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Friends and Relations: The Sackbut
| Friends and Relations: The Sackbut |
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| Written by Keith McGowan | |
| Sunday, 25 May 2008 | |
Keith McGowan looks at the history of the sackbut family and the contemporary market
This instrument with a double slide developed out of its 15th century equivalent that had only a single slide, the slide trumpet. Such proto-sackbuts were to be heard all over Europe in the ceremonial bands of the great families, usually in partnership with a shawm and a bombard (alto shawm), an ubiquitous trio, often referred to as the alta capella. While with the sackbut one holds the instrument still and moves the slide, the slide trumpet conversely requires the movement of virtually the whole instrument to change the pitch of a note. However, the best practitioners of this instrument today perform astonishing feats of agility on it, making it the equivalent of the bombard in an alta capella.
A feature of the tenor sackbut, compared with its modern counterpart, is that it was pitched in A, whereas the modern trombone is in B flat. It is likely that the transition had something to do with the introduction of round stays during the second quarter of the 17th century, at which point the trombone took on virtually the same form it has today. The sackbut was in demand during the 16th century, particularly because of its vocal qualities, and was commonly used in grand churches and cathedrals all over Europe to accompany the choir. This sonority was especially popular in Britain in the years before the Commonwealth, in spite of official suspicion of its "Popish" overtones. A number of prominent musicians of the 16th century started their careers on the sackbut, including the Italian composer Bartolemeo Tromboncino and the Dutch publisher Tilman Susato. The sackbut participated fully in the soloistic repertoire of the 17th century, appearing regularly in sonatas and concertante works as an equal partner with cornetts or viols. There are even two virtuoso works that specify solo sackbut that could be a useful addition to a modern trombonist's repertoire: La Hieronima by G.M.Cesare (Musikverlag Max Hieber, MH6012) is rather like a solo canzona with semiquaver passage work that uses the full tessitura of the instrument. More challenging still are Rognoni's divisions (Renaissance variations) on the popular song Suzanne ung jour for "Trombone alla bastarda" (London Pro Musica, LPM REP15). The term "bastarda" does not refer to the piece's relentless cascades of semiquavers all over the instrument, but describes a technique that made variations on all the different voices of a part song, rather than just the melody or the bass. Rognoni's divisions are in a style more familiar to cornettists or violinists, and are a testimony to the high standards that some brass players achieved in the early seventeenth century. As the century progressed, however, the sackbut's use declined. By the end of the 18th century, the sackbut was on the verge of extinction. "Only the Catholics in Germany still favour this instrument, and unless help is forthcoming from Vienna, we must fear for the gradual and complete loss of this instrument." Help did come from Vienna and the sackbut did recover to reaffirm itself in a metamorphosed state as the trombone in the finale of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, arguably the first appearance of the trombone section in the symphony orchestra. Buying an InstrumentAlthough sackbuts are rarely specified for any pieces before Giovanni Gabrieli, a chameleon-like ability to adapt to different musical styles and circumstances gives the sackbut player a vast choice of potential repertoire. The Spanish seem to have been particularly fond of the sound of shawms and sackbuts, and motets and hymns of the Spanish cathedrals make particularly fine instrumental pieces: Mapa Mundi has made available a great deal of music in the series called Spanish Church Music. The Venetian canzona is the best-known and probably best-loved repertoire of most Renaissance instrumentalists. Sackbuts are indispensable in this music, a great deal of which is available from Musica Rara (particularly the canzonas of Giovanni Gabrieli) and London Pro Musica (Venetian Instrumental Music and A Due Cori series). Although the slide trumpet appears to have been a prominent instrument of the Renaissance, even into the 17th century, a false reputation for radically rearranging dentition has prevented it from establishing itself in the ensembles of the early music revival. Nevertheless, a few makers have reconstructed good, useable 15th century slide trumpets based on contemporary iconography. Models of this sort are available from Instrumentenbau Egger, Gert Jan van der Heide, and John Webb Brass Instruments. Max and Heinrich Thein of Bremen, Germany, produce bespoke sackbuts and mouthpieces. They attempt to recreate every feature of the original they copy, down to the composition of the metal and the entirely collapsible construction: the reproduction they made of the exquisite Schnitzer (1579) in Verona is breathtaking, as is the price tag on such an instrument. If nothing else, it serves to remind us how valuable and esteemed a fine instrument must have been in the 16th century, affordable only to the highest in the land. Somewhat more affordable are the sackbuts of Gerd Jan van der Heide, manufactured using authentic production techniques. All the tubes are made from folded and seamed sheets of metal (most makers settling for the modern compromise of extruded tubing), producing sackbuts of great verisimilitude. Van der Heide's instruments are correspondingly expensive, but have a soft quality of their own. He produces Renaissance sackbuts with flat or round stays and prides himself on the degree to which he can thin the bell by hand-hammering and chasing the metal. Van der Heide also makes very good mouthpieces.
