The English Slide Trumpet by John Webb
The English Slide Trumpet by John Webb
The English Slide Trumpet by John Webb
he most significant period in the evolution of the trumpet was the last two decades
T of the 18th century. Clearly, the art of natural trumpet playing was in decline, as
exemplified by Burney's complaints about out-of-tune eleventh and thirteenth
harmonics in a performance of "The Trumpet Shall Sound" by Sargant (1784): "He had not
been bred in the clarion way of playing and could not temper these tones to their proper
intonation."1
Three years later, we had Shaw's "Harmonic Trumpet,"2 the earliest surviving example
of a brass instrument equipped with nodal venting. About the same time, hand-stopping was
introduced (with the demi-lune trumpet, a natural instrument curved to make the bell
accessible to one hand). The keyed trumpet, too, must have been around on the Continent
for Haydn to have been familiar enough with its capabilities for his concerto (1796). In
England, the big development was the slide trumpet.
The only novelty about the slide trumpet was the slide-return mechanism. The
principle of slides on trumpets goes back probably to the 15th century and the common
ancestors of the trumpet and trombone. Many engravings exist of the Zugtrompete, the
instrument that could move to and fro on its mouthpipe yard. A few, showing U-bend slide
trumpets, have come to light. Three are reproduced here (Figures 1 a, lb and 1c). Their
kinship with the trombone is hinted at in Figure 1 e, the Cellier woodcut (ca. 1585), as well
as in several descriptions: Trevor Herbert, in his article "The Sackbut in England in the 17th
and 18th centuries," cites a 1692 dictionary definition of a sackbut as a "drawing trumpet".3
There is also Burney's "sackbut or double trumpet" (see note 1), Cerone and Mersenne's
"sackbut or harmonic trumpet," and, of course, there are a number of engravings of the
English flat trumpet with their "sackbut" captions.4
Figure 1 d shows the most familiar flat trumpet depiction. Figure I f is from a procession
marking the anniversary of the accession of Elizabeth I in November, 1679. I have found
and reproduced others dating from 1679 to 1714. Those with captions perpetuate a mistake
by calling the instruments "sackbuts and courtall." Elsewhere in the processions of which
they are part can be seen standard trumpetsshorter, bannered, and held horizontally by
one hand. The association of cornetts with flat trumpets in these engravings equates with
the more usual cornett and sackbut combination. In England at this time there seems to have
been no differentiation between the two slide instruments.
Talbot describes both a sharp and a flat trumpet (1685-1701),3 the latter in C with a
fourteen-inch slide movement, the back-bow being positioned by the left ear and extending
backwards. This is at variance with the pictures, but as I have pointed out elsewhere,6 it is
unlikely there was ever any definitive design for the instrument. Talbot's description,
though, is of an instrument whose format clearly inspired that of the later slide trumpet. Less
than seventy years separated the demise of the one and the introduction of the other, and
WEBB 263
Figure 1
(a) Musicians of Graz in 1568. Vienna, Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek,
Handschrift 10.116.
(b) Jean Stumpf, Zurich, 1548.
(c) From J. Rodler, The Origins and Development of the Tournament in
Germany (1532).
(d) Barlow's engraving in Sandford's History of the Coronation of...James
//...(1687).
(e) Cellier woodcut, ca. 1585.
(f) From a procession marking the anniversary of the accession of Eliza-
beth I, In November, 1679.
264 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
it is more than likely that a few old flat trumpets still survived at the end of the 18th century.
The mechanical slide trumpet was built always in F, and the earlier ones had a much
shorter slide movement (four inches) than their successors. Toward the end of the 18th
century, natural F trumpets had begun to appear, equipped with crooks for lower keys.
These were the instruments on which the slide trumpets were based. Few remain today
because, presumably, few were made. The one shown in Figure 2a, from the author's
collection, bears no maker's name. It is of typical English natural-trumpet construction,
with cantilevered mouthpipe yard passing through a groove in the ball, the front bow
fastened to the bell with a wire ligature. In the cartouche of the garland are engraved the
letters YHY. The trumpet is associated with an assortment of crooks, all early shapes and
designs, indicating it to have been used orchestrally rather than ceremonially. It probably
dates from between 1790 and 1820. It is certainly the kind of instrument that was altered
to form the earliest slide trumpets (the bell-yard of a D or Eb instrument being too wide at
the point where the cylindrical slide tubing has to begin).
