Sackbut - Wikipedia A sackbut has the characteristic telescopic slide of a trombone, used to vary the length of the tube to change pitch, but is distinct from later trombones by its smaller, more cylindrically-proportioned bore, and its less-flared bell
Sackbut | Renaissance, Baroque Trombone | Britannica Sackbut, (from Old French saqueboute: “pull-push”), early trombone, invented in the 15th century, probably in Burgundy It has thicker walls than the modern trombone, imparting a softer tone, and its bell is narrower
Sackbut (Renaissance) – Early Music Instrument Database Evolving quickly from the single-slide instrument, the slide trumpet, the sackbut has changed perhaps the least of any instrument in common use today Its earliest ensemble use seems to have been as a regular member of the shawm band
Sackbut - Organology: Musical Instruments Encyclopedia The sackbut is a brass wind instrument with a distinctive telescoping slide, making it a precursor to the modern trombone It was developed in the Renaissance period, around the 15th century, and was widely used through the Baroque period
Sackbut vs Trombone | News Blog | Wessex Tubas What Is a Sackbut? The sackbut is an early brass instrument that dates back to the late 15th century It was widely used during the Renaissance and Baroque periods and is considered one of the first true slide brass instruments
A crash course on the sackbut, ancestor of the modern trombone The sackbut first appeared in the 15th century, and was a prominent brass instrument during the Renaissance, baroque and early classical periods But by the 18th century, it fell out of use
Sackbut — Grokipedia The sackbut is a family of brass wind instruments and direct predecessor to the modern trombone, characterized by its telescopic slide mechanism for altering pitch, which originated from the slide trumpet in mid-15th-century Europe
sackbut - Wiktionary, the free dictionary Noun sackbut (plural sackbuts) (music) A brass instrument from the Renaissance and Baroque Eras, and an ancestor of the modern trombone It was derived from the medieval slide trumpet