Summary: An introduction to and short history of the orchestral brass instrument called the "French horn" or "horn",
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The middle-range brass instrument in the Western orchestra or band is sometimes called the horn, sometimes the French horn. It is a conical brass wind instrument with a fairly small mouthpiece, a widely flaring bell, and about 17 feet of metal tubing wrapped into a circular shape to make it easier to hold. It is a transposing instrument; most horn music is written in F.
Listen to a horn play a short melody by Beethoven or Dvorak.
| The French horn |
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As in other brass instruments, the sound of a horn is produced by "buzzing" the lips against the mouthpiece. Buzzing the lips faster or slower produces higher or lower notes, but the three valves that open extra sections of tubing are also needed to get all the notes possible on the horn (see below). The left hand works the valves; the right hand is normally placed inside the bell of the instrument, where it can be used to help tune the instrument and make changes in its timbre.
The most common modern instrument is a "double horn", which has two parallel sets of tubing. One set makes it an F horn; the other a smaller, higher B flat horn. (See History, below for an explanation of how and why instruments come in differenet keys.) A fourth valve called the trigger is used to switch between the two sides of the instrument. But as a transposing instrument, the double horn is considered to be "in F"; music for the instrument is usually written in F, allowing individual players to choose whether to use the F or the B flat "side" of the instrument for any given note.
| The Range of the Horn |
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The very earliest horns were made out of real animal horns, but the modern instrument is descended from earlier brass instruments that were used for centuries in Europe for military and hunting purposes. These horns came in various different sizes and shapes. The orchestral horn is particularly descended from the French trompe de chasse; hence the name "French horn". This hunting horn, in use in France in the seventeenth century, was a slender tube that was coiled into a large hoop that could easily be slung over a huntsman's shoulder. The tube was only about 7 feet long and was much more cylindrical than a modern horn. The eighteenth-century cor de chasse, the typical instrument in the orchestra of Bach's and Handel's time, was twice as long and coiled into a double hoop. This instrument had no valves and was originally played with the bell pointing up and out. It could therefore play only the notes of a single harmonic series. This severely limited the parts a single instrument could play; a horn that could play a harmonic series on an E flat fundamental, for example, could play some, but not all, of the notes in the key of E flat, could play even fewer notes in keys closely related to E flat, and could play no notes at all in keys not related to E flat. Horn players had to own many horns, and needed time to switch instruments whenever the music changed keys. And even then, they could not play all of the notes that, say, a viola or bassoon could play in that key. For centuries, the history of the horn was a history of the search for solutions to these limitations.
One solution to this problem was to add a second set of players. One pair of horns could play in one key; the other in the other key. The setup of the modern orchestra often still reflects this early solution, with four horns playing in two pairs, and the third horn part almost acting like another first horn.
A second solution was to change the position of the horn so that the bell rested on the player's leg, and the right hand could be placed inside the bell. The player could then use the hand in two different ways, partially blocking the air flow, or almost completely stopping the air with the hand. Partially blocking the air lowered the pitch by about a half step, but the full stop basically shortened the playing length of the instrument and thus raised the pitch by about a whole step. The timbre of half-stopped and stopped notes are very different from each other and also very different from the sound of "open" notes. They can sound very jarring to modern ears. But hand-horn technique allowed the horn player to play the entire chromatic scale, greatly improving the instrument's abilities. Hand-horn became so widely accepted that it continued to be expected and used for decades after it was no longer really necessary.
Finally, there were many mechanical solutions. The first of these involved adding extra lengths of tubing to the instrument to change its key. There were different ways to add the extra tubing: crooks could be fitted into sockets in the hoop, couplers could be added in between the mouthpiece and the instrument. Now a single horn player could play in many different keys with only one horn and a bag of crooks or couplers. He still needed time to change the crooks on his instrument when the music changed keys, but not as much time as before. To simplify things for the horn player, the composer would indicate which crook was needed (a movement might be labelled "for horn in A") and transpose the part for that instrument. This made the music easy to read - the first harmonic always looked like a C, the third like a G, and so on - easy for the horn player of that time, whose instrument was transposing the notes for him, but harder for a modern horn player trying to read older music, who may have to transpose the A part to her accustomed horn in F.
Of course, the ideal horn could switch crooks nearly instantaneously, and many new horns were invented to provide this best solution. Some more successful than others. The omnitonic horn attached all crooks to the instrument, with a device to switch from one tube to another. This made it very easy and fast to change crooks, but hand horn technique was still needed to be able to play any note in the key.
The invention that really freed the horn to play the full chromatic scale easily was the valve. A valve can open and close almost instantly, redirecting the air through an extra crook in the middle of the instrument. In 1818 a valve horn with two piston valves was patented; in the 1830's a third piston was added. Although most other modern brass still use piston valves, the horn switched to rotary valves, apparently invented by Joseph Riedl of Vienna around 1832. The modern horn uses three rotary valves, which lower its natural (F) harmonic series by a half step, a whole step, and one and a half steps, giving the horn a quick and easy chromatic scale. (For more on why three valves is enough for a brass instrument, see The Harmonic Series.)
Most modern horns are also double horns, that is, two horns in one. When instrument makers and players were settling on which of the many instruments (Horn in D? In E flat?) to use for the modern valved horn, the F horn was originally chosen as having a particularly full, moderate, and pleasing sound. But it is difficult to play high notes accurately on the F horn, so a second set of crooks, for the smaller, higher B flat horn, was added. A fourth valve, or trigger opens the shorter set of crooks, switching the instrument from the F "side" to the B flat "side" to play high notes.
Horns are part of the standard orchestra. A small orchestra will have two horns, a large one four or more. The first horn (principal) part may be so tiring that a large orchestra may have an associate principal horn player to take the principal's place on some of the program, and/or an assistant principal horn player to play along with the principal on non-solo sections. A typical band or wind ensemble will also have at least four horns. Some easy-to-find recordings that feature horns in larger ensembles are Strauss' "Blue Danube" waltz, the "Waltz of the Flowers" from Tchaikovsky's ballet The Nutcracker, and the "Ride of the Valkyries" music from Wagner's opera Die Walkuere.
Horns are also well-represented in the chamber music repertoire. The standard brass quintet includes a horn, and so does the standard woodwind quintet. There is also much music written for horn quartet, some - but by no means all - of it derived from orchestral works.
In spite of the historic limitations of the instrument (see history, above), several famous composers also wrote solo music for the horn. The most well-known of these are the four Mozart horn concertos.
The French horn is a versatile brass instrument with a large range, very useful in many different kinds of arrangements. Played with a brassy tone, or grouped with other brass, it can give a military or fanfare flavor, but, played with a mellower tone it also blends very well with orchestral woodwinds. It can give a sweet, haunting color to solos and easily evokes hunting or other pastoral scenes.
The most important thing to remember when writing for horn is that it is a transposing instrument; most players are only comfortable reading parts that have been transposed into F. If you do not know how to transpose, see the modules on Transposing Instruments and Transposition.
The horn is a more agile instrument than the lower brass, but not as agile as the trumpet. Avoid writing too many fast notes or large leaps in a row. Note also that the horn plays higher in its harmonic series than other orchestral brass instruments. This makes the notes at the top of the intrument's range (the notes above the treble staff in the instrument's written range) very easy to miss. Use this range sparingly unless writing for professionals. Even in the middle register, an inexperienced player aiming for one note can very easily hit a different note with the same fingering and only very small differences in embouchure (the lip buzzing that produces the sound). This is what gives the horn its reputation as an instrument that is "difficult to play".