The reasons for the rise in basic pitch of orchestral trumpets, I know, are busily being
investigated. Though most keyed and demi-lune trumpets were in G, and English slide
trumpets in F, there are few early works scored for trumpets in those pitches.
One natural trumpet converted to a slide trumpet is that by John Harris (ca. 1715) at
the Bate Collection in Oxford? Another well-known conversion is the Woodham-
Rodenbostel instrument owned by Brian Galpin.8 Both instruments would have been
converted in the last quarter of the 18th century. Thomas Harper, Jr. claimed that the Harris
trumpet was the model for Kohler's slide instruments. Certainly, all the early slide trumpets
employed the clock-spring slide-return mechanism. An 1835 Kohler example is shown in
Figure 2b.
This silver-mounted instrument was acquired with its original chest but only one crook
(shown in Figure 3b). The chest contains all the usual slots and holes for a range of tuning-
bits, shanks, and crooks, plus accommodation for a complete cornopean outfit. Unfortu-
nately, the latter is missing. But these old double cases cast an interesting light on the
instrumental obligations of their musician owners. This player (in 1835) doubled on valved
cornet. Another case in my collection contained a slide trumpet and keyed bugle, with all
their accessories. Yet another, later, slide trumpet (Figure 4a) shared its case with a valved
F trumpet (Figure 5c), exemplifying the reluctance with which the valved trumpets, even
at the end of the 19th century, were accepted by the ever-conservative British.9 The only
other item of interest in the chest was the original receipt, signed by Kohler himself (Figure
8). It reads: "London, 35 Henrietta St., Covent Garden. Received February 25th 1835 of
Lord Arundell the Sum of Nineteen Pounds Sixteen Shillings on Acct." Not bad for a slide
trumpet and cornopean with all their accompaniments, even in 1835.
The trumpet itself is typical ofits period. The silver garland is engraved round its upper
rim: "T. HARPER'S IMPROVED. MANUFACTURED BY I. KOHLER." In the
cartouche: "35 Henrietta St. / Covent Garden / London." On the bell: "Lord Arundel" The
rather shallow acanthus leaf decoration on the garland is chased, likewise the triple ball. The
relief on the three ferrules was die-stamped when the silver was in sheet form. The bell
WEBB 265
Figure 2
(a) English natural trumpet, ca. 1790-1820. Author's collection.
(b) KOhler slide trumpet of 1835. Padbrook Collection
(c) Brass slide trumpet with nickel-silver garland, ball, and garnishes.
Engraved on bell: " T. LLOYD / Maker / HANDSWORTH." Padbrook Collection.
(d) Silver slide trumpet. Engraved around bell rim: "T. HARPER'S IMPROVED.
KOHLER. MAKER. LONDON." Hallmarked 1860. Padbrook Collection.
266 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
Figure 3
(a) Young musician with slide trumpet.
(b) Unusual D crook with clock-spring slide, acquired with the Kohler slide
trumpet in Figure 2b.
(c) Thomas Harper, Jr., in his Sergeant Trumpeter's regalia.
WEBB 267
diameter is 11 cm., bell length is 15 inches. Bore of cylindrical tubing on the body: 10.5 mm.
Bore of inner slides: 11 mm. Draw on slide: 4 inches.
More significant, in some ways, than the trumpet itself is the accompanying D crook
furnished with its own clock-spring slide. Neither Crispian Steele-Perkins nor myself have
found away of holding the instrument by which both slides can be manipulated at the same
time, nor a reason why a slide trumpet would have been thought at the time to have required
such a supplementary slide. It is likely that the crook was made for a natural trumpet in F.
This supposition is supported by the painting, part of which is reproduced in Figure 3a.
