Title: ALVIN'S RC Heli Art
Description: Top views on my site!
Johnny_J - February 12, 2008 11:40 PM (GMT)
Just thought I'd let yall know that Alvin's Helicopter that I drew is on of the top visited pieces on my site at FineArtAmerica.com!
Here's the link:
Alvins Heli
Avistar 2 - February 13, 2008 12:23 AM (GMT)
I give it :helicopter: :helicopter: :helicopter: :helicopter: :helicopter: :helicopter: :helicopter: 7 heli points for good work..
Robert S. - February 13, 2008 03:00 AM (GMT)
:bigplane: VERY COOL, GO JOHNNY GO.
4star40 - February 13, 2008 05:01 AM (GMT)
AWESOME!!!! What would it take to get you to do one of a trumpet in a music like background?? if I may ask
Johnny_J - February 13, 2008 12:26 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (4star40 @ Feb 12 2008, 11:01 PM) |
| AWESOME!!!! What would it take to get you to do one of a trumpet in a music like background?? if I may ask |
Sounds like a cool idea.
Got a good picture of a trumpet?
4star40 - February 13, 2008 03:41 PM (GMT)
Flying Dutchman - February 13, 2008 07:51 PM (GMT)
How about this one, 4star40?
Is this a trumpet? It looks complicated, but it sure is shiny!... :huh:
Johnny_J - February 13, 2008 10:05 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Flying Dutchman @ Feb 13 2008, 01:51 PM) |
How about this one, 4star40?
Is this a trumpet? It looks complicated, but it sure is shiny!... :huh: |
That'l work! :thumbup:
Thanks Fritz! :D
Avistar 2 - February 13, 2008 10:15 PM (GMT)
You couldn't draw one 4 star 40 ? :blink:
Robert S. - February 14, 2008 12:19 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Flying Dutchman @ Feb 13 2008, 01:51 PM) |
How about this one, 4star40?
Is this a trumpet? It looks complicated, but it sure is shiny!... :huh:
 |
:wacko: NO that is a Cornet, The lead tube coming from the mouth would be longer on a trumpet.
Flying Dutchman - February 14, 2008 12:25 AM (GMT)
Rats! :o
It sure looks pretty!...
Robert S. - February 14, 2008 12:38 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Flying Dutchman @ Feb 13 2008, 06:25 PM) |
Rats! :o
It sure looks pretty!... |
:thumbup: They ( Trumpet & Cornet ) are very close to the same thing.
Johnny_J - February 14, 2008 01:35 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Robert S. @ Feb 13 2008, 06:19 PM) |
:wacko: NO that is a Cornet, The lead tube coming from the mouth would be longer on a trumpet. |
Darn! :o
I already started to draw it! :yickes:
Just kiddin! :D
4star40 - February 14, 2008 03:35 AM (GMT)
No I can't draw that good.... But can draw... I can play the mess out of one, since it is my major...
Trumpet [Fr. trompette; Ger. Trompete, It. tromba, Sp. trompeta]. A soprano brass instrument commonly about 1.4 m. (4 1/2 ft.) in tube length, folded twice to a narrow rectangular shape about 35 cm. (14 in.) long. A mouth pipe with mouthpiece protrudes from one end of the rectangle, and an expanded opening or bell extends from the other. The center of the rectangle is occupied by three valves and associated extra tubing. The bore of the trumpet is mostly cylindrical, though like the *cornet it expands just before the bell. Most trumpets are now made of brass, either lacquered or plated with silver, nickel, or more rarely gold. Other materials occasionally used besides brass include German silver, copper, silver, and very rarely gold.
Trumpets are commonly available in several sizes named according to the pitch class of their fundamental. Instruments in Bb, C, D, Eb, F, and piccolo Bb or A have actual fundamentals Bb, C, D, Eb, F, and Bb or A. The Bb instrument is used mostly in school bands and popular music. The C trumpet is the favorite among professional orchestra players. The higher trumpets are becoming more common and find use in certain segments of the repertory written for instruments in those keys or demanding an extremely high register. For the latter use, piccolo trumpets are made in a variety of shapes, some (occasionally called Bach trumpets) straight except for the valves and their associated tubing, and some with four rather than three valves. American trumpets are now almost invariably equipped with Perinet piston valves for the right hand, though orchestra players some times use instruments with rotary valves. Better-quality instruments also have levers or rings for adjusting the length of the first and third valve tubes [see also Valve].
