Trombonium
Marching valve trombone in upright form
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The trombonium is a valve trombone in upright form, formerly manufactured by E. H. White under its "King" label.[2] It was unveiled by H.N. White in 1938 and manufactured until the mid 1970s.[2] In the early 1970s, C. G. Conn also manufactured a similar instrument as their 90G model valve trombone.[3]
(Lip-reed aerophone with valves and cylindrical bore longer than 2 meters[1])
King trombonium in B♭ | |
| Brass instrument | |
|---|---|
| Classification | |
| Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 423.233.2 (Lip-reed aerophone with valves and cylindrical bore longer than 2 meters[1]) |
| Timbre | Trombone |
| Related instruments | |
| Musicians | |
| Builders | |
The trombonium has a timbre similar to a trombone. It is built with valves instead of a slide, in a compact upright form superficially resembling a baritone or euphonium, suitable for use in marching bands.[2] A similar-sounding marching trombone is the flugabone, which is wrapped similar to a bass trumpet. The trombonium was used by the University of Southern California Marching Band[2] and on a handful of jazz recordings (e.g., Jay and Kai + 6).