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美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国大都会艺术博物馆中的24万件展品,图片展示以及中文和英文双语介绍(中文翻译仅供参考)
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品名(中)圆形小号
品名(英)Circular Trumpet
入馆年号2020年,2020.2a–q
策展部门乐器Musical Instruments
创作者
创作年份公元 1830
创作地区
分类航空电话(Aerophone)
尺寸Assembled instrument: max depth: 12.5厘米; max width: 31厘米; max height: 35厘米 Wooden case, closed: 42.5厘米 x 29.5厘米 x 25.5厘米
介绍(中)这种停止的喇叭采用了一个由黄铜制成的微型手喇叭的形式,配有各种各样的弯曲物和一个镶有洋甘菊的分隔木箱。该乐器配有六个内部弯钩(以发明小号或装饰独奏的方式插入乐器主体的中心);缩短仪器发声长度的两个内部弯钩,其中一个接口接收器绕过仪器主体上的末端弯钩接收器,一个支腿由假管组成;三个末端弯钩和一个耦合器。该仪器及其弯钩具有类似的带有矩形凸缘的中空管状撑杆。尽管没有多色的证据,但很可能这件乐器最初的内部是彩绘的钟。乐器的琴身以铜版字体刻在钟上,如下所示:

Jahn,àParis


尽管1814年发明了铜管乐器的阀门,但在19世纪上半叶,制造商和表演者继续试验各种技术和演奏实践技术,使铜管乐器能够进行彩色演奏。这既是由早期瓣膜的初期问题驱动的,也是由音色美学驱动的,该美学重视天然铜管乐器上手停的表现细微差别。尽管这一点在手喇叭上得到了最好的体现,但这一技术也被应用于自然喇叭,这些喇叭被配置为可以方便地进入钟形内部,并在许多论文中进行了描述,包括Joseph Gebhardt Kresser、Karl Bagans和Joseph David Buhl的论文。通过将手指插入乐器的铃铛并在不同程度上关闭它,可以操纵和声系列的音符来产生半音音阶。这种技术及其由此产生的隐蔽音色使圆形小号特别适合柔和、抒情的演奏,这使其与自然小号特有的明亮声音不一致,并在管弦乐队中用作一种大声宣告的乐器。由于这个原因,圆号主要是作为一种独奏乐器来培养的。尽管今天被广泛归类为圆形小号,但"简单短号"一词也被用来指代这些乐器。这种乐器的色度能力及其抒情倾向确实将其与短号习语联系得更紧密。手喇叭在声学上更适合手动停止,并在19世纪的大部分时间里继续在法国和英国种植,与此不同,这种技术在天然小号和短号上的使用寿命很短

技术说明:

圆形小号/天然短号(短号简单型),以微型手喇叭的形式,由黄色黄铜制成,带有典型的法国钟形边缘,绕在金属丝上。在仪器及其弯曲处发现了匹配的管状支架。钟形部分用一条带标签的接缝连接起来。该乐器配备了六个内部弯钩(以发明小号或装饰独奏的方式插入调谐滑腿),用于延长乐器,两个内部弯勾用于缩短乐器(上升),三个末端弯钩和一个耦合器。内部弯钩的腿部有一个暴露的榫头和一个插座。榫上有一个保护套,可以将钩子插入乐器



Crooks如下,由菱形白色金属标签识别:



两个内部弯钩,一条腿由假管组成。骗子有一个话筒接收器;这绕过了乐器主体上的末端曲克接收器,并减少了乐器主体的发声长度:

LA B;SOL





六个内部曲拐,必须用一个末端曲拐演奏:

FA[也可用作带有末端曲拐的调音滑块];MI;MI B[印记模糊];RE;UT;SI B[印记模糊]




三个末端弯:
>
S B;LA;FA



一个耦合器(插入主体和末端弯钩之间):
>
M B

带有牙套接收器的弯钩具有匹配的菱形浮雕装饰。此外,所有弯钩都有类似的中空管状支柱(直径略有变化),带有矩形凸缘和单独形成的钥匙标签(菱形,带轻微圆形点)。所有这些都与乐器配合良好,并提供了广泛的按键和调谐可能性,每个弯钩都与乐器原始木箱中的一个隔间相匹配

琴身以铜版字体刻在钟上,如下所示:

