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  2. Mouthpiece (brass) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouthpiece_(brass)

    Trumpet mouthpiece from the side. The mouthpiece on brass instruments is the part of the instrument placed on the player's lips. The mouthpiece is a circular opening that is enclosed by a rim and that leads to the instrument via a semi-spherical or conical cavity called the cup.

  3. Flumpet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flumpet

    The Flumpet was designed in 1989 [2] and borrows the three piston valve design of both the trumpet and flugelhorn and shares the same instrument length of a trumpet. The curves on the end of the Flumpet have a resemblance to shepherd's crooks.

  4. Mellophone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mellophone

    This mouthpiece usually has a deep cup, like that of the flugelhorn, and has a wider inner diameter than a trumpet mouthpiece. These mouthpieces give the mellophone a dark, round sound. Some trumpet players who double on mellophone use a trumpet-style parabolic ("cup") mouthpiece on the instrument, resulting in a much brighter, more trumpet ...

  5. Flugelhorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flugelhorn

    The flugelhorn's mouthpiece is more deeply conical than either trumpet or cornet mouthpieces, but not as conical as a French horn mouthpiece. Some modern flugelhorns feature a fourth valve that lowers the pitch by a perfect fourth (similar to the fourth valve on some euphoniums , tubas , and piccolo trumpets , or the trigger on trombones ).

  6. Embouchure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embouchure

    The double reed woodwinds, the oboe and bassoon, have no mouthpiece. Instead the reed is two pieces of cane extending from a metal tube (oboe – staple) or placed on a bocal (bassoon, English horn). The reed is placed directly on the lips and then played like the double-lip embouchure described above.

  7. Al Cass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Cass

    After several years of research and development, he invented "doubling" mouthpieces for brass musicians, which he patented with Patent #2,917,964. He was a mouthpiece consultant, manufacturer of brass mouthpieces for trumpeter, jazz musician, and creator of bebop John Birks; Dizzy Gillespie ; and many other legends from the Big Band era.

  8. C. G. Conn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._G._Conn

    C. G. Conn Ltd., Conn Instruments or commonly just Conn, is a former American manufacturer of musical instruments incorporated in 1915. It bought the production facilities owned by Charles Gerard Conn, a major figure in early manufacture of brasswinds and saxophones in the USA.

  9. Firebird (trumpet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firebird_(trumpet)

    Hybrid or "duplex" brass instruments equipped with both a slide and valves were built as early as the 1860s, by instrument makers Besson and Conn. [2]Jazz trumpet player Maynard Ferguson worked with Holton (now a division of C.G. Conn) to develop the model ST302 trumpet.

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