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OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Sun Jan 01, 2023 11:16 pm
by Hector Pascal
Hi all,
Wishing everyone on the forum a happy new year :)
Cheers,
Hector.
PS: I was just watching the 2023 Vienna Philharmonic New Year's Concert and saw this instrument and am not sure what it is.
It was played at the end of Carl Michael Ziehrer's "In lauschiger Nacht" (On a Cozy Night), Waltz, Op. 488.
instrument.jpg

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Sun Jan 01, 2023 11:31 pm
by N Grossingink
It's a Posthorn. Also used in Mozart's Posthorn Serenade and Mahler's 3rd Symphony, among others.

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2023 6:04 am
by Hector Pascal
Thanks, N! I like the sound of the instrument :)
Cheers,
Hector.

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2023 3:25 pm
by ebiggs1
It is also quite different as are all horns of modern design. They originally, the post horn or hunting horn, was a single horn without valves. The post horn as it was called was used to signal the arrival of the mail or "post" as they called it.

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2023 3:28 pm
by Bill Stevens
Nowadays who would play posthorn? The French Horn player? Trumpet?

I took a temporary trip down the posthorn rabbit hole and found that there is a posthorn symbol in Unicode at U+1F4EF.

::: Bill

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2023 5:10 pm
by motet
Trumpet player.

Re: OT: What is this instrument?

Posted: Mon Jan 02, 2023 6:13 pm
by David Ward
OT (even more): in 1952, aged 12, I was taken sitting on top of a coach & four (horses) the 14 miles from Wisbech to Kings Lynn. Next to the coachman his colleague had a long, straight posthorn without valves on which he played traditional calls as we approached each inn along the road. People came out to cheer us on our way. There was nothing like as much traffic on the main road in those days. I suspect it would be close to impossible nowadays. I can't remember what was behind this exercise in nostalgia, driving a horse-drawn vehicle along a motor road, but I still remember the trip vividly.

BTW ‘post’ is still probably the more usual word in most of the UK rather than ‘mail’.