Recently an old friend, a fiddler with whom I've worked for many years, decided to return to his high school trumpet playing roots. He said that he wanted a "Silver plated shepherd's crook cornet" and if he could find one that played in they key of C so much the better.
Searches on eBay turned up a lovely old (1912 - 1915) J.W. Pepper cornet advertised to be in Bb and C. After we nailed it down I did some cleanup and repairs of old repairs. As it turns out it actually was designed to be played in one of three keys: A, Bb or C.
A truly beautiful instrument, it is engraved from stem to stern - even on the outer tuning slide legs and crooks - and all details are quite well crafted and delicate.
Key of A configuration:
Key of Bb configuration:
Key of C configuration:
General photos:
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
I have a Pepper cornet from the same era very much like yours that's engraved Pepper 'Surprise'. Nice job. I wish mine had all the leadpies. I had to make a Bb one.
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker" http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
Hahaha, okay... I thought you were just asking about "dorn."
"Horn dorn" is just a phrase that means posting pictures of attractive instruments, for the sole purpose of ogling them. Still not sure I'd Google the phrase, but it's nothing NSFW.
Magnificient instrument! I especially like the C leadpipe. Does it have different individual valve slides for the various pitches, or do you just keep pulling until the individual valve circuits are in tune?
TubaTinker wrote:I have a Pepper cornet from the same era very much like yours that's engraved Pepper 'Surprise'. Nice job. I wish mine had all the leadpies. I had to make a Bb one.
I'm not up on the model names, does the "Surprise" have an over-abundance of engraving like this one?
And yes it's nice when all of the parts are present. JR is a happy camper.
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
I wonder about the C leadpipe. Does it have a dummy tubing entering the lower receiver for the tuning slide?
Would a few separate photos of the C contraption be possible?
Klaus
I will do that ASAP Klaus. The bottom "slide" bit is nothing more than an alignment piece, all of the air goes through the leadpipe into the top part of the horn's leadpipe circuit.
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
iiipopes wrote:Magnificient instrument! I especially like the C leadpipe. Does it have different individual valve slides for the various pitches, or do you just keep pulling until the individual valve circuits are in tune?
The big change is swapping the MTS for the C leadpipe mechanism. A and Bb use the same MTS but with different leadpipes. The tuning slides are marked for Bb, for A one guesses (or today uses a quartz tuner).
The C leadpipe shortens the horn to match and yes, the small leadpipe for C is a tuning slide with additional lower travel available by pulling the whole leadpipe assembly.
Now waiting to hear "Tin Roof Blues" and the like emanating from its bell.
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
TubaTinker wrote:I have a Pepper cornet from the same era very much like yours that's engraved Pepper 'Surprise'. Nice job. I wish mine had all the leadpies. I had to make a Bb one.
I'm not up on the model names, does the "Surprise" have an over-abundance of engraving like this one?....
Yes. Lots of engraving. Here are a few images....
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker" http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.