Trumpet vs Cornet - discussion and demonstration
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- Опубліковано 30 лис 2014
- This video is a discussion and demonstration of the differences between a cornet and a trumpet. The trumpet demonstrated is a Chinese knock-off of a Bach, and the cornet is a Besson Sovereign. I'm using extracts from the air varie 'Napoli' as the demonstration piece.
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Nice playing. It seems both cornet and trumpet require similar amount of eye-brow agility. ;-)
One of the clearest (and most succinct) explanations of the differences I've ever seen -- thanks. I would really like to see you do a similar one contrasting baritone horns and euphoniums. Here in the US, school bands call euphoniums "baritones" and don't use actual baritones at all!
It's a fairly simple difference. Euphonium has conical piping, while baritone has cylindrical. Sound-wise, baritone is closer to trombone, while euphonium can be thought of as a mini tuba.
My school calls it the euphonium
euphoniums also will usually have 4 valves while baritones mostly have 3 but there are 3 valve euphs and 4 valve baris
@@sceu25 It really just depends the model…
@@bobcat24 Yea but my point still stands.
I'm back at this video once again. Even though I play both trumpet and cornet, the cornet has a special place in my heart and it annoys me when people call it a trumpet. And I am seriously tired of explaining the difference, so much so that when people ask me what instrument I play, I usually just say that I play the trumpet. I have now made it my mission to make the cornet a known instrument to the common folk. I have started by creating a local band only consisting of cornets. And I urge you, my fellow cornet players to do the same.
Let us never have to explain the difference between a cornet and a trumpet ever again!
Ha ... Once I told a choir colleague that I play trombone (Zugposaune - I'm Austrian), she forgot during the following conversation and called it a "slide trumpet" (Zugtrompete)🤷
Same Bro
I completely agree with you. Although I play a trumpet, I think post-horns like coronets indeed deserve there own classification.
When I was in elementary school band in the 1950s U.S.A., all the parts were for Bb cornet. The band teacher explained to us that the cornet used to be the standard band instrument, but we could play it on trumpet as well. I recently made a friend who is a middle school band teacher. When I looked at his band books, they are still marked for cornet.
I have a 1955 Conn Victor trumpet, that passed through my younger brother and back to me. I took up the instrument again at age 72. After practicing on the Conn Victor for the first few months, I decided I might like the mellower sound of a cornet. I bought a cheap one online (CR400) from Thomann Music in Germany. Glad I did. I like the sound better, and it's easier to hold up, except for the hand grip, which I find a little tight.
Pretty much all of my sheet music in high school in the early 2000's was for Bb cornet too.
If u play In a brittish brassband it’s all Bb cornets and one Eb cornet
i graduated hs in 2013 and for quite a few songs during my middle and highschool years the trumpet section was given cornet marked sheet music
Anyone else rember the tune from "Spider-Man 2" video game, when you delivered pizza?
Alfred Olsson yup lmao
Alfred Olsson was looking this comment
PIZZA TIME
PIZZA TIME!
Funiculi funicali
Thank you so much - that was MOST informative! I found the cornet more mellow - a great-niece is learning the cornet, I shall now be less ignorant about it! She is actually playing rather well; aged 11, she makes a very pleasing sound; I hope she will continue with it
The cornet, which has a conical bore (tubing gradually gets larger in diameter), while the trumpet has a cylindrical shape (same diameter until it reaches the bell portion). This changes the overtone series, which is more mellow in the cornet. It also makes the cornet a little easier to play with a little less resistance and easier to slur and play legato. The famous concert bands of the Sousa era used mainly cornets, as did the soloists such as the great Herbert L. Clark.
This back-to-back demo is the most illustrative, so far, I've seen. Including the flugelhorn (and the much-to-maligned, undeservedly so, piccolo trumpet) would be an even more comprehensive exposition.
Dues the cornet sound a bit softer? Or is that just my impression?
Mariangiongiangela's Tech Tips It has a darker tone
That's how I learned the difference between cornet and trumpet when I was first starting out. Corner is less of a slap in a face, more gentle.
The cornet characteristically had and has a softer tone. The first great cornets Courtois, French Bessons 1865 - 1900 had a softer tone that was compatible with vocal arias of operettas or operas. With the rise of the trumpet, after 1900-1930, cornet sounds were made to resemble that of the trumpet and in appearance too in some cases as with the Conn Constellation cornets.
Trumpets tend to sound "brighter" while cornets sound "darker".
