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Standard Brass Band Instrumentation
One E flat Soprano Cornet serves
as the piccolo voice. It requires a delicate touch and is used
frequently as a soloist or to add brightness to the cornet tutti
sound.
Four B flat Solo Cornets are
the lead voices in the ensemble. The use of four cornets permits
players to switch off on parts that are frequently continuous
throughout the entire piece. Divisi parts are also frequent. The
four solo players should ideally match each other in sound.
Two B flat Second Cornets and two
B flat Third Cornets fill
out the cornet choir.
One B flat Repiano Cornet is the "roving middle
linebacker" of the section. Often used as a solo voice or
doubling the Soprano Cornet in unison or at the octave. The
Repiano is also used to add weight to the other Cornet parts.
One B flat Flugelhorn serves
as a bridge to the Tenor Horns. It is a frequent solo voice and
is often used as the top voice in the horn family.
Three E flat Tenor Horns (Solo,
First and Second) often perform as a choir with flugelhorns and
baritones. The Solo Horn is a frequent solo voice. Also commonly
referred to as the Alto Horn in the United
States; it is an upright, three valve
instrument, with a lighter sound than the French Horn.
Two B flat Baritones are
often doubled with Euphoniums but work best as lower extensions
of the Tenor Horn section. As separate voices, their ability to
blend and add a middle-low voice without heaviness is a unique
feature of the brass band.
Two B flat Euphoniums are
the predominant solo tenor voices and also function as tutti
enforcers with the basses.
Two B flat Tenor Trombones provide
punch and drive because of their cylindrical construction. One
Bass Trombone is
both a low support for the trombone section and an additional
weight to the tubas…and is the only brass instrument to be
reading in concert pitch (bass clef).
Two E flat Tubas and two
B flat Tubas give
composers an extraordinary flexibility in dictating the sound of
the bass part. The lighter quality of the E flats can have all
the Iyricism of the Euphoniums while the fatter B flat Tuba
sound adds weight. In octaves or fifths, the section can give
the brass band an incredible richness of tone.
Three Percussionists will
cover the entire spectrum of percussion instruments. Timpani,
battery, and mallets are standard for almost all compositions.
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