Clarion is a name for a high-pitched trumpet used in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It is also a name for a 4' organ reed stop that produces a high-pitched or clarion-like sound on a pipe organ in the clarion trumpet's range of notes.[1][2]

Clarion
Woman playing a clareta or clarion, from a woodcut by Tobias Stimmer, circa 1575. Possibly a slide trumpet or trombone.
Brass instrument
Other namesclairon,[1] clarin trumpet,[1] clarino,[1] chiarina
Classification Brass
Hornbostel–Sachs classification423.121
(Natural trumpets – There are no means of changing the pitch apart from the player's lips; end-blown trumpets – The mouth-hole faces the axis of the trumpet. Some may have been (423.22) slide trumpets, in an attempt to gain more notes.)
DevelopedDeveloped from the buisine or by experimenting with the idea of a metal tubular instrument with bends to shorten length
Related instruments
Sound sample

The word clarion has changed meanings over centuries and across languages. Today, in modern French clairon refers to the bugle,[1] while in Italy chiarina refers to modern trumpets of historic design, made from bent tubing and without valves, similar to the natural trumpet. Resembling these instruments is the modern fanfare trumpet, like the chiarina or natural trumpet, but with the option of using valves.

Clarion became a musical term to refer the upper register of the standard trumpet.[1] However, a clarin trumpet did exist with a narrower bore than the standard trumpet and a "broad, flat mouthpiece," designed to "play the high partials."[1]

Clarion as heraldic device depicted in the coat of arms of Grenville, a mid-16th century carving which clearly shows the labium openings in the pipes of a pipe organ. Bench end in Sutcombe Church, Devon

In war the trumpet historically had a harsh sound, often described as, "like the braying of an ass."[3][4] As technology improved the ability of trumpets to take pressure and reach more notes and higher notes, that higher-pitched sound became the focus of the term clarion.[5] By the 14th century, it was described as high-pitched, shrill, or clear sounding.[6]

In general (and not all early writers agreed) the clarion was a shorter trumpet with narrower bore.[6] For example, a 1606 author named Nicot wrote that while the term clarion had once referred to a group of high pitched trumpets with a narrower bore, by his day it was the higher pitches in a sound range that any trumpet should be able to play.[6]

The narrowing of the bore and the manufacturers' control of how gradually it widened changed the tone of new instruments.[7] Rather than braying, the trumpets took on the sound of courts, sounding much like the modern fanfare trumpet. During the development process, longer "shrill" trumpets such as the añafil or buisine trumpets were folded into more compact forms. By 1511, Virdung had published engravings of these folded instruments, one labeled "clareta", which became the clarion.[1] Tonally, clarin or clarino also came to refer to melodic playing in the upper register of the trumpet "with a soft and melodious, singing tone"[6]

By 1600 the term clarin came to be a musical term used by composers for "the highest trumpet part" in Germany and Spain and was limited to German and Spanish composers from the 16th–19th centuries. Clarino was used by Italians, but not for trumpets.[6]

Trumpet history

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After the fall of Rome, when much of Europe was separated from the remaining Eastern Roman Empire, both straight and curved tubular-sheet-metal trumpets disappeared, and curved horns from natural materials like cowhorn and wood were Europe's trumpet.[8][9]

The straight sheet-metal tubular-trumpet persisted in the Middle East and Central Asia as the nafir and karnay, and during the Reconquista and Crusades, Europeans began to build them again, having seen these instruments in their wars.[9][10] The first made were the añafil in Spain and buisine in France and elsewhere. Then Europeans took a step that hadn't been part of trumpet making since the Roman (buccina and cornu); they figured out how to bend tubes without ruining them and by the 1400s were experimenting with new instruments.[9][11]

Whole lines of brass instruments were created, including initial examples like the clarion the natural trumpet, slide trumpet and sackbut.[9][12] These bent-tube variations shrunk the long tubes into a manageable size and controlled the way the instruments sounded.[12]

