Bingo.tstryk wrote:...baritones are cylindrical and euphoniums are conical.
BTW, when I was in high school, it was explained that baritones have a forward bell, and euphoniums have an upright bell. I never really believe that!

Bingo.tstryk wrote:...baritones are cylindrical and euphoniums are conical.



The three main brass instrument families, IIRC, are:the elephant wrote:I am saying that the baritone is a larger, rounder tone than the trombone. It does not have a trombone tone, which is cylindrical. It is larger and less cylindrical than a trombone. It is sort of in between. The relationship between the three soprano brasses and the three tenor brasses are very similar in function.bort wrote:What is the "cornet = baritone" connection? Aren't cornets conical?


This seems to me like the lie that increasingly trips us up as we have to elaborate on it.Kevin Hendrick wrote: The three main brass instrument families, IIRC, are:
- Cylindrical bore: trumpet & trombone
In-between (half-n-half): cornet, alto horn & baritone
Conical bore: flugelhorn, euphonium & tuba






He moved to London, after writing a book.the elephant wrote:I liked that Klaus guy. Whatever happened to him?

Indeed!!!tstryk wrote:I took it to mean the timbre not the physical properties of the horn.bort wrote:What is the "cornet = baritone" connection? Aren't cornets conical?

Did they? Thought that was a British brass band thing. We see different parts for treble and bass clef, but they look the same to me otherwise. Liberty Bell, Invincible Eagle for examples that I happen to have on hand. As for the instruments, I'd expect an older American baritone to have similar `middle of the road' proportions to the later ones, but am not so familiar with the really antique stuff from Sousa's early years. I think that may have been around the end of the period where what we'd call a baritone was the Bb bass, but don't take my word for it!tstryk wrote:Sousa and Fillmore and probably others wrote seperate cornet parts, trumpet parts, baritone parts, and euphonium parts for a reason.




pjv wrote:isn't anybody gonna' take a shot at fitting the tenor tuba into this picture?
What do you think - does the shoe fit?GC wrote:3rd trombone or Bb bass


Indeed. I don't remember the names of the pieces, but in my high school band we played several pieces that had both cornet and trumpet parts. The cornet parts were, of course, the more lyrical parts, and the trumpet parts more fanfare oriented.Donn wrote:Did they? Thought that was a British brass band thing.tstryk wrote:Sousa and Fillmore and probably others wrote seperate cornet parts, trumpet parts, baritone parts, and euphonium parts for a reason.