Tenor horn

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The tenor horn (British English; alto horn in American English, sometimes E♭ horn; Althorn in Germany) is a brass instrument in the saxhorn family and is usually pitched in E♭. It has a bore that is mostly conical, like the flugelhorn and euphonium, and normally uses a deep, cornet-like mouthpiece.

It is most commonly used in British brass bands and Mexican banda music, whereas the French horn tends to take the corresponding parts in concert bands and orchestras. It is occasionally used as an alternative to the French horn in concert bands.

History

Template:Multiple image The tenor horn found in British-style brass bands was derived from the French Template:Lang, a mid-voiced member of the family of saxhorns invented in the 1840s by the Paris-based instrument maker Adolphe Sax. Bore measurements of historical instruments by Sax all have inner diameters described in his saxotromba patent, which describes a separate family of instruments with narrower bore, although only the E♭ ténor and B♭ baryton were ever built.Template:Sfn Other members of these families developed into modern instruments now common in bands, such as the baritone, euphonium, and the E♭ and B♭ tubas.Template:Sfn

In Prussia, early valved instruments with similar pitch and bore profile derived from bugles, called Althorns, were already in use by the late 1820s.Template:Sfn Built like a large flugelhorn with a forward-pointing bell, these were common in central and eastern Europe. Later, rotary valves were adopted, and an oval upright form was developed by the Austro-Hungarian maker Václav František Červený in the 1870s, based on his Kaiser family of instruments.Template:Sfn

During the American Civil War in the 1860s, "over-the-shoulder" (OTS) saxhorns, including an E♭ tenor horn size, were built in large numbers in the United States. These were made for military bands, with the bell pointing backwards over the player's shoulder, so that soldiers marching behind the band could more easily hear the music.<ref name="villanueva">Template:Cite web</ref> In New Orleans in the early 20th century, the tenor horn was used in Dixieland jazz bands, including those of Papa Jack Laine.Template:Sfn

In mid-19th century Mexico, small brass and wind bands known as bandas became popular in rural and urban areas. Different regions adopted instruments from the military bands of European colonists, and music from German immigrants, particularly along the Pacific coast. By the time of the Mexican Revolution (1910–20), Sinaloan Template:Lang (popular bands) had standardized on using the tenor horn in the ensemble, along with trumpets, trombones, and tubas or sousaphones.<ref name="GMO-banda"/>

The alto horn became colloquially known as the "peck horn" in America, as the player "pecks away at" the off-beats that were often assigned to the instrument in marches and band arrangements.<ref name="alto-tenor-FAQ">Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Sfn This name is mentioned in the 1957 Broadway musical, The Music Man.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the 1970s, King produced an instrument called the "altonium", keyed in F with a French horn mouthpiece.<ref name="HornMatters">Template:Cite web</ref> In their 1971 catalog, King produced two models: the 1147 upright model, and 1148 with the bell facing forward.<ref name="RugsNRelics">Template:Cite web</ref> Soon after, the tenor horn was entirely replaced with bell-forward forms of the mellophone in American marching bands and drum and bugle corps.<ref name="alto-tenor-FAQ"/>

Construction

The modern tenor horn, found in British brass bands, is pitched in E♭ and changed little from the mid-19th century French Template:Lang. It has an upward-pointing bell and three Périnet piston valves. The bore is moderately conical, like that of the cornet or baritone horn, but not as wide as that of the flugelhorn or euphonium. It uses a small mouthpiece with a diameter slightly larger than a cornet or flugelhorn mouthpiece, and usually with a deeper, more funnel-shaped cup. This combination of bore and mouthpiece dampen the higher frequency partials to produce a mellow, rounded timbre compared to cylindrical bore instruments at the same pitch.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There are two variants, one with the beginning of the bell looping over the top of the valves, and the other looping below the valves.

Modern manufacturers, tracking the late 20th century trend of increased bore sizes in band and orchestra brass instruments,Template:Sfn build tenor horns with more power and projection than earlier instruments, whilst preserving their characteristic mellow tone, built mainly by Besson, Yamaha, and Geneva.

In Central and Eastern Europe, the instrument is called the Template:Lang and has rotary valves and usually an oval upright form, similar to the larger B♭ Tenorhorn.<ref name="GMO-althorn">Template:Cite Grove</ref> These are made by Miraphone, Amati, Červený, B&S, and others.

Performance

The standard instrumentation of the British brass band has three tenor horn parts: solo, first, and second. The section usually plays as part of the alto and tenor lines in the middle of the band, with the solo horn part having occasional solo passages. Historically, the tenor horn has gained little recognition as a solo instrument in its own right. This has been gradually improving since the late 20th century.Template:Sfn The instrument's timbre, with a relatively soft attack and mellow sound, aids it in its ability to blend into the overall band sound.<ref name="alto-tenor-FAQ"/>

Range

Template:Image frame The nominal range of the tenor horn (expressed in concert pitch) is from [[scientific pitch notation|ATemplate:Sub]] an octave and a minor third below middle C to E♭Template:Sub an octave and a minor third above middle C, although experienced players can reach higher than this. Since the tenor horn is a whole-bore brass instrument, the fundamental pitches, or pedal tones, are available from E♭Template:Sub to as low as ATemplate:Sub but are seldom called for in band parts or solo repertoire.

