Why do German instrument makers put rotary valves on trumpets and piston valves on horns?
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It seems it's not a German instrument unless it has a whole lot of extra linkages that the rest of the known universe has found a way to avoid.
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Deutsche Drehventile sind nicht Wiener Pumpventile (genauer genannt: "Doppelrohrschubventil" In Wien haben die Trompete Deutsche Drehventile und die Waldhörner haben Pumpventile "Doppelrohrschubventil".Posaunus wrote: ↑Sat Aug 03, 2024 8:42 pm I thought that it was primarily the Viennese that use the Pumpenvalve horns.They are Austrian, not German.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_horn
The sound of the Vienna Philharmonic (and Vienna Symphony) is "different" - and pleasing. I hope they don't change so that they sound like every other modern orchestra.
Ja, das weiß ich. In Österreich haben Trompeten Drehventile und Waldhörner Pumpventile.musicofnote wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2024 12:22 am Deutsche Drehventile sind nicht Wiener Pumpventile (genauer genannt: "Doppelrohrschubventil" In Wien haben die Trompete Deutsche Drehventile und die Waldhörner haben Pumpventile "Doppelrohrschubventil".
Das ist genau das, was ich geschrieben hatte:Posaunus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2024 1:53 amJa, das weiß ich. In Österreich haben Trompeten Drehventile und Waldhörner Pumpventile.musicofnote wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2024 12:22 am Deutsche Drehventile sind nicht Wiener Pumpventile (genauer genannt: "Doppelrohrschubventil" In Wien haben die Trompete Deutsche Drehventile und die Waldhörner haben Pumpventile "Doppelrohrschubventil".
And really particularly specifically Vienna, because tradition. It's more than just the valves though. They have a distinctly different bore profile more akin to that of a 19th-century natural horn. They also still use crooks inserted between the mouthpiece and instruments like on a natural horn and are always single horns. It's really a whole different concept of the instrument.
From what I've seen, the mouthpiece is also different - a very open throat, almost (but not quite) to the point of not really having a venturi.LeTromboniste wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2024 9:37 amAnd really particularly specifically Vienna, because tradition. It's more than just the valves though. They have a distinctly different bore profile more akin to that of a 19th-century natural horn. They also still use crooks inserted between the mouthpiece and instruments like on a natural horn and are always single horns. It's really a whole different concept of the instrument.