This intriguing portrait was bought some time ago by trumpeter/maker Steve Keavey
in an antique shop near the town of Worcester in England. It shows a very young musician
holding what appears to be an unusual slide trumpet that has one clock-spring positioned
inside the back-bow. This means the slide of the instrument would have had to be pushed
forward rather than pulled backwards. We can reject theories of artistic license; it is a naive
painting, and the details ofmouthpiece, tuning-bit, supplementary crook, etc., are all shown
with painful accuracy. In taking the picture therefore literally it is probable that the young
man is holding a natural trumpet with a slide crook similar to that in Figure 3b or at least
a short-model instrument in a similar arrangement. One other thought occurs when
contemplating this portrait could the subject be a youthful Harper Sr.? He was born in
Worc.ester. 1
The Woodham-Rodenbostel trumpet mentioned above carries the claim on its spring-
box cover: "Woodham, Inventor & Maker, Exeter court, Strand, London." In the earliest
tutor for the slide trumpet, John Hyde, the author, under the heading "Observations on the
Chromatic Trumpet," says, "Invented by J. Hyde, and made by Woodham." Woodham,
originally a watchmaker, died in 1797 and so was not in a position to dispute Hyde's
contention. (Woodham, incidentally, took in as apprentice the better-known Samuel Keat,
who was to take over the instrument-making business on Woodham's death.)
The clock-spring mechanism with which all these early slide trumpets were equipped
has always seemed to me to be an unnecessarily complex device for such a simple function.
It is expensive to make, and very difficult to assemble and service. Inside the cast figure-8-
shaped box are two drums containing clock-springs, each fixed at both ends to hooks on its
drum and axle. Lengths of gut are wound round both drums, one running along the inside
of the middle finger-bar tube and attached to a washer at the rear-bow end, the other
emerging from a hole in the back of the figure-8 box and retained by a knotted-on bead or
ring. This second spring was used as a spare. All clock-spring trumpets have a slot in the
appropriate blade of their finger-pulls to accommodate it. (It takes a good half-hour for a
professional clock maker to tension and re-string the main spring and gut, and conductors,
then as now, are not the most patient of people.) The mechanism is described more
exhaustively in Bartonll and Hoover. 12
In the Hoover article, the author dwells on an instrument in the Smithsonian, No.
237,756. This, like the Woodham-Rodenbostel trumpet, has a notched tuning device on
the finger-pull tube. It is simply a means whereby the slide is pushed incrementally out to
flatten the instrument. Some have asked why this tuning solution was not used more widely.
268 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
The answer is that it effectively shortened the amount of available slide movement. Apart
from a few of these earliest trumpets, tuning was accomplished, as it always had been on most
natural instruments, by means of tuning bits, shanks of varying lengths inserted between
mouthpipe and mouthpiece. Only some of the very last slide trumpets had tuning slides.
In the Galpin Society Journah vol. 9 (1956) is an article by Morley-Pegge en tided "The
Regent's Bugle." The instrument described is a twice-wound short-model slide trumpet
with a single clock-spring box and a slide pull of only two and one-half inches. It is silver,
hall-marked 1819, made by J ames Power of London, the spring-box by Keat. I have not been
able to trace its present whereabouts, but it belonged successively to Harper Sr., Harper Jr.,
Blandford, Morley-Pegge, and the late Joe Wheeler. Few of these short models were made
(two are shown in Figure 5). They were not just experimental anomalies but seem to have
occurred from time to time throughout the life of the slide trumpet. Why they weren't more
popular is a mystery because, apart from being more compact, they had one big advantage
over the standard single-loop models: their bells were much longer.
To accommodate the cylindrical tubing of the slide, the bell of a standard slide trumpet
rarely exceeded fourteen inches, a fifth of the total length in F; crooked in C, a mere seventh.
On the short models, the slide is fitted to the second loop so that the tapered bell tubing can
be bent to form the main back bow. The two instruments in Figure 5 have bells of twenty-
three inches and twenty-five inches, much closer to the conical/cylindrical ratios associated
with natural trumpets.
Another mystery about these short-model slide trumpets concerns mouthpieces. The
one in the instrument in Figure 5b seems to be original. It is brass with a silver rim and a
deep, funnel-shaped cup. I would have said it was an D keyed bugle mouthpiece, except that
Morley-Pegge, in the Regent's Bugle article mentioned above, describes another short-
model trumpet dated 1832 by Clementi which had what sounds like an identical mouth-
piece with a "deep hornlike cup." The general format of these instruments resembles that
of keyed bugles. Were they perhaps meant to sound like them, too? Was this also the reason
for the doubling of the length of their conical tubing?
After dock-springs, the next slide-return mechanism involved a compression spring.
