About 185,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Cornett - Wikipedia

    Four extant sizes are the soprano (cornettino), the treble or curved cornett, the alto, the tenor or lizard and the