Francis Galpin theorized that straight trumpets, buisines, of different lengths became different instruments.[13] Shorter instruments with narrower tubing became the clarions and field trumpets (the clarions being the narrower of the two).[13] Longer, lower pitched trumpets became the trombone.[13] Comparing the field trumpet and the clarion, Galpin said both were used in fanfare music, the broader tubed and longer field trumpet taking lower notes, the clarion the higher notes.[13]

European experiments with bent-tube instruments in turn influenced Islamic musical instruments, resulting in the S-curved nafir or karnay and the Turkish boru.[11]

Etymology

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Straight trumpet, short enough to have clarion notes. High pitched trumpets are shorter instruments.[14] In comparison to the busine, the trumpet pictured is shorter. The añafil (Spanish renaming of Arabic Nafir, also called buisine was between 4 and 7 feet long.[15] Calling it "clairon," Nicot said the nafir at 4.25-5 ft long served as treble for the Moore's other trumpets, which sounded tenor and bass tones.[15] Some of those trumpets such as the modern Moroccan nafir reach about 6 ft long, and the Tajikistani karnay can reach as long as 6 ft 10 (210 cm).[16][17]

"Clarion" derives from three Latin words: the noun clario (trumpet), the adjective clarus (bright or clear), and the verb claro (to make clear). Throughout Europe, an eclectic set of variations on clarion came into use. The meaning of these variations was not standard. It is not clear whether they are meant to refer to an actual instrument or simply the high register of the trumpet.[18]

  • In France, the usage evolved into words like "clairin", "clarin", "clerain", "clerin", "clairon", "claroncel", and "claronchiel".[18] Clairon become the most commonly used version.[18]
  • English variants were "claro", "clario", "clarone", "clarasius", "clarioune", "claryon" and "clarion".[18] Early clarion use found in written work in English from 1325 AD.[1]
  • In Spain, the terminology became "clarín" and "clarón".[18]
  • Italians used "chiarina", "chiarino", and "claretto", and by 1600, they began to use "clarino" or "chlarino", which became a standard, albeit widely misunderstood, term.[18]
  • In Germany, the usage was "clareta", and by the middle of the 16th century, "clarin".[18]

Usage of the word

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Angels sounding trumpets. With the exception of some early European instruments such as the Greek salpinx and Roman tuba, cornu and buccina, pre-13th century European trumpets were horns, shaped like oxen horns until encounters with Islamic armies' nafirs inspired creation of instruments such as the Spanish añafil and French buisine.

The various iterations of "clarion" occur alongside the idiomatic usage of "trumpet" in the literature and historical records of several countries. The presence of these terms in concert with each other throughout such passages gave rise to a consensus that there must be a clarion trumpet which is distinct in construction from a standard trumpet. In France, historical records include phrases like "à son de trompes et de clarons", for instance. In his French dictionary, Jean Nicot wrote that the clarion is used among the Moors and the Portuguese (who adopted the Moors' custom). Nicot defines the clarion as a treble instrument, which is paired with trumpets playing the tenor and bass. Nicot also specifies that the clarion was used by the Cavalry and Marines.[19]

In The Knight's Tale, Chaucer writes, "Pypes, trompes, nakers, clariounes, that in bataille blowen blody sounes", which adds to the notion that clarions must somehow be distinct from trumpets.[20]

This idea was bolstered by artworks of the time, which show a variety of trumpets in different shapes and sizes. There are even records from trade guilds like the Goldsmith's Company of London which specify that a clarion is 70% lighter than a trumpet. However, there is no precise understanding of what any of these variations meant. The fundamental confusion is over whether or not they refer to an actual instrument or to a style of playing in the high register of the trumpet. Even the Spanish historian Sebastián de Covarrubias confused the meaning in his Tesoro de la lengua castellana o española, writing that the clarin was a "trumpetilla", a tiny trumpet capable of playing in the high register or that the term could simply refer to the high register of the trumpet.[21]

