5 Brass Instruments You've Never Heard Of...

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Published 2018-11-24

All Comments (21)
  • @snoproblem
    These instruments look like something from a Dr. Seuss story, and were named accordingly.
  • @bikkies
    I love these names. It's like someone threw a bag of Scrabble letters in the air and wrote down what resulted. Flompletraphone. Borreltarbophone. Furgingratrophone.
  • @SbubbyS
    The sudrophone sounds like a non-brass player being forced to play a trombone at gunpoint
  • We had a set of Antoniophones at Illinois in the instrument museum. As a grad student, my summer job was keeping all these instruments in working order and, of course, I got to play them. The Bb baritone Antoniophone played astonishingly well in tune. It was very free blowing and responsive, much like a euphonium. The tone quality was brighter than a euphonium but darker than a baritone horn. We also had an entire set of rear facing, over-the-shoulder brass band instruments from the US Civil War era. The brass band played an entire concert on them in the Great Hall facing the wall with the conductor at the wall facing the audience and players. These instruments, as I remember, were stuffy and difficult to play in tune. The rotary valve strings often broke.
  • Someone please start an extinct brass instrument noisecore band. I would love to play all of these with a piezobarrel installed in the mouthpiece!
  • @nickcelestino
    0/10 not enough jokes about the name of the schediphone
  • Oh my goodness, I'm a music nerd who spends way too much time looking up weird instruments, but I can honestly say that some of these are ones I've never seen before in my life. An instrument with a valving for every note? Unheard of. How 'bout one with piano-like valves? Never heard of it. You clearly have such a great passion, as well as interest, in brass instruments (and music as a whole), and it clearly shows through into your videos
  • @carlenger9707
    I actually had heard of the Antoniophone- and I can sort of see where they got the inspiration. I see it bears a little resemblance to the serpent, just with piston valves and obviously a different timbre. However, as this would've been invented in the 1830's when instruments such as the Mellophone, Tenor Cor and modern Single Horn would've been invented, it makes sense that they would've gotten rid of it. I mean, it really does look weird and cumbersome. Also- 2:21 Just when you thought the Horn couldn't be more complicated.
  • @mrparlanejxtra
    The song 'while my shedophone gently weeps' never caught on.
  • @royfearn4345
    The instrument with one movable mouthpiece with eight sets of tubes puts me in mind of the Octoventral Heebiephone of Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy fame. I always wondered what an octoventral instrument would look like. Now I know!!!
  • @5610winston
    I saw an illustration of a seven-bell "valve trombone". Then there is the Sarrusophone family, sort of double-reed analogs of the saxophones.
  • @GamerTime_2002
    Oh my God, when I first saw that French horn, I thought it was a joke
  • @joejoseph3078
    How fun, thanks for this. As a former euphonium player in high school and college I love this. I keep saying I am going to buy an old euphonium and take up playing again. Especially this time of year I get nostalgic for when I would play in a brass quintet and we would play Christmas music at various places. We always went to the midnight mass at the catholic church. My mom was always so proud of that.
  • @imperiumof997
    It's weird to think some people think a Euphonium are like these instruments. But Euphoniums are cool I play one.
  • My father owned an instrument he called a Ballad Horn. It was French Horn shape but played right handed and pitched in C. It had a very solid wood case. Never did find out who made it!
  • @kyleethekelt
    Very well described, particularly for a blind viewer like myself. Would have liked to have heard the sound of all of them, however.