, Himachal Pradesh, India Monastery, Ladakh The most common type is the B trumpet, but A, C, D, E, E, low F, and G trumpets are also available. The C trumpet is most common in American orchestral playing, where it is used alongside the B trumpet.
Orchestral trumpet players are adept at transposing music at sight, frequently playing music written for the A, B, D, E, E or F trumpet as well as for the B, C, F or G trumpet (which is used more rarely) on the C trumpet or B trumpet. s to tune the instrument to B (shorter) or A (longer) The smallest trumpets are referred to as
piccolo trumpets. The most common models are built to play in both B and A, with separate leadpipes for each key. The tubing in the B piccolo trumpet is one-half the length of that in a standard B trumpet, making it sound an octave higher. Piccolo trumpets in G, F, and C are also manufactured, but are less common. Almost all piccolo trumpets have four valves instead of three—the fourth valve usually lowers the pitch by a fourth, making some lower notes accessible and creating alternate fingerings for certain
trills.
Maurice André,
Håkan Hardenberger,
David Mason, and
Wynton Marsalis are some well-known trumpet players known for their virtuosity on the piccolo trumpet. Trumpets pitched in the key of low G are also called sopranos, or soprano bugles, after their adaptation from military
bugles. Traditionally used in
drum and bugle corps, sopranos employ either
rotary valves or
piston valves. Trumpets in low F were common in the nineteenth century, composed for by
Richard Wagner,
Franz Liszt, and
Anton Bruckner, among others. These parts are in the upper register (unlike parts for alto trumpet, which are intended for the lower register) and are typically played on the B or C trumpets today. The bass trumpet is at the same pitch as a trombone and is usually played by a trombone player, The
pocket trumpet is a compact B trumpet. The bell is usually smaller than a standard trumpet bell, and the tubing is more tightly wound to reduce the instrument's size without reducing the total tube length. Its design is not standardized, and the quality of various models varies greatly. It can have a unique warm sound and voice-like articulation. Since many pocket trumpet models suffer from poor design as well as poor manufacturing, the intonation, tone color, and dynamic range of such instruments are severely hindered. Professional-standard instruments are, however, available. While they are not a substitute for the full-sized instrument, they can be useful in certain contexts. The jazz musician
Don Cherry was renowned for his playing of the pocket instrument. The tubing of the bell section of a
herald trumpet is straight, making it long enough to accommodate a hanging banner. This instrument is mostly used for ceremonial events such as parades and
fanfares.
David Monette designed the
flumpet in 1989 for jazz musician
Art Farmer. It is a hybrid of a trumpet and a flugelhorn, pitched in B and using three piston valves.
Rotary valve, or German, trumpets are commonly used in professional German and Austrian orchestras. Other variations include alto and
Baroque trumpets, and the
Vienna valve trumpet (primarily used in Viennese brass ensembles and orchestras such as the
Vienna Philharmonic and
Mnozil Brass). The trumpet is often confused with its close relative, the
cornet, which has a more
conical tubing shape compared to the trumpet's more
cylindrical tube. This, along with additional bends in the cornet's tubing, gives the cornet a slightly mellower tone, but the instruments are otherwise nearly identical. They have the same length of tubing and, therefore, the same pitch, so music written for one of them is playable on the other. Another relative, the
flugelhorn, has tubing that is even more conical than that of the cornet, and an even mellower tone. It is sometimes supplied with a fourth valve to improve the intonation of some lower notes. ==Playing==