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Τι (ποιος) είναι sackbut$525918$ - ορισμός


sackbut         
  • wait]], an ensemble of loud instruments suited to playing outdoors. Centre, a sackbut.
  • Trombone on a 1909 headstone, Christ Church, [[Todmorden]]
  • Bass sackbut in G by Pierre Colbert, 1593. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • Contrabass sackbut in B♭ by Georg Nikolaus Öller, 1639, Stockholm. The Swedish Museum of Performing Arts.
  • Play}}
  • Sackbut in a [[fresco]] by [[Filippino Lippi]] in Rome, ''The Assumption of the Virgin'', dating from 1488 to 1493. This is the earliest clear evidence of a double-slide instrument.<ref name="Herbert 2006, p. 60">Herbert (2006), p.&nbsp;60.</ref>
  • [[Marin Mersenne]], ''L'Harmonie universelle'' (1636).<!--this image is displayed at less than standard width (150px specified) given its height to prevent the display of extreme pixel height-->
  • Musicians from 'Procession in honour of Our Lady of Sablon in Brussels.' Early 17th-century Flemish [[alta cappella]]. From left to right: bass [[dulcian]], alto [[shawm]], treble [[cornett]], soprano shawm, alto shawm, tenor sackbut.
  • Musicians gallery from the funeral of Charles III, Duke of Lorraine. The gallery has a mix of instruments and musicians including singers, sackbuts, bass [[shawm]]s, [[cornett]]s, [[lute]]s, [[viol]]s (both bowed and plucked).
  • baritone clef]] seen here is very common for trombone parts of this era.<!--this image is displayed at more than standard width (400px specified) given its width to allow visibility and prevent the display of extreme image narrowness-->
  • Trombones in ''[[Syntagma Musicum]]'' (1614-20), by [[Michael Praetorius]].
  • ''Left to right'': replica alto, tenor and bass sackbuts, in [[Museu de la Música de Barcelona]].
  • Four sackbuts: two tenors, ''left & middle''; alto, ''top''; bass, ''right''.
  • "Busaun" (trombone) and various trumpets by different names, from the 1511 [[treatise]] by [[Sebastian Virdung]].
  • Virgiliano's treatise ''Il Dolcimeo'' (c. 1600).<!--this image is displayed at more than standard width (400px specified) given its width to allow visibility and prevent the display of extreme image narrowness-->
HISTORICAL BRASS INSTRUMENT
Sackbutt; Sacbutt; Sacbut; Sacqueboute; Sagbutt; Shakbusshe; Great quint; Sackbutist; Shakbusse; Sackbuts; Sagbut; Saqueboute; Renaissance trombone
['sakb?t]
¦ noun an early form of trombone used in Renaissance music.
Origin
C15: from Fr. saquebute, from obs. saqueboute 'hook for pulling a man off a horse'.
Sackbut         
  • wait]], an ensemble of loud instruments suited to playing outdoors. Centre, a sackbut.
  • Trombone on a 1909 headstone, Christ Church, [[Todmorden]]
  • Bass sackbut in G by Pierre Colbert, 1593. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • Contrabass sackbut in B♭ by Georg Nikolaus Öller, 1639, Stockholm. The Swedish Museum of Performing Arts.
  • Play}}
  • Sackbut in a [[fresco]] by [[Filippino Lippi]] in Rome, ''The Assumption of the Virgin'', dating from 1488 to 1493. This is the earliest clear evidence of a double-slide instrument.<ref name="Herbert 2006, p. 60">Herbert (2006), p.&nbsp;60.</ref>
  • [[Marin Mersenne]], ''L'Harmonie universelle'' (1636).<!--this image is displayed at less than standard width (150px specified) given its height to prevent the display of extreme pixel height-->
  • Musicians from 'Procession in honour of Our Lady of Sablon in Brussels.' Early 17th-century Flemish [[alta cappella]]. From left to right: bass [[dulcian]], alto [[shawm]], treble [[cornett]], soprano shawm, alto shawm, tenor sackbut.
  • Musicians gallery from the funeral of Charles III, Duke of Lorraine. The gallery has a mix of instruments and musicians including singers, sackbuts, bass [[shawm]]s, [[cornett]]s, [[lute]]s, [[viol]]s (both bowed and plucked).
  • baritone clef]] seen here is very common for trombone parts of this era.<!--this image is displayed at more than standard width (400px specified) given its width to allow visibility and prevent the display of extreme image narrowness-->
  • Trombones in ''[[Syntagma Musicum]]'' (1614-20), by [[Michael Praetorius]].
  • ''Left to right'': replica alto, tenor and bass sackbuts, in [[Museu de la Música de Barcelona]].
  • Four sackbuts: two tenors, ''left & middle''; alto, ''top''; bass, ''right''.
  • "Busaun" (trombone) and various trumpets by different names, from the 1511 [[treatise]] by [[Sebastian Virdung]].
  • Virgiliano's treatise ''Il Dolcimeo'' (c. 1600).<!--this image is displayed at more than standard width (400px specified) given its width to allow visibility and prevent the display of extreme image narrowness-->
HISTORICAL BRASS INSTRUMENT
Sackbutt; Sacbutt; Sacbut; Sacqueboute; Sagbutt; Shakbusshe; Great quint; Sackbutist; Shakbusse; Sackbuts; Sagbut; Saqueboute; Renaissance trombone
·noun A brass wind instrument, like a bass trumpet, so contrived that it can be lengthened or shortened according to the tone required;
- said to be the same as the Trombone.
The Sackbut         
BRITISH MUSIC JOURNAL
The Sackbut was a British music journal published from 1920 to 1934 by the Curwen Press. It published general articles on mainly contemporary, both British and foreign, music as well as reports on performances and records.