Figure 2c shows a standard model, Figure 5a a short model. Here a spring is enclosed in a
cylinder between the bell- and bow-stays. The finger-pull rod passes through the center, and
a fixed disc on it, inside the cylinder, squeezes the spring when the rod (and slide) is drawn
back. Released, the spring returns the rod (and slide) to closed position. It is a good system,
except that to completely dismantle the instrument the finger-pull has to be unsoldered and
removed.
The final slide-return device was an expansion spring or a rubber cord (both require the
same mechanism). An example of the latter is shown in Figure 2d. This is a Kohler "Harper
Improved" trumpet with its normal complement of crooks, shank and tuning bits. The
shank in the instrument is for F. The crooks: E, El D, and CO. Some of the later slide trumpets
,
also had DI crooks (Figures 4a and 4b). The bent tuning bits are for use with the crooks. The
bent F shank and crook bits, according to Harper Sr., allow the trumpet to be held
horizontally while the player looks down at his music. In fact, they have to be twisted slightly
269
Figure 4
(a) Silver plated slide trumpet. Stamped 'F. BESSON / Prototype / 198
EUSTON ROAD / LONDON.- Ca. 1880. Padbrook Collection.
(b) Slide trumpet, mainly gold brass. Yellow brass ferrules and stays, etc.
Engraved on bell, '6 / Wyatt's / PERFECTED PATENT 123 Portman Buildings /
MARYLEBONE / Padbrook Collection.
(c) Clapper-key cornopean stamped "MADE BY / FREDk PACE / 15 KING
STEET / WHITE HALL.' Padbrook Collection.
270 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
Figure 5
(a) Brass slide trumpet. Stamped on bell garland, "Charles Pace / Maker /
49 King St. / Westminster." Tolson Museum, Huddsersfield.
(b) Brass slide trumpet. Cliffe Castle Museum, Keighley, Yorkshire.
(c) Silver-plated slide trumpet. Stamped on bell, "GOLD MEDAL / PARIS /
C. MAHILLON & COL / LONDON / MADE AT THEIR BRUSSELS / WORKS." Ca.
1880. Padbrook Collection.
272 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
no doubt deemed necessary to return the weight of the double slide. And the friction caused
by four sets of slide legs means that, however well aligned, their movement is always going
to be slow and cumbersome, just as it is on the double-slide bass and contrabass trombones.
Other interesting features of the Wyatt trumpet are the nickel inner slide legs (to reduce
friction), the long, false, cosmetic front bow, and the finger-pull, which is coiled into two
loops to echo the shape of the old clock-spring boxes.
Curiously, in F, E, and 13, there is no way to tune the instrument except with tuning
bits. The D, I>, and C crooks, however, are made in two parts that slide together, and are
tunable. Most of the instrument is made of what we would now call gold-brass: brass with
a high copper content. The standard Kohler slide trumpets were made of the same alloy, as
were those ofmany other makers. There seems to have been a "copper" tradition in England:
Talbot refers to Bull's famous copper trumpets in the late 17th century. The English field
bugle has always been made of copper (the keyed bugle, too, based as it was on the 1800-
period single-loop English field bugle). Algernon Rose, in Talks with Bandsmen (1894), 13
describes tests made by the Royal Marine Artillery just before the Crimean War that proved
that the sound of a copper bugle was clearly heard two miles away, while an identical brass
one was inaudible at less than half the distance. On the lee side of a fairly strong wind, a
copper bugle signal was said to carry up to five miles. Goodison, the maker (then foreman
of Rudall Carte), was present at the tests on Woolwich Common. Brown said that good brass
was superior in "musical quality" to copper and silver (pure metals), although the latter
"carried farther." So perhaps gold-brass was a compromise, as it is on most modern
trombones.
Old cockney William Brown died in 1893, aged 76. He had been the maker of the most
highly regarded comets in Britain, having instigated major improvements in valve design.
His three sons succeeded him, working without assistants, hand-making fine brass instru-
ments, tempering and hammering bells as taught by their father, crafting every part, even
hammering water-keys out of heavy wire. They were wiped out as makers at the beginning
of the century by cheap, imported rubbish from France and Markneukirchen, but lingered
as repairers until 1952a permanent exemplification of the precedence of profit over craft.