Nikola Tesla cornets were considered solo instruments much more than trumpets in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. the virtuosic solo peices like Napoli and carnival of Venice were all written for cornet. it was probably jazz players who made trumpets into more soloistic instruments, although many early jazz players did play cornets. even Louis Armstrong early on his career.
they sound totally different. The Cornet is just so much more sultry.
Its also a $3,000 cornet vs a $280 trumpet
Trumpet is more classy and assertive. Cornet is small and shy
@Agnostic Monk Then you should stick to playing the drums
@Werewolf O. London, Esq. Same. The difference is more or less negligible.
Like a horn
I have been watching this channel for about two weeks now and I have to say I enjoy it very much. I am only 16 years old but I play about 5 instruments and I plan to either teach music, or make playing my career. With my main instrument being a tenor sax, my knowledge of instruments only lies with the realm of saxophones and some clarinet things, as I play bass clarinet and Bb. But this channel has really helped me to discover the amazing side of brass and how everything works from a Tuba or a Bass Trombone to a piccolo trumpet. So for that, thanks, Mr. Hamilton.
The different tone is magnified when you get a section of them playing together, as in a British style brass band or a proper concert band. (Most American school concert bands nowadays have trumpets where the cornets should be, since most students and amateurs don't usually own a cornet)
Dont forget having a proper British cornet mouthpiece !
That's odd - when I was in school, they started everyone on cornet, and trumpets were pretty uncommon.
i think a lot of the us not using cornets, especially for school bands, has to do with budgets and ease of access. getting a proper even student cornet is probably out of the budget for most schools. i know my hs band, combined with the orchestra and choir, had the budget of a shoe string and a ham sandwhich. our only loaner trumpet looked like it could hold the worlds next pandemic within it. most kids coming into band were also started in trumpet anyway, at least when i was ins chool in the early 2000s. sad though, i really like the cornet's sound and would have switched tbh
I hear cornet played in some older jazz recordings. This is a good comparison. Thanks. My only suggestion would be to put the playing of the more mellow instrument before the brighter one, i.e., cornet before trumpet,. to make them easier to compare.
Pizza time
Pizza time
I've seen a lot of Trent's videos. This by far is the best showing of his "Trumpet" skills.
Cornets do not only use triggers. I sell instruments and that is actually the first cornet i've seen with triggers. Also, trumpets can come with triggers
Great video! Played cornet in H.S., wish I still had it, didn't fully realize then what a beautiful sound it had...
Well demonstrated Trent,very informative.
Do each of these instruments sound with a Kiwi eccent?
I have had a trumpet with a first valve trigger instead of a saddle hook and I preferred it. I also currently own a cornet that does not have the shepherd's crook and has a third valve ring instead of a trigger. With the aesthetics of the trumpet and cornet there are no absolutes.
Very nice demonstration of tonal differences and mechanical differences. Thanks so much.
Very good video, especially the playing comparisons. This is a great primer for the basic differences, and is by and large accurate.
However, there have been so many variations on the common designs, that the lines do blur. For example, perhaps the most glaring variation is the American standard trumpet, the Bach Strad. It is in fact, a long cornet with a trumpet mouthpiece receiver, as the tubing graduates throughout the instrument. Many people, myself included, have verified this with the use of calipers.
Also to be noted is the Besson 10-10 trumpet, which has triggers on both the 1st and 3rd slides, perhaps as an effort to duplicate the playing mechanics of the Besson Sov, truly a hallmark cornet.
At the other end of the spectrum are the American cornets, void of any shepherd crook, but still very much cornets. While perhaps a bit brighter than their British cousins, they still are conical instruments with a very specific cornet tonal quality.
Once again, this video should be the point from which all others take off as far as variations between trumpet and cornet.
The manual/trigger tuning slide is NOT a key difference between the two. There are cornets with manual tuning slides and Trumpets with triggered tuning slides. I apologize if i come off as an ass, but I couldn't let this go. Very informational outside of that though.
He didn't say trumpets don't have trigger slides, he said he never saw one with a trigger slide.
I've posted an image of three, so now he has.
why don't trunpets typically have triggers? It seems a much more convenient means to an end in my opinion than manual slides
i'm guessing because it was how the trumpet was originally made and they didn't really bother to change it much, however some people/companies decided to take matters into their own hands.
The trumpet i just ordered has a trigger on the first valve slide, but a ring on the 3rd.
