Brass band British brass bands consist only of brass instruments and a
percussion section. The cornet is the leading melodic instrument in this ensemble; trumpets are never used. The ensemble consists of about thirty musicians, including nine B cornets and one E cornet (
soprano cornet). In the UK, companies such as
Besson and
Boosey & Hawkes specialized in instruments for brass bands. In America, 19th-century manufacturers such as Graves and Company, Hall and Quinby, E. G. Wright, and the
Boston Musical Instrument Manufactury made instruments for this ensemble.
Concert band The cornet features in the British-style
concert band, and early American
concert band pieces, particularly those written or transcribed before 1960, often feature distinct, separate parts for trumpets and cornets. Cornet parts are rarely included in later American pieces, however, and they are replaced in modern American bands by the trumpet. This slight difference in instrumentation derives from the British concert band's heritage in
military bands, where the highest brass instrument is always the cornet. There are usually four to six B cornets present in a British concert band, but no E instrument, as this role is taken by the
E clarinet.
Fanfareorkest Fanfareorkesten ("
fanfare orchestras"), found in only the Netherlands, Belgium, northern France, and Lithuania, use the complete
saxhorn family of instruments. The standard instrumentation includes both the cornet and the trumpet; however, in recent decades, the cornet has largely been replaced by the trumpet.
Jazz ensemble In old-style
jazz bands, the cornet was preferred to the trumpet, but from the swing era onwards, it has been largely replaced by the louder, more piercing trumpet. Likewise, the cornet has been largely phased out of
big bands by a growing taste for louder and more aggressive instruments, especially since the advent of
bebop in the post-
World War II era. Jazz pioneer
Buddy Bolden played the cornet, and
Louis Armstrong started off on the instrument, but his switch to the trumpet is often credited with the beginning of the trumpet's dominance in jazz. Cornetists such as
Bubber Miley and
Rex Stewart contributed substantially to the
Duke Ellington Orchestra's early sound. Other influential jazz cornetists include
Freddie Keppard,
King Oliver,
Bix Beiderbecke,
Ruby Braff,
Bobby Hackett, and
Nat Adderley. Notable performances on cornet by players generally associated with the trumpet include
Freddie Hubbard's on
Empyrean Isles, by
Herbie Hancock, and
Don Cherry's on
The Shape of Jazz to Come, by
Ornette Coleman. The band
Tuba Skinny is led by cornetist Shaye Cohn.
Symphony orchestra Soon after its invention, the cornet was introduced into the
symphony orchestra, supplementing the trumpets. The use of valves meant they could play a full
chromatic scale in contrast with trumpets, which were still restricted to the
harmonic series. In addition, their tone was found to unify the horn and trumpet sections.
Hector Berlioz was the first significant composer to use them in these ways, and his orchestral works often use pairs of both trumpets and cornets, the latter playing more of the melodic lines. In his
Symphonie fantastique (1830), he added a
counter-melody for a solo cornet in the second movement (). Cornets continued to be used, particularly in French compositions, well after the valve trumpet was common. They blended well with other instruments and were held to be better suited to certain types of melody.
Tchaikovsky used them effectively this way in his
Capriccio Italien (1880). From the early 20th century, the cornet and trumpet combination was still favored by some composers, including
Edward Elgar and
Igor Stravinsky, but tended to be used for occasions when the composer wanted the specific mellower and more agile sound. The sounds of the cornet and trumpet have grown closer together over time, and the former is now rarely used as an ensemble instrument: in the first version of his ballet
Petrushka (1911), Stravinsky gives a celebrated solo to the cornet; in the 1946 revision, he removed cornets from the orchestration and instead assigned the solo to the trumpet. ==See also==