Jahn,àParis

该乐器配有两个合适的当代吹口,均为黄铜制,其中一个镀银。这些吹口的口径轮廓通常是圆锥形的,喉部狭窄,背部轻微张开,与19世纪上半叶提供的山茱萸和短号一致。没有制造商的邮票。
介绍(英)This iteration of the stopped trumpet takes the form of a miniature hand horn fashioned from brass, complete with an extensive assortment of crooks and a chamois-lined compartmentalized wooden case. The instrument is supplied with six internal crooks (inserted centrally into the body of the instrument in the manner of an inventionstrumpet or cor solo); two internal crooks that shorten the sounding length of the instrument, with a mouthpiece receiver that bypasses the terminal crook receiver on the body of instrument and one leg consisting of dummy tubing; three terminal crooks, and one coupler. The instrument and its crooks have similar hollow, tubular stays with rectangular flanges. Although no evidence of polychrome is present, it is likely that the instrument would originally have had a painted bell interior. The body of the instrument is engraved on the bell, in copperplate script, as follows:

Jahn, à Paris


Despite the invention of valves for brass instruments in 1814, makers and performers continued to experiment with a wide range of technology and performance practice techniques to enable brass instruments to play chromatically during the first half of the 19th century. This was driven both by teething problems with early valves and by a timbral aesthetic that prized the expressive nuances of hand stopping on natural brass instruments. Although this was best exemplified by the hand horn, the technique was also applied to natural trumpets that were configured to allow easy access to the bell interior and is described in a number of treatises, including those by Joseph-Gebhardt Kresser, Karl Bagans, and Joseph-David Buhl. By inserting fingers into the instrument’s bell and closing it off to varying degrees, the notes of the harmonic series can be manipulated to produce a chromatic scale. This technique and its resultant veiled timbre made the circular trumpet particularly well suited to soft, lyrical playing, which placed it at odds with the natural trumpet’s characteristic bright sound and use in the orchestra as a declamatory fanfare instrument. For this reason, the circular trumpet was cultivated primarily as a solo instrument. Although widely classified as circular trumpets today, the term ‘cornet simple’ was also used to refer to these instruments. The chromatic capacity of this instrument and its predisposition towards lyricism indeed links it more closely to the cornet idiom. Unlike the hand horn, which was acoustically better suited to hand stopping and continued to be cultivated in France and Britain throughout much of the nineteenth century, this technique was short lived on natural trumpets and cornets.

Technical description:

Circular trumpet/natural cornet (cornet simple) in the form of a miniature hand horn, made of yellow brass, with typical French bell rim rolled over wire. Matching tubular braces are found on the instrument and its crooks. The bell section was joined with a tabbed seam. The instrument is supplied with six internal crooks (inserted into the tuning slide legs in the manner of an inventionstrumpet or cor solo) that lengthen the instrument, two internal crooks that shorten the instrument (ascending), three terminal crooks, and one coupler. The legs of the internal crooks have one exposed tenon and one socket. The tenons are furnished with a protective sleeve that is removed to insert the crook into the instrument.




Crooks are as follows, identified by diamond-shaped white metal tags:



Two internal crooks, with one leg consisting of dummy tubing. The crook has a mouthpiece receiver; this bypasses the terminal crook receiver on the corpus of instrument and reduces the sounding length of the instrument’s body:

LA B; SOL





Six internal crooks that must be played with a terminal crook in place:

FA [also can be used as the tuning slide with terminal crooks]; MI; MI B [stamp indistinct]; RE; UT; SI B [stamp indistinct]




Three terminal crooks:

S B; LA; FA



One coupler (inserted between corpus and terminal crook):

M B

Crooks with mouthpiece receivers have matching, diamond-embossed trim. Additionally, all crooks have similar hollow, tubular stays (diameter varies slightly) with rectangular flanges and individually formed key tags (diamond-shaped with slightly rounded points). All fit and function well with the instrument and provide a wide range of keys and tuning possibilities and each crook matches with a compartment in the instrument’s original wooden case.

The body of the instrument is engraved on the bell, in copperplate script, as follows:

Jahn, à Paris

The instrument is supplied with two appropriate contemporary mouthpieces, both of turned brass with one being silver-plated. The bore profile of these mouthpieces is generally conical with a restricted throat and a gently flared backbore and is consistent with those supplied with cornopeans and cornets from the first half of the nineteenth century. No maker’s stamps are present.
  大都会艺术博物馆,英文 Metropolitan Museum of Art,是美国最大的艺术博物馆,世界著名博物馆,位于美国纽约第五大道的82号大街。
  大都会博物馆回顾了人类自身的文明史的发展,与中国北京的故宫、英国伦敦的大英博物馆、法国巴黎的卢浮宫、俄罗斯圣彼得堡的艾尔米塔什博物馆并称为世界五大博物馆。