Woodwind instrument | |
---|---|
Classification | aerophone |
Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 422.211.2 (single-reed aerophone with cylindrical bore and fingerholes) |
Related instruments | |
arghul, bülban, clarinet, diplica, dili tuiduk, dozaleh, Chalumeau, cifte, launeddas, mijwiz, pilili, Reclam de xeremies, sipsi, zammara, zummara |
The mock trumpet is a single-reed woodwind instrument popular during the second half of the seventeenth century, especially in England. By the 1720s, the mock trumpet was documented in use in the New World.[1]
The mock trumpet predated the chalumeau and may be one of the primary predecessors of both the chalumeau and clarinet.[1] Thurston Dart wrote that the mock trumpet was the name for the chalumeau in England, and that music was published for it in 1698.[2]
Mock trumpets are keyless reed-pipes, closed on one end by the natural joint of the cane and wrapped in leather. The reed is idioglottal, meaning that it is a tongue cut but not detached from the reed itself. The reed was placed on the upper side of the instrument and vibrated against the upper lip; the pipe had six tone holes on top and one in the back.[3] Early chalmeaus used idioglot reeds, as shown in the debate as to whether to install reeds up or down.[4] Rice said the idioglot reed was installed with the split going from the top downward (anaglott).[5]
Documented music for the mock trumpet primarily includes tutors and method books, indicating that this was an instrument studied in the Western Classical tradition.[1]
... the reed consists of a small tongue detached from the reed itself... the reed [not the tongue] is placed on the upper side, unlike the arrangement in the clarinets of the present day...