The trumpet mouthpiece is generally a shallow cupped shape with formerly rather pronounced but recently more rounded corners surrounding the bore or throat. The sound of the instrument is brilliant and commanding in its most characteristic range from written c' to c", gradually less brilliant on the increasingly difficult notes above this range, and more and more dark and grainy on the lower tones to f#. Special timbres and effects can be produced by using various kinds of *mutes in the trumpet bell [see ill, under Brass instruments]. Most trumpet parts since about 1900 are written either for Bb trumpet, sounding one tone lower, or for C trumpet at concert pitch. Orchestral parts from earlier periods were written for trumpets that could be put in the appropriate key for the composition to be played by means of crooks (small loops of extra tubing). These parts were commonly in Bb, C, D, Eb, and F, sounding from a tone lower to a fourth higher than written. Some late 19th-century parts were written for trumpets with an extra valve or slide to put them in A, sounding a minor third lower. Orchestra players today usually play all of these parts on Bb or C instruments, making the necessary transposition as they play.
The trumpet has a very long history, having been used in ancient Egypt, the Near East, and Greece. During much of that time, however, it was a signaling device sounding only one or two tones. Even in the Roman era, trumpet-like instruments, though prominent in art and literature, are not known to have been used in music. They remained instruments of only a few tones for signaling, announcing, commanding, and ceremonial purposes. It was not until the 14th and 15th centuries that the more musical possibilities of the long trumpet began to be recognized and used, and the instrument acquired its characteristic folded form. The instruments of this period were natural trumpets, on which only the tones of the *harmonic series were available.
Evidence exists that toward the end of this period, however, some instruments may have been fitted with a single slide at the mouth pipe, theoretically providing a chromatic scale, except for one pitch, from the fourth harmonic upward. Such an instrument was called a tromba da tirarsi.
The 16th century saw increasing use of the trumpet in a variety of more musical situations in addition to court ceremony and military communication. Craftsmen in Nuremberg, Germany, began to excel in trumpet making during this period and supplied instruments to most of Europe. At the end of this century and the beginning of the next, the first written accounts of trumpet playing occur. In these works are found trumpet calls, fanfares, toccatas, and sonatas using mostly the low register of the instrument. Among the later of these writings are the first illustrations of melodic playing on the higher pitches of the harmonic series.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the natural trumpet reached its peak of development and was used with brilliant effect by Each, Handel, and many other composers. The instruments were from about 1.8 to 2.5 m. (6 to 8 ft.) in total length, folded to traditional form, and pitched usually in D and C for court use and in Eb and F for the military. Players specialized in different registers, allowing the clarino or high-range players to concentrate on the top dozen or so tones where melodic playing is possible. This type of playing reached its zenith in the mid-1700s and gradually declined toward the end of the century. The lower range was called the principale. The orchestral trumpet of the late 18th and the early 19th century was in F, with crooks for lower keys down to C or Bb to match the key of the composition played. Its sound was not as loud as the modern trumpet's, and it balanced well with other instruments in smaller ensembles. The limitations of an instrument that could play only the tones of the natural harmonic series, however, became gradually more perplexing toward the end of the 1 8th century and led to a number of attempts to improve the instrument mechanically.