Fantastic breakdown of each horn! Your videos are very interesting and informative.
Thanks for taking the time to make this. BRILLIANT
I’ve seen many trumpets with triggers for the tuning slides!!! I used to completely refuse to play anything other than a corner but I’m now completely in love with my trumpet. Both have such beautiful sounds.
I would have to play the cornet. My hands are small. This is a great comparison. The trumpet has a stronger sound. But, the cornet sounds good too. You are a very talented musician. Thanks for the video. You've helped me make an informed decision.
+Denise Borum the cornet is very lovely!
Cornet is also easier for kids to hold properly, as it's shorter overall and the valves are closer to the player.
Are you a cornet player? I ran into some of your posts from a couple of older random videos about cornets. Strange indeed or maybe it really is a small world.
Very good comparisons, however something should be noted: the cornet demonstrated (an excellent one btw) is a shepherds crook type. There is a natural mellowness in its sound compared to a cornet without the crook. Shepherd crooks are very popular with the Brits, while straight cornets are more popular in America I believe. The shepherds crook stands between the trumpet and the flugelhorn for that mellow sound, but the flugelhorn is larger, and bulkier say to use in the marching band.
Those who want to play trumpet and flugelhorn, but cannot afford both will settle on the shepherd crook to satisfy both sounds more economically.
A really fair comparison should be made with a straight cornet vs trumpet and the difference would be heard. The straight cornet is very handy because of its shorter size in marching, yet maintains that brilliant sound. The Salvation Army bands of Britain use them effectively, for example.
Bravo. Extremely informative demo. Onya Trent!
Technically, the cornet and trumpet are almost identical. Both are partially conical and cylindrical. There is a common misconception that the trumpet is cylindrical and the cornet is conical, but this is not true on modern 20th and 21st century instruments. The comparison of the bell flares is also inaccurate as the cornet bell is shorter, which explains why it appears to start tapering quickly at the base of the bell. The tapers on most cornets begin smaller than trumpet and end smaller than the trumpet, but flare faster. This fact combined with a deeper mouthpiece cup and wider backbore give the cornet a softer attack and tone than the trumpet.
Nice video and discussion :)
Are trumpet mouthpiece and a cornet mouthpiece interchangeable?
@@ironmandave3000 They are not compatible. The mouthpiece for the cornet is shorter and narrower than the trumpet mouthpiece. The difference in size is comparable to the difference in size going from trumpet to trombone
@@ianlee9647 thank you I'm aware of that. I have played both. I was looking for someone else to help illustrate my point that trumpets and cornets are not the same. Doc Severinsen tells a great story how about trying to play cornet in a lead trumpet position. It doesn't work!
I think the biggest contributor to the difference in sound (among other things) is the mouthpiece. I play a cornet. I can't say for certain what the "average" trumpet vs. cornet mouthpiece cup is for either instrument. But I know the typical "stock" cornet mouthpiece that comes with the cornet is deeper than the stock mouthpiece you get with your trumpet. I find cornet mouthpieces can range from very deep/funnel (almost french horn-like) to basically a trumpet-type cup on a cornet shank (Bach). Not so sure if the same in reverse is the case for trumpet mouthpieces. I alternate between a Denis Wick 4B and a Bach 3D, depending on the music. When I use the Bach 3D, I'm basically indistinguishable from the trumpets in my section.
Thank you for posting. You are a fine musician. Nice double and triple tonguing.
Great stuff Trent. My son (plays trumpet) has been asked to join a Police Band, playing cornet. I found this very helpful. Kiwi's are the Southern Hemisphere musical race!
Hi...someone can tell me where i can download the air varie 'Napoli' pdf? Thanks
Man!! That was great.
I had no idea a cornet was so much more mellow than a trumpet.. Makes sense when you look at how they are made.
Probably said a billion times, but many trumpets do have triggers.
Exactly. My Getzen Eterna had a third valve trigger.
Also many corners have a thumb and ring for the slides
Cornets**
Thank you so much. I think of the coronet sound as mellower. Both sounds are beautiful, and I love knowing about their origins.
Thank you, so enlightening! Despite the close similarity, I can really hear the hint of the old-timey jazz tone in the cornet. I think it's really a shame that the cornet gets so overlooked by jazz players and rock/pop horn section guys now.
its definitely a softer, mellower sound
I suddenly felt like I needed to deliver pizzas when the demo started
I have a Bach Strad made in the early 70's that has a first valve trigger. All my my friends Strads back them had saddles, but mine has a trigger. Another friend of mine from the 70's had a king silver flair with a first valve trigger also. FYI. Good video!