Baroque

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The confusion over the usage of these terms seemed to mainly dissipate in the Baroque era, when "clarino" (plural: "clarini"), and its variants, came to be specifically understood as the practice of playing the natural trumpet in its high register.[22]

Range of notes

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See: Natural trumpet for history of expanded tonal range.
Cavalry use of short high-pitched trumpet, circa 1642–1645
Military ensemble, with four straight trumpets and a bent-tube trumpet. The instruments are paired with horse-mounted timpani. 16th century.

Natural trumpets were originally war trumpets used to signal with a short repeating pattern.[23] They were largely the same among European countries, consisting of two tones, a fifth apart.[23] Calls were started with the lowest.[23]

Before the modern naming systems were invented that allow us to describe a note with a letter, trumpeters assigned names to notes that their trumpets played.[3][23] The names described a note's relationship to the other notes.[3][23] Similar names were used in different countries, though the changed based on language.[23]

The first named were the lowest, made by a long horn that could only play one note. When a second note was added, it was named in relationship to the original note, as the note that follows.[23] Although military in use initially, trumpets were put into trumpet ensembles, with places in the ensemble based on the notes they played. The basic series by the 1600s was:

  • 1 basso (also gross or grob). This was the oldest note, sometimes called boss or master. An early trumpet could play only one note well, possibly two. That good note was a low note, and formed the bottom of a series of notes.[3][23]
  • 2 Folgant, (also: vulgano or vorgano), the "note that follows", "follower", "attendant". A single note higher than the basso.[3][23]
  • 3 Alto e basso, altebasso, alterbass, or "up-and-down". 3 notes. Played harmony to the trumpet above it.[3][23]
  • 4 Sonata, quinta, principale. This became the modern standard trumpet, with a wide range of low and high notes. In this era it had between four and six notes and created a melody.[3][23]
  • 5 Clarin, claretta, claron, clarion. High ranging part, flourishes and some melody parts above the quinta. The highest notes were hard to play. When these notes were by a shorter nafir (they could be long), the effect was not musical but "excruciating".[3][23]
 
1636 illustration from book by Marin Mersenne, showing notes playable in the natural trumpet. His illustration shows from the 1st to the 13th partial. The clarion range was 8–13 at this time.

In the 16th century, a clareta or "sopranoor clarino" in C was tuned to the 8th partial, c" or c5, and might reach as high as the 13th partial.[24][25] In a 5-trumpet ensemble of trumpets as long as 8 feet, it would be paired with a standard trumpet. The long trumpet was tuned an octave lower, and called sonata, quinta or principale). The other trumpets were the basso trumpet, vulgano trumpet, and alto e basso trumpet.[25]

Trumpets in the 16th century had a narrow range of notes that could be played. The larger straight trumpets, like the buisine likely played one or two notes. The bent-tube trumpets likely had an increased range of about 4 playable notes in the "Late Middle Ages", the "naturals 1-4."[24] Innovations such as the slide trumpet and different mouthpieces helped increase the notes available.[24] Better built trumpets also gained notes as they could increasingly be overblown.[24]

There was less need of the specialized clarion as trumpets improved in the Baroque period. The principal register of the trumpet extended to the seventh pitch of the harmonic series. The trumpet's clarino register then ran from the eighth to the twentieth pitch in the series.[22]

Among today's trumpets, the piccolo trumpet occupies the same position in relation to standard trumpets that the clarion did, tuned one octave above the standard trumpet.

Ottoman boru

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Mehterhâne, Ottoman miniature circa 1568. The musicians play two zurna, two spiral trumpets (boru), a cylinder drum davul and a pair of kettle drums (nakkare). In 1529, the "Turkish field clamor" reached Vienna for the first time.