John Webb Brass Instruments is the most recent workshop to turn to making sackbuts and has produced a range of instruments in co-operation with Susan Addison of His Majesties Sagbutts and Cornetts. The two tenor instruments are based on trombones in the Reid Collection, Edinburgh, one being a round-stayed sackbut by Schnitzer, dated 1594, the other a Baroque trombone by Huschauer, Vienna 1794. These are made with historical bells, in the correct historical proportions, with the mod cons of a water key and tuning slide. The latter instrument is proving particularly popular, for it is ideal in time and place for the Tuba mirum solo of Mozart's Requiem, and for other Viennese classics. It needs to be pointed out that although the Renaissance tenor sackbut was in A and had flat stays, makers' catalogues only ever offer tenors in B flat, and usually with round stays. This compromise arises partly out of financial considerations, as reproducing a flat-stayed slide usually puts the price of a sackbut sky high. Frank Tomes is currently the only maker to offer an affordable 16th century flat-stayed sackbut, based on the aforementioned Neuschel/Stengel instrument. The instrument is quite historical, with a seamed, hammered and hand-finished bell, removable flat slide braces, and in its proportions, it is a close, scaled copy of the original. As such, it is the only sackbut available that is intended to be played in A and comes with a set of tuning crooks, as would an original sackbut. Do not be put off: playing in A is nothing like as difficult as one would imagine. He also offers an adaptation of this instrument to play in B flat, incorporating a tuning device in the bell section, as well as alto and bass models in E flat and F respectively.
The bargain end of the sackbut market is represented chiefly by instruments under the name of Böhm und Meinl. These are in no way to be confused with the Ewald Meinl instruments discussed above. While the bore of these instruments is of the right sort of dimensions, they are in no way reproductions of original instruments. Aspects of historical construction are sidelined to produce a compromise instrument that looks convincing and plays well enough. The bass in F is particularly popular, producing a big, mellow sound with a modern mouthpiece. There was once a fashion for adapting early 20th century English and French orchestral trombones to make sackbuts by trimming back the bell by a few inches. While these trombones have the required small bore diameter and may help schools form an early brass section (they are as historical as some budget sackbuts, and are often good instruments in their own right), the mutilation of the bell cannot bring the sound nearer to that of a sackbut. If these trombones are to be used as sackbuts, then let us call a moratorium on the trade in "peashooter sackbuts", except for those already culled. Although there is no society in the UK that specifically represents the interests of historical brass players, the Historic Brass Society (USA) welcomes British members, and issues regular newsletters and well as the annual Journal, giving the best digest of events, publications and recent discoveries. |
| Wed, Jan 7th, @7:30pm - 09:30PM Coventry quartet concert |
| Sat, Jan 24th Newark Brass Festival |
| Sat, Jan 31st, @6:00am - 12:00AM Symphonic Brass, Cambridge |
| Fri, Feb 6th Dudley Bright master class, London |
| Fri, Feb 13th Bones Apart, Cardiff |