The Cor Solo: History and Characteristics

Arnold Myers, Anneke Scott, John Chick

Research output: Contributions to journalsArticlepeer-review

Details

The cor solo, a French version of the German Inventionshorn, enjoyed a period of popularity at the end of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries. In its most common form it was pitched in 11-ft G with tuning-slide crooks for F, E, E-flat and D. Thirty extant examples (by Cormery, Raoux, Courtois, Jahn and Sax) have been studied and measured along with examples of the Inventionshorn for comparison. This paper presents an analysis of contemporary references to and illustrations of, the cor solo, a comparative account of models produced by the Raoux family as the instrument’s principal makers, detailed bore comparisons, and players’ observations on the comparative merits of the orchestral horn of the period with terminal crooks.
Original languageEnglish
JournalHistoric Brass Society Journal
Volume31
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 22 Feb 2019

Cite this