The trumpet in Figure 4b is numbered 6; Steele-Perkins has No. 7. A few others
survive, all in single numbers, and I doubt if more than a dozen were made. By 1890, the
F valved trumpet was afait accompli.
Slide trumpets, however, continued to be advertised and included in catalogues well
into the 20th century. Boosey's 1902 catalogue contains two F valved trumpets, a BWA
trumpet which it calls a soprano, an "ordinary model" slide trumpet, and its Patent Ortho-
Chromatic Slide Trumpet (Figure 6a). This it describes as a new instrument (although it is
in the 1892 catalogue) with a slide arranged for a shift of two tones. Built in either F or D,
"it therefore has a complete chromatic scale from the lower F) upwards and the necessity for
changing crooks is thereby obviated." There is no return mechanism and it is not clear how
it was supposed to be used. It is really a "slide-forward" flat trumpet, or trumpet-shaped alto
trombone. Curiously, it cost nearly three times as much as the B-Class alto trombone in the
same catalogue.
WEBB 273
a
EXTENDED.
PATENT ORTHO-CHROMATIC SLIDE TRUMPET, W
PATENT ORTHO -CHR
Figure 6
(a) Boosey catalogue (1902) Illustrations of the Patent Ortho-Chromatic
Slide Trumpet.
(b) Slide trumpet by John Webb.
274 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
Two slide trumpets at Padbrook have associated mutes (Figure 4). They are very
similar, light (about thirty grams), made of wood covered in crimson leather. The "corks"
are under the leather in both cases. They keep perfect pitch, sounding like modern straight
mutes.
The silver trumpet in Figure 2d has two mouthpieces (on the left in Figure 9). Both are
the Harper Sr. model, as illustrated in his 1837 Instructions for the Trumpet 14 (Figure 12).
One is silver and highly decorated, the other, with identical basic turnings, is ebony,
presumably for state trumpeting out-of-doors in winter. Harper says it is the mouthpiece
he used for twenty years, and can be used with "Trumpets of every description." It has a
massive rim and a very wide throat, and although I have made and sold forty or fifty copies
of it, I don't know any modern players who can really get on with it. The mouthpiece third
from left in Figure 9, associated with another Kohler trumpet, has a similar wide rim but
a more conventional throat. Quite a number of players use copies of this with their natural
Figure 7
Thomas Harper, Sr. (1786-1853);
above, Harper with soprano Clara
Novel lo.
WEBB 275
eta r-ice... c 4.
.---7) ,......
--.7 "I'
a"
...41(/ ' 7
I oy-s.
e.).1-
- .:1 0.-'097
ii
,41-'- -- t/ / c:/es
, i . .el e z -I5
;
bI 7-.1 C
Figure 8
Receipt for trumpet shown in Figure 3b, signed by John KOhler.
Figure 9
Left: Harper Sr.-model mouthpiece in silver associated with the silver
trumpet shown in Figure 2d.
Left center: The same model mouthpiece, with similar turnings, in ebony,
presumably for outdoor performance in winter.
Right center: Mouthpiece associated with another Kohler trumpet.
Right: Mouthpiece belonging to the short-model slide trumpet in Figure 4a.
trumpets.
Although the slide trumpet was the standard orchestral instrument in Britain through-
out most of the 19th century, it had by no means an easy ride. It must be remembered that
it was originally thought of as a natural trumpet with a means of correcting the inherently
out-of-tune harmonics and adding a few notes. From early in the century it had to compete
with the cornet. Figure 4c shows a typical English comopean of the 1830s of the type that
276 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
would have shared the case with the trumpet in Figure 2b.
Obviously, the slide trumpet lacked the cornet's agility. As late as 1897, Ebenezer Prout
was writing: "As good trumpet players are rare, the parts written for these instruments are
frequently played on the cornet-3-pistons--a much easier instrument to manipulate, but far
inferior to the trumpet in nobility and beauty of tone."15 He went on to write, "We cordially
endorse the dictum of M. Gavaert who says 'no conductor worthy of the name of artist
ought any longer to allow the cornet to be heard in place of the trumpet in a classical world'"
In 1895, Walter Morrow lamented, "Experienced players of the older instrument [i.e., the
slide trumpet] when they were called upon to play parts written for the valve trumpet,
instead of adapting themselves to the valve trumpet resorted to the cornet. Consequently the
cornet has crushed the trumpet out of the orchestra altogether. One rarely hears the sound
of a real trumpet now."16
It is ironic that Morrow, the main exponent and defender of the F valve trumpet against
the Bb instrument, studied at the Royal Academy of Music, where Harper Jr. was professor.