Thank you for an extremely informative video. I never realised the tonal differences in the cornet before and can understand why it's favoured for certain music pieces over the trumpet and vice versa.
I'd be tempted to get myself a cornet just so I can be an all rounder as I also play trombone although the trumpet is my instrument of choice.
Thank you, that was very informative. Would you say the coronet is more elegant and subtle than a trumpet?
Just one question. Which is easier to play - or, in other words, which wears out the embouchure the least?
Many thanks.... I'm just sorting out my music departments brass and not being a brass player this really helped.
Good video and good demonstration.
Thanks for putting it together!
The cornet have a rounder sound while the trumpet have a sharper sound .
The trumpet also needs more air and the mouthpiece is slightly bigger while the cornet do not need as much air and has a smaller mouthpiec
The trumpet definitely has a brighter sound. But the cornet sounds better for soft playing music in my opinion
Many thanks Trent: as a composer I found this very useful :-)
Excellent demo, great playing!
I have a verry weird horn that has charactorectistics of both trumpets and coronets can i get your professional opinion on identifying it?
Sure - contact me on Facebook or email.
What would be the best mouthpiece to make the cornet sound a bit sharper, like a trumpet?
is that possible to play Haendel's "the trumpet shall sound" with a cornet?
Great video. I suspect the sound difference is more pronounced than the video indicates. The sampling rate on UA-cam video is a limiting factor.
Thanks for posting!
Thanks :) The sound quality is limited also by the microphone inside my phone...
I Just want to say awesome, very nice. I have recently started playing again (cornet) and I have a long way to go to get back in playing shape and style!
Could you contrast in the same way the piston valve and rotary valve trumpet?
Very cool demo. I like the cornet.
• Cheers from The Detroit & Mackinac Railway 🚂
Would it give a greater difference in tone if you used a corner mouthpiece as well?
Is there a specific name for the black rubber rings you have on your first and third valve slides?
+Sean Smith These are nitrile o-rings
from this very well presented video I can tell that the cornet is warmer, the trumpet more harsh,brighter. It also seems that cornet is harder to play.
thanks for the demonstration, it was very helpful !
SO is the Coronet harder to play than Trumpet? Would the same lessons jive for both instruments?? I am trying to start out new and self teach. find more on Trumpet but really like the mellow Jazz sound of the Coronet.
Awesome video! Thanks for the demonstration
My cornet has one manual tuning slide and it is a ring?
Excellent vid Trent, really useful thank you
Wonderful explanation and demonstration.Thank you.
Great video. Like the comparison at
the end. Thanks.
Is it easier to play fast on the trumpet compared with the cornet?
what type of cornet mouthpiece are you using please
solid explanation and demonstration. Good work
Interesting to note the comments re the comparisons. I usually add a Cornet to a composition for brass and percussion, particularly when I include Trumpets in C (as opposed to B-flat) in the orchestration. J Steven Lasher.
Thank you. Love your explanations. Appreciate it. Any chance you can discuss the mouthpiece differences? Thanks
how is the response and resistance VS trumpet and tuning issues for me the cornet looks like a mini flugelhorn i play the Bb trumpet
In high school I played a Conn Connstellation which had a trigger on the first valve tuning slide, and the common ring, which was adjustable, on the third valve tuning slide.
Great demonstration! Thank you very much,
Good video, thanks for uploading. What I want to know is, can I play these instruments left handed?
Thanks, Trent!
What was the song he was playing
when I was in a band I played trumpet and I think my friend was the only guy with a cornet, he had this t-shirt about how cornets were better than trumpets. Definitely a softer sound, in a proper brass band are they treated as interchangeable or are they used case by case?
No. Sometimes a piece will call for cornets and trumpets have their own parts. Currently, my band is playing/rehearsing a Leonard Bernstein piece that has three cornet parts and two trumpet parts. But for those of us that dont have cornets, we just use our trumpets
Loved the demo! Thanks--after watching, then, it seems to me that the cornet is mellower 'creamier' and the trumpet brassier, more brilliant. Am I right here? I like Berlioz and that French composer consistently employees 2 trumpets and 2 cornets in many of his compositions--is this to get the qualities mentioned above combined??
high brass player here, you are spot on! a conical tubing generally makes an instrument more mellow in sound. flugels have the most conical tubing out of cornets (1/3), trumpets (0/0, and flugels (2/3)
Thank you very much for satisfying my curiosity. Bless heart, Master.
i have a cornet and im in band so into finding out how to play high low and middle sounds??? plus I have a cornet from Germany made by huttl in regd western Germany line 800 my dad is 76 and he had it second hand from a old man so I question how old it is ....