By the late 1500s, Ottoman armies were playing these new folded trumpets (or natural trumpets) in place of their former nefir trumpets. The nefir was closely related to the añafil.

In today's Turkish, nefir means "trumpet/horn" and "war signal".[11] In military music, the straight natural trumpet nefir is distinguished from the general Turkic word for "tube" and "trumpet," boru.[11] Boru refers to the looped military trumpet, which is due to European influence,[11] while the derived borazan ("trumpeter") is understood today in Turkish folk music as a spirally wound bark oboe.[26]

In the 17th century, when the Ottoman writer Evliya Çelebi (1611 – after 1683) wrote his travelogue Seyahatnâme, the nafīr was a straight trumpet that was played in Constantinople by only 10 musicians and had fallen behind the European boru (also tūrumpata būrūsī), for which Çelebi states 77 musicians.[27] Nefir, or nüfür in religious folk music, was a simple buffalo horn without a mouthpiece, blown by Bektashi in ceremonies and by itinerant dervishes for begging until the early 20th century.[27]

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Marcuse, Sibyl (1964). "Clarino, clarin trumpet, clarion". Musical instruments; a comprehensive dictionary. Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. p. 109.
  2. ^ Randel, Don. The New Harvard Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1986. p. 172.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Margaret Sarkissian; Edward H. Tarr (2001). "Trumpet (Fr. trompette; Ger. Trompete; It. tromba)". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.49912. Herodotus likened the sound of the ancient trumpet to the braying of an ass.
  4. ^ Marcuse, Sibyl (1964). Musical instruments; a comprehensive dictionary. Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. Karranay...curved trumpet of Turkey...sounded like the braying of an ass...
  5. ^ Ghost Music. British Broadcasting Corporations (BBC). April 2011. [Summary: King Tut's trumpets and also close reproductions were tested using modern mouthpieces as well as without a mouthpiece. The latter was how they originally were played. Using a mouthpiece allowed more notes to be played, but one of the original trumpets was damaged from the pressure made by playing the highest note. Without the modern mouthpiece, only two notes were playable.
  6. ^ a b c d e Reine Dahlqvist; Edward H. Tarr. "Clarino". The new Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments. pp. 405–406.405-406&rft.au=Reine Dahlqvist&rft.au=Edward H. Tarr&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Clarion (instrument)" class="Z3988">
  7. ^ Marcuse, Sibyl (1964). "Trumpet". Musical instruments; a comprehensive dictionary. Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. p. 540. The brilliance of the trumpets tone is caused by its narrow, mainly cylindrical bore...
  8. ^ Michael Pirker (Spring 1993). "The Looped Trumpet in the Near East". RIdIM/RCMI Newsletter. 18 (1). Research Center for Music Iconography, The Graduate Center, City University of New York: 3–8. JSTOR 41604971. There is no evidence available on the use of the trumpet in Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire. It made its appearance again from the Orient, via the Crusades, beginning in the eleventh centuru3-8&rft.date=1993&rft_id=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41604971#id-name=JSTOR&rft.au=Michael Pirker&rft_id=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41604971&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Clarion (instrument)" class="Z3988">
  9. ^ a b c d Margaret Sarkissian; Edward H. Tarr (20 January 2001). "Trumpet (Fr. trompette; Ger. Trompete; It. tromba)". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.49912. According to Sachs, the trumpet disappeared from Europe after the fall of Rome and was not reintroduced until the time of the crusades, when instruments were taken from the Saracens...the Slide trumpet was developed with a mouthpipe that telescoped inside the first length of tubing to enable the player to alter the instrument's length while playing.
