Saxtuba

Saxtuba
Brass instrument
Classification
Playing range
Written range
Related instruments
Saxhorn, Saxotromba
Trumpet, Bugle
Tuba, Wagner tuba
Cornu, Buccina, Roman tuba

The saxtuba is an obsolete valved brass wind instrument conceived by the Belgian instrument-maker Adolphe Sax around 1845.[1] The design of the instrument was inspired by the ancient Roman cornu and tuba. The saxtubas, which comprised a family of half-tube and whole-tube instruments of varying pitches, were first employed in Fromental Halévy's opera Le Juif errant (The Wandering Jew) in 1852. Their only other public appearance of note was at a military ceremony on the Champ de Mars in Paris in the same year. The term "saxtuba" may also refer to the bass saxhorn.[2]

  1. ^ Clifford Bevan (1990) gives the instrument's name as Saxtuba throughout. Other sources refer to the Sax-tuba or saxo-tuba.
  2. ^ Mitroulia 172; "Definition of SAXTUBA". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2023-02-20.