It seems that you should collect it instead of playing it ...
The trumpets lead pipe is also conical. And my freind plays a trumpet with triggers. I think alot of the difference is less to do with the ammount of conical tubing, and more so the rate of expansion. Nowadays, modern trumpets aren't actually very different from cornets except for mouthpiece type and shape.
Thanks so much for nice comparison vid! My cornet has the fingering reversed to that of a trumpet in a mirror image.
What? Really? Can you please send me some photos? trenthamiltonnz@gmail.com
I think you have a flugel
@@keithwhite4458 That should be the same fingering as a regular trumpet as well.
@@TrentHamilton I'm curious to know if this ever got a follow up? There are some rare early instruments that have so called "Catholic fingering", i.e. first and second valve reversed, but all three reversed is unheard of. Either way, the mentioned instrument, if true, is a rarity and deserves to be shared with the public.
@@RetiredBrass No, never had a reply that I can recall.
Awesome thank you.
If I'm singing songs like Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra, which should I have as an accompaniment?
Cornet or Trumpet?
Thanks, I've always wondered what the differences were. I am a real cornet fancier.
Downunda - Melbourne Australia
Many thanks, no big difference in sound. Your lips technique is so good!
Any tips on the cornet? I have both, and I seem to have a MUCH better sound on the trumpet. Is there a difference in tone production between the two that I am missing?
A trumpet's long lead pipe allows high volume high notes fly out of the instruments with ease vs. the cornet's curved lead pipe giving it a subdued tone. You could also have your embouchure messed up, the mouthpieces are different sizes.
The West Will Rise Again! Never thought of the mouth pieces or anything like what you said, thanks!
+The West Will Rise Again! Sorry, cannot agree with this. I play both trumpet and cornet as well as flugel, the trick is finding the correct mouthpiece that allows the airflow and resistance to be consistent between the three.
Perry Parsons I only play trumpet out of those three, but I was speculating on what the problem might be. Admittedly, I am an amateur.
Love the comparisson, actually I skipped to the playing differences quite fast, sorry for dropping the technicals :) Thanks for sharing!
the cornet seems to sound less bright
spiralacrobat I agree. The trumpet sounds much much more crisp.
thx
The cornet does have a darker sound. The conical lead pipe provides a darker tone that that of the cylindrical. (Same difference between baritone and euphonium)
good video,
good explained!
thanks
After listening to you the cornet doesn't sound as clean as the trumpet, but for some reason I like the cornet better. Thanks I am going to get a cornet.
Can you give me any tips on beginning on the cornet, I'm a trombone player trying to learn.
Switch to baritone or euphonium first so that you can get the fingerings down with the same pitches, then switch up from there.
PLEASE DO A MARCHING FRENCH HORN VS. MELLOPHONE!!!
Marching French horn barely exists
+The West Will Rise Again! you are correct about that, but at my school, there are still many of them and none of us know the differences between them. There are still quite a few out there since the mello is a newer instrument. I for one would like to see him do a video on the differences between the two.
Nova Extreme Are you talking about a dedicated French Horn for marching? Does it have a forward or backwards facing bell?
+The West Will Rise Again! front facing
Nova Extreme They're probably functionally the same thing
Which of the two are more in demand if you're wanting to preform?
Great playing and very informative
Thank you! I never knew there was so much difference!
Thank you for this interesting video!
Are the fingerings the same
What's the name of the dip in the cornets bell pipe again
Usually called a shepherd's crook.
There are two kinds of Cornet The shapards crook type which is sometimes referred to as a British cornet (as it is the style used by all British Brass bands) and the American Long Cornet as seen here :
www.philparker.biz/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/1/8/181ml.jpg
Which is subtely different in having a longer bell section and a closer resemblance to a Trumpet.
There is a third instrument which has not been mentioned called the "Flumpet", which is a trumpet with a conical bore which has a much more cornet sound and is a hybrid between a Flugalhorn and trumpet.
The tune is called “Funiculi Funicula”, A.K.A. The Spider-Man 2 Pizza theme.
Great video!