Brass Bulletin 21, I / 1978 (page 13–25) · 16 min. read
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Cesare Bendinelli (1542-1617)

The Trumpet Method

Part 2 – End

By Edward H. Tarr

The first trumpet method rediscovered: Edward H. Tarr reveals how Bendinelli’s 1614 treatise reshapes our understanding of trumpet technique, signals, and ensemble art.

This article continues the series started in Brass Bulletin 17 (1977). There the biographical information on Bendinelli appeared in a first section. In this second section Bendinelli’s Tutta l’arte della Trombetta (1614) is discussed.

Part II: The Trumpet Method

As we know today, Bendinelli presented the Accademia Filarmonica of his home city, Verona, in 1614 with a trumpet made in 1585 by Anton Schnitzer and a book entitled Tutta l’arte della Trombetta («The Entire Art of Trumpet-Playing»)¹. A note is preserved in the archives of the Accademia Filarmonica of Verona to the effect that Bendinelli gave the trumpet and the method, together with a letter which has not survived, to Count Agostino Giusti, and that Giusti was requested to thank the donor in everyone's name². This donation was incorporated into the library of the Accademia Filarmonica and began a slumber of centuries.

Although Giuseppe Turrini mentioned both the trumpet and the method in his catalogue of the contents of the Accademia Filarmonica library, a catalogue which was published in 1941³, they only became known to trumpet scholarship in 1970. The musicologist Lorenzo Bianconi⁴ came upon them while cataloguing the contents of Italian libraries for the source lexicon RISM⁵. When Bianconi traveled with me in 1970 to the International Musicological Congress in Bonn, he told me about the trumpet method.

Was I familiar with it? No — but on my next Italian tour I headed straight for Verona. Prof. Enrico Paganuzzi, head of the library of the Accademia Filarmonica, was very helpful and cooperative; and thus it became possible for the Bärenreiter publishing house to bring out a facsimile edition in 1975. Since then, Bendinelli’s trumpet method has been discussed in several publications⁶, and the last sonata contained within it, the Sonata No. 336, has been printed⁷. Since the reader will be able to form a clear idea of the method through these recent publications, I would like in this article first briefly to show its importance and then to call attention to just three of its aspects: 1) the table of the trumpet's range at the beginning of the method, 2) the military signals, and 3) the five-part sonatas.

Until now, Girolamo Fantini’s Modo per imparare a sonare di tromba (Frankfort 1638) was considered to be the first trumpet method⁸. Bendinelli’s work now enjoys this distinction. Other important documents on trumpet-playing from this time are, in chronological order: 1) the notebooks of two German trumpeters at the Danish court, Hendrich Lübeck (written down c. 1596–1609) and Magnus Thomsen (written down in 1598)⁹, 2) Claudio Monteverdi's five-part Orfeo-toccata (1607)¹⁰, 3) valuable instructions in the third volume of Michael Praetorius' Syntagma musicum (Wolfenbüttel 1619)¹¹, and 4) the military signals transmitted to us by Marin Mersenne in his Harmonie universelle (Paris 1636–1637)¹².

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