied as seen here on a Cornopean.
This instrument bears a British makers mark “an Irish harp” and was imported into the U.S. by John Howard
Foote, probably before the Civil War. Interesting about this horn is the original tarred wooden case to make it waterproof, and the pigtail and straight crooks which pitch the instrument to ” Bb, Ab, FA, LA, and SOL”. There is also a screw in Lyre and a bubble glass painting of the period, of a musician holding this horn. Notice that the “SOL” crook is in the upright position in the painting.
This horn was found in Fond du Lac Wisconsin at an estate sale in early 1970.
Keyed Brasses, the first brass bands
June 10, 2008 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass
Not much is written any more about the first brass bands that developed just after the invention of the keyed bugle and ophicleide. The Serpent, which is not actually a brass instrument but a leather and wood concoction with a brass or ivory mouthpiece added the bass element to the band and an occasional trombone or sackbutt and a flute rounded out the earliest brass bands from 1810 up until the mid 1840s when the invention of valves on brasses changed the picture forever.
Keyed brass bands had their own soloists of the day. Edward “Ned” Kendall and the mysterious Francis Johnson, an African American of much renoun provided the solo line and actually “dueled” with valved brass soloists to display the proficiency of the instruments and the talent of the soloist.
Keyed brass bands soon faded and are not heard from except in the U.K. and eastern seaboard of the United States where there is only one such band remaining.
Keyed brass return us to the earliest brass bands. I remember hearing the 1st Brigades Bill Burdick performing “Gentle Annie” on the ophicleide. It is something I will always treasure
Valved Trombones, their faded glory
May 23, 2008 by Robert Medley
Filed under Brass, Post Civil War
I think the reasons we no longer see them is that they outlived their usefulness They came in many sizes and with different valve systems and at one time were very popular. I have my own theory on this subject and I actually played an Eb tenor valved trombone in the 1970s for a period of about 5 years. I acquired it in Kiel Wisconsin at an antique store. It was a refugee from an estate sale that did’nt sell and was consigned to languish away in an obscure corner of the shop. Mine came with its original coffin case, a lyre and original mouthpiece. There was also a crook to put it in the key of C. All things considered, it played rather well and research indicated that it belonged to a William Voss of Kiel Wisconsin. It has string action rotary valves that appear to have been made in New York or the New England states shortly after the Civil War.
Now, to my theory of why valved trombones are no longer used. I think they were used in lieu of slide trombones when the regimental bands were in vogue. They were much more durable than slide trombones and took the rough handling of a field band. Add to that the number of regimental bands that were mounted on horseback and required the musician to hold reins in one hand and play with the other, and you have the answer! European Bands still have bands mounted on horseback, and I would wager that some of them, especially British bands may occasionally still use a valved trombone rather than a Bb tenor horn.
Is there anybody out there that has another view of the valved trombones exit from todays brass bands?