Hand stopping, used on horns since about 1750, was tried on specially constructed trumpets [Ger. Inventions trompete] beginning in the 1770s. The keyed trumpet was tried with limited success by several makers and players in the last 30 years of the century. Four or five keys like those on clarinets of the time provided pitches missing in the natural harmonic series. Concertos by Haydn and Hummel exploited the capabilities of these instruments. The slide trumpet, never completely forgotten since the 16th century, was revived again in England about 1800. The improved slide mechanism was fairly successful in that country throughout the 19th century, and such instruments continued to be made into the 20th century in the U.S. as well. The most important mechanical improvement, however, was the invention of the *valve for brass instruments about 1814. Valves were very quickly applied to the trumpet, and, although crude at first, were gradually refined until they provided the trumpet with a fairly even chromatic scale. By the mid-19th century, the orchestral trumpet in F had two or three valves instead of the crooks used earlier in the century. Late in the 19th century, as larger orchestras played for larger audiences, the long F trumpet was finally given up in favor of shorter-valved trumpets in Bb and C. The new instruments were louder, more brilliant, and somewhat easier to play accurately. After the mid-1920s, the trumpet also replaced the comet in dance bands.
Bibl.: James Murray Barbour, Trumpets, Horns, and Music (East Lansing: Mich St U Pr, 1964). Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1 721 (Syracuse: Syracuse U Pr, 1973). Norbert Carnovale, Twentieth-Century Music/or Trumpet and Orchestra (Nashville: Brass Pr, 1975). Anthony Baines, Brass Instruments (London: Faber, 1976). Linda Parr, A Trumpeter's Guide to Orchestral Excerpts (Nashville: Brass Pr, 1977). Philip Bate, The Trumpet and Trombone: An Outline of Their History, Development, and Construction, 2nd ed. rev. (New York: Norton, 1978).
Robert S. - February 14, 2008 04:12 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (4star40 @ Feb 13 2008, 09:35 PM) |
No I can't draw that good.... But can draw... I can play the mess out of one, since it is my major...
Trumpet [Fr. trompette; Ger. Trompete, It. tromba, Sp. trompeta]. A soprano brass instrument commonly about 1.4 m. (4 1/2 ft.) in tube length, folded twice to a narrow rectangular shape about 35 cm. (14 in.) long. A mouth pipe with mouthpiece protrudes from one end of the rectangle, and an expanded opening or bell extends from the other. The center of the rectangle is occupied by three valves and associated extra tubing. The bore of the trumpet is mostly cylindrical, though like the *cornet it expands just before the bell. Most trumpets are now made of brass, either lacquered or plated with silver, nickel, or more rarely gold. Other materials occasionally used besides brass include German silver, copper, silver, and very rarely gold.
Trumpets are commonly available in several sizes named according to the pitch class of their fundamental. Instruments in Bb, C, D, Eb, F, and piccolo Bb or A have actual fundamentals Bb, C, D, Eb, F, and Bb or A. The Bb instrument is used mostly in school bands and popular music. The C trumpet is the favorite among professional orchestra players. The higher trumpets are becoming more common and find use in certain segments of the repertory written for instruments in those keys or demanding an extremely high register. For the latter use, piccolo trumpets are made in a variety of shapes, some (occasionally called Bach trumpets) straight except for the valves and their associated tubing, and some with four rather than three valves. American trumpets are now almost invariably equipped with Perinet piston valves for the right hand, though orchestra players some times use instruments with rotary valves. Better-quality instruments also have levers or rings for adjusting the length of the first and third valve tubes [see also Valve].
The trumpet mouthpiece is generally a shallow cupped shape with formerly rather pronounced but recently more rounded corners surrounding the bore or throat. The sound of the instrument is brilliant and commanding in its most characteristic range from written c' to c", gradually less brilliant on the increasingly difficult notes above this range, and more and more dark and grainy on the lower tones to f#. Special timbres and effects can be produced by using various kinds of *mutes in the trumpet bell [see ill, under Brass instruments]. Most trumpet parts since about 1900 are written either for Bb trumpet, sounding one tone lower, or for C trumpet at concert pitch. Orchestral parts from earlier periods were written for trumpets that could be put in the appropriate key for the composition to be played by means of crooks (small loops of extra tubing). These parts were commonly in Bb, C, D, Eb, and F, sounding from a tone lower to a fourth higher than written. Some late 19th-century parts were written for trumpets with an extra valve or slide to put them in A, sounding a minor third lower. Orchestra players today usually play all of these parts on Bb or C instruments, making the necessary transposition as they play.