Notation

Tenor horn parts are written in treble clef as a transposing instrument in E♭ a major sixth above concert pitch. The tenor horn's written middle C (CTemplate:Sub) sounds the E♭Template:Sub below middle C.<ref name="GMO-tenor-horn">Template:Cite Grove</ref>

Players

Kate Westbrook playing the tenor horn

The tenor horn as a serious solo instrument was first entertained in the 1970s by Gordon Higginbottom, a horn player with Black Dyke Mills. Brass band composers began writing pieces for him, culminating in his 1978 performance of Eric Ball's September Fantasy in the Royal Albert Hall. In 1996 Sheona White, horn player in the Yorkshire Building Society Band, won the BBC Radio 2 Young Musician Award.Template:Sfn She has since made recordings of most of the band solo repertoire, including the tenor horn concerto by Derek Bourgeois, and newly commissioned works in 2023 for tenor horn and string orchestra.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Welsh tenor horn soloist Owen Farr, professor of tenor horn at the Royal Northern College of Music, has tutored several young musicians, including the German hornist Anabel Voigt, who has recorded arrangements (including the Strauss Horn Concerto No. 2) and new works for tenor horn with piano, strings, and brass band.<ref name="rncm-owenfarr">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Flemish tenor horn virtuoso Tim De Maeseneer has commissioned and recorded concertos for tenor horn by Jan van der Roost, Thierry Deleruyelle, and Edward Gregson.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In jazz, tenor horn is sometimes used by trumpeters as a doubling instrument, and was played by Humphrey Lyttelton and Mercer Ellington. British jazz musician and composer Django Bates performs mainly on tenor horn.Template:Sfn The English singer and painter Kate Westbrook also plays tenor horn, collaborating and recording with her husband Mike Westbrook's various ensembles including The Orckestra (1977–78) and The Village Band since the early 2000s.<ref name="GMO-kate-westbrook">Template:Cite Grove</ref>

Repertoire

The tenor horn has not appeared in the symphony orchestra, where its place is taken by the French horn. It is a fixture of brass bands in Britain and the Commonwealth, and sometimes used in concert bands as a replacement for the French horn. Publishers of concert band music often provide the French horn parts transposed into E♭ for the tenor horn.

The tenor horn is also used in banda music in Mexico and Latin America, where it is called the Template:Lang or Template:Lang.<ref name="GMO-banda">Template:Cite Grove</ref>

In chamber music, the standard quartet in brass bands is two cornets, tenor horn, and euphonium. In Russia the brass quartet in the late 19th century was two cornets, althorn, and tenorhorn (baritone), although Russian and Soviet composers after 1890 often substituted a trombone for the lowest part.Template:Sfn

Notable pieces of solo repertoire:

  • Sonata for Altorn and Piano (1943)—Paul Hindemith.
  • Sonata for E♭ Horn and Piano, op. 75—John Golland
  • September Fantasy (1977)—Eric Ball
  • Masquerade for Tenor Horn and Brass Band (1985)—Philip Sparke
  • Concertino for Tenor Horn (1989)—Gareth Wood
  • A Hornting We Will Go for Tenor Horn and Piano, op. 151 (1997)—Derek Bourgeois
  • Concerto for E♭ Tenor Horn and Brass Band, op. 194 (2003)—Derek Bourgeois
  • Aria for Tenor Horn and Brass Band (2003)—Philip Sparke
  • Concerto for E♭ Tenor Horn (2004)—Elgar Howarth
  • Fantasie Concertante (2004)—Philip Wilby
  • Rhapsody for E♭ Tenor Horn and Piano, op. 76 (2007)—Geert Callaert, dedicated to Tim De Maeseneer
  • Capricorno for Tenor Horn and Brass Band (2009)—Philip Sparke
  • Sonata for Tenor Horn and Piano, op. 304 (2011)—Derek Bourgeois
  • Rajaz, Concerto for Tenor Horn and Chamber Ensemble (2013)—Idin Samimi Mofakham
  • Sunday in the Park for Tenor Horn and Brass Band (2016)—Philip Sparke
  • Birth of Time Echoes for Tenor Horn and Brass Band (2019)—Jan De Maeseneer
  • Essay, Concerto for E♭ Horn and Strings (2023)—Jeffrey Kaufman
  • Tenor Horn Concerto (2024)—Jan Van der Roost
  • Three Gods, Tenor Horn Concerto (2024)—Edward Gregson

References

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Bibliography

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