  10. ^ Farmer, H.G. (2012). ""Būḳ"". In P. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0127. ISBN 9789004161214. Retrieved 13 January 2023. It is generally acknowledged...that the cylindrical bore instruments were borrowed from the East. Perhaps those buccins Turcs and cors sarrasinois which the Crusading chroniclers record included the nafīr and karnā...
  11. ^ a b c d e Michael Pirker (2001). "Nafīr". Grove Music Online. The looped trumpet is a European development adopted by Eastern cultures; from the 14th century new forms of trumpets with curved tubes started to appear in Europe, and European instruments then began to supersede the straight trumpet in Islamic societies...
  12. ^ a b Klaus, Sabine (2019). "Bugle". In Herbert, Trevor (ed.). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 90–1. doi:10.1017/9781316841273. ISBN 978-1-316-63185-0. OCLC 1038492212. OL 34730943M. Wikidata Q114571908.
  13. ^ a b c d Galpin, Franci W. (1911). Old English Instruments of Music. Chicago: A. C. McCLURG & CO. pp. 199–207.199-207&rft.pub=A. C. McCLURG & CO&rft.date=1911&rft.aulast=Galpin&rft.aufirst=Franci W.&rft_id=https://archive.org/details/oldenglishinstru00galp/mode/1up&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Clarion (instrument)" class="Z3988">
  14. ^ Bloss, aura (December 2012). Natural Trumpet Music and the Modern Performer (Thesis). The University of Akron. p. 3.
  15. ^ a b Marcuse, Sibyl (1964). "Añafil, Buisine, Nafir.". Musical instruments; a comprehensive dictionary. Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. pp. 15, 70–71, 356–357.70-71, 356-357&rft.pub=Doubleday&rft.date=1964&rft.au=Marcuse, Sibyl&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Clarion (instrument)" class="Z3988">
  16. ^ "Hoorn van messing - Nafir" [Horn of brass - Nafir] (in Dutch). Horn of brass - Nafir. Culture: Moroccan. Origin: North Africa / Maghreb / Morocco. before 1955. approx. 176cm (69 5/16in.))
  17. ^ Д. Раҳимов. Касбу ҳунарҳои анъанавии тоҷикон. – Душанбе, 2014. – С. 40 - 42 (D. Rahimov. Traditional crafts of Tajiks. - Dushanbe, 2014. - p. 40 - 42.)
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Dahlqvist, Reine, and Edward H. Tarr. "Clarino," Grove Music Online, Accessed: November 6, 2011
  19. ^ Chamber, Ephraim. Cyclopaedia, p. 232.
  20. ^ Tarr, Edward H. The Trumpet. Portland: Amadeus Press, 1988. p. 41.
  21. ^ Dahlqvist & Tarr.
  22. ^ a b Randel, p. 171.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Baines, Anthony (1974–1975). "The Evolution of Trumpet Music up to Fantini". Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association. 101: 1–9. doi:10.1093/jrma/101.1.1. JSTOR 766032.1-9&rft.date=1974/1975&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093/jrma/101.1.1&rft_id=https://www.jstor.org/stable/766032#id-name=JSTOR&rft.aulast=Baines&rft.aufirst=Anthony&rft_id=https://www.jstor.org/stable/766032&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Clarion (instrument)" class="Z3988">
  24. ^ a b c d "Trumpet in C". Vienna Academy, Vienna Symphonic Library GmbH. In the 16th century the trumpet's range increased up to the 13th natural...from the 8th partial upward was called clarino...a special clarino mouthpiece, a narrow-bore cup-shaped mouthpiece with a sharp-angled rim
  25. ^ a b Margaret Sarkissian; Edward H. Tarr (2001). "Trumpet (Fr. trompette; Ger. Trompete; It. tromba)". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.49912.
  26. ^ Laurence Picken : Folk Musical Instruments of Turkey. Oxford University Press, London 1975, p. 482
  27. ^ a b Henry George Farmer: Turkish Instruments of Music in the Seventeenth Century. In: Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, No. 1, January 1936, pp. 1-43, here p. 28
  28. ^ Sibyl Marcuse (1975). A Survey of Musical Instruments. New York: Harper & Row. p. 794. ISBN 0-06-012776-7.

Further reading

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