The trumpet has a very long history, having been used in ancient Egypt, the Near East, and Greece. During much of that time, however, it was a signaling device sounding only one or two tones. Even in the Roman era, trumpet-like instruments, though prominent in art and literature, are not known to have been used in music. They remained instruments of only a few tones for signaling, announcing, commanding, and ceremonial purposes. It was not until the 14th and 15th centuries that the more musical possibilities of the long trumpet began to be recognized and used, and the instrument acquired its characteristic folded form. The instruments of this period were natural trumpets, on which only the tones of the *harmonic series were available.
Evidence exists that toward the end of this period, however, some instruments may have been fitted with a single slide at the mouth pipe, theoretically providing a chromatic scale, except for one pitch, from the fourth harmonic upward. Such an instrument was called a tromba da tirarsi.
The 16th century saw increasing use of the trumpet in a variety of more musical situations in addition to court ceremony and military communication. Craftsmen in Nuremberg, Germany, began to excel in trumpet making during this period and supplied instruments to most of Europe. At the end of this century and the beginning of the next, the first written accounts of trumpet playing occur. In these works are found trumpet calls, fanfares, toccatas, and sonatas using mostly the low register of the instrument. Among the later of these writings are the first illustrations of melodic playing on the higher pitches of the harmonic series.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the natural trumpet reached its peak of development and was used with brilliant effect by Each, Handel, and many other composers. The instruments were from about 1.8 to 2.5 m. (6 to 8 ft.) in total length, folded to traditional form, and pitched usually in D and C for court use and in Eb and F for the military. Players specialized in different registers, allowing the clarino or high-range players to concentrate on the top dozen or so tones where melodic playing is possible. This type of playing reached its zenith in the mid-1700s and gradually declined toward the end of the century. The lower range was called the principale. The orchestral trumpet of the late 18th and the early 19th century was in F, with crooks for lower keys down to C or Bb to match the key of the composition played. Its sound was not as loud as the modern trumpet's, and it balanced well with other instruments in smaller ensembles. The limitations of an instrument that could play only the tones of the natural harmonic series, however, became gradually more perplexing toward the end of the 1 8th century and led to a number of attempts to improve the instrument mechanically.
Hand stopping, used on horns since about 1750, was tried on specially constructed trumpets [Ger. Inventions trompete] beginning in the 1770s. The keyed trumpet was tried with limited success by several makers and players in the last 30 years of the century. Four or five keys like those on clarinets of the time provided pitches missing in the natural harmonic series. Concertos by Haydn and Hummel exploited the capabilities of these instruments. The slide trumpet, never completely forgotten since the 16th century, was revived again in England about 1800. The improved slide mechanism was fairly successful in that country throughout the 19th century, and such instruments continued to be made into the 20th century in the U.S. as well. The most important mechanical improvement, however, was the invention of the *valve for brass instruments about 1814. Valves were very quickly applied to the trumpet, and, although crude at first, were gradually refined until they provided the trumpet with a fairly even chromatic scale. By the mid-19th century, the orchestral trumpet in F had two or three valves instead of the crooks used earlier in the century. Late in the 19th century, as larger orchestras played for larger audiences, the long F trumpet was finally given up in favor of shorter-valved trumpets in Bb and C. The new instruments were louder, more brilliant, and somewhat easier to play accurately. After the mid-1920s, the trumpet also replaced the comet in dance bands.
Bibl.: James Murray Barbour, Trumpets, Horns, and Music (East Lansing: Mich St U Pr, 1964). Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1 721 (Syracuse: Syracuse U Pr, 1973). Norbert Carnovale, Twentieth-Century Music/or Trumpet and Orchestra (Nashville: Brass Pr, 1975). Anthony Baines, Brass Instruments (London: Faber, 1976). Linda Parr, A Trumpeter's Guide to Orchestral Excerpts (Nashville: Brass Pr, 1977). Philip Bate, The Trumpet and Trombone: An Outline of Their History, Development, and Construction, 2nd ed. rev. (New York: Norton, 1978). |
:o But what about the Cornet????
4star40 - February 14, 2008 04:47 AM (GMT)
The cornet is a brass instrument very similar to the trumpet, distinguished by its conical bore, compact shape, and mellower tone quality. The most common cornet is a transposing instrument in B. It is not related to the medieval cornett or cornetto.