Harper was the principal defender of the slide trumpet against the valved version. In turn,
Morrow's most illustrious pupil when he was professor at the Royal College ofM usic, Ernest
Hall (1890-1984), refused to take the F valve trumpet seriously and played 1E0 throughout
his long life.
Harper Sr. (1786-1853) was the most famous and successful ofslide trumpeters (Figure
7). His Instructions are mainly for that instrument, sections on valve trumpets, comets, and
keyed bugle being relegated to comparatively short sections at the back of the book. The
keyed trumpet (so important on the Continent) is dismissed contemptuously in a footnote.
Like the slide trumpet, the first F valve trumpets were equipped with terminal crooks
to take them down to E, B, D, C, and sometimes even B. Tapered lead-pipes do not work
when cylindrical crooks are used with them. This is the main reason the cornet was found
easier to play than either instrument. Even the crooks of comets were conical, each really
a tapered lead-pipe (venturi).
All modern trumpets, of course, have lead-pipes, and compared with slide trumpets,
are much easier-blowing because of them. I have made many traditional slide trumpets and
am aware of the difficulties most modern players have in adapting to them (much as they
do to F [alto] valve trumpets). So a final instrument, my latest, is shown here (Figure 6b).
This has a lead-pipe, a seventeen-inch bell length, a slide-pull of six inches and two tuning
slides, one giving F and E, the other, D and C. It is still basically a slide-assisted natural
trumpet "improved." At least, no vents. Now that "authentic performance" demands are
beginning to affect the 19th century repertoire, interest is growing. Maybe, at least in
Britain, the slide trumpet is on its way back.
WEB B 277
FIC.I.
gip
VAINAIII
;
Figure 10
Abridged patent application of 1890 by W. Wyatt for a double slide trumpet.
-
Figure 11
Two mutes associated with slide trumpets in the Padbrook Collection.
278 HISTORIC BRASS SOCIETY JOURNAL
Figure 12
The Harper Sr.-model mouthpiece,
Instructions for the Trumpet (1837).
NOTES
2. Eric Halfpenny, "William Shaw's Harmonic Trumpet," Galpin Society Journal 13 (1960): 7ff.
3. Trevor Herbert, "The Sackbut in England in the 17th and 18th Centuries, "Early Music18 (1990):
609-616, here p. 612 and note 27. The dictionary cited by Herbert is Elisha Coles, An English
Dictionary (London, 1692).
5. Anthony Baines, "James Talbot's Manuscript," Galpin Society Journal l (1947), p. 9ff.
7. The Bate Collection of Historical Wind Instruments: Catalogue (Oxford, 1976), p. 70.
8. Peter Barton, "The Woodham-Rodenbostel Slide Trumpet." Galpin Society Journal 42 (1989):
112ff.
9. An excellent dissertation, "A Historical Study of the F Trumpet," was prepared by trumpeter Paul
Beniston as part of his M. Mus. in performance studies (Royal College of Music) in January, 1989.
He outlines not only the problems of acceptance of the F valved trumpet in Britain, but also of the
later change from F to D.
10. Scott Sorenson and John Webb, "The Harpers and the Trumpet," Galpin Society Journal 39
(1986): 35ff.
12. Cynthia Adams Hoover, "The Slide Trumpet of the Nineteenth Century," Brass Quarterly 6, no.
4 (Summer 1963): 159-78.
15. Ebenezer Prout, The Orchestra, vol. 1: Technique ofthe Instruments (London, 1897).
16. Walter Morrow, "The Trumpet as an Orchestral Instrument," Proceedings of the Musical
Association 31 (1895). Morrow (1850-1937) was the leading F valve trumpet player of his generation,
famous as a soloist and English pioneer of "Bach" trumpets and natural trumpet technique.
John Webb u a former adman, collector for twenty-five years (the Padbrook Collection) and
maker of natural horns, trumpets, and sackbuts since the early 1980s.