The cornet was originally derived from the post horn. Sometimes it is called a cornopean, which refers to the earliest cornets with the Stölzel valve system.
This instrument could not have been developed without the invention of the valves by Stölzel and Blühml. These two instrument makers almost simultaneously invented the modern valves, as still used today. They jointly applied for a patent and were granted this for a period of ten years. The first great player was Jean Baptiste Arban. In the first half of the 19th century he studied cornet at the Conservatoire National in Paris. He started studying the cornopean but quickly changed to the cornet. He was influenced by Niccolò Paganini, the violin virtuoso, and tried to apply his technical virtuosity to brass instruments. The cornet proved to be the perfect vehicle for this. For the next 100 years the trumpet and cornet coexisted in musical ensembles. In symphonic repertoire one will often find separate parts for both trumpet and cornet. As several instrument builders made improvements to both instruments, they started to look and sound more alike. The modern day cornet is used in brass bands, concert bands, wind ensembles, and in specific symphonic repertoire that requires a more mellow sound.
BenHere - February 14, 2008 04:58 AM (GMT)
awww mannn.. i read alll that.. and i still can't play one.. :banghead:
Flying Dutchman - February 14, 2008 08:10 AM (GMT)
Sometimes I have trouble blowing my nose... :D
BenHere - February 14, 2008 08:26 AM (GMT)
i think i got it backwards... my feet smell, and my NOSE runs.. I diddd learn that alll these years... i been spelling Cornet wrong... i thought it was Coronet.
Johnny_J - February 14, 2008 12:15 PM (GMT)
I always wondered how they get all the notes out of them! :unsure:
Turns out they are kinda like a Harmonica, with them being pretuned to scales. ;)
4star40 - February 14, 2008 03:23 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Johnny_J @ Feb 14 2008, 06:15 AM) |
I always wondered how they get all the notes out of them! :unsure: Turns out they are kinda like a Harmonica, with them being pretuned to scales. ;) |
Yes and no. They are tuned chromaticaly to a certian key (trumpets and cornets are Bb) They are tuned to that scale to a degree, yet they have certian notes that need a lot of adjustment from your face as you play to have them be "in tune". It can be a pain sometimes and every horn is different, they all have different "pitch centers" so each and every horn is different. A harmonica plays chords, it can play more than one not at a time, where a trumpet can only play one not at a time, unless you know "multiphonics" which is when you can play the trumpet and hum a different pitch at the same time.....
Johnny_J - February 14, 2008 11:27 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (4star40 @ Feb 14 2008, 09:23 AM) |
| when you can play the trumpet and hum a different pitch at the same time..... |
:blink:
I see! :D
I know it's not the same thing but you can bend the notes on a Harmonica! ;)
Flying Dutchman - February 15, 2008 12:14 AM (GMT)
Is that like twanging the strangs on a gittar? :D
Johnny_J - February 15, 2008 01:46 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (Flying Dutchman @ Feb 14 2008, 06:14 PM) |
| Is that like twanging the strangs on a gittar? :D |
Not sure bout the term twanging but it is like bending the strings. :yes:
4star40 - February 16, 2008 05:00 AM (GMT)
You can bend the notes on the trumpet, it is for sure something you would have to work on but you can do it.
Johnny_J - February 16, 2008 06:33 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (4star40 @ Feb 15 2008, 11:00 PM) |
| You can bend the notes on the trumpet, it is for sure something you would have to work on but you can do it. |
Another fact I didn't know! ;)
4star40 - February 16, 2008 08:19 PM (GMT)
There is a lot you can do, whether its adjustment to your face or, saying certain syllables while you play. You can ghost note, an endless list......
lloyderc - February 17, 2008 05:52 AM (GMT)
:P i can bend notes on anything :hmm: u just hit it with a hammer :hysterical: :hysterical: really hard. :yickes: :hysterical: :banana:
Johnny_J - February 17, 2008 05:58 AM (GMT)
Funny how a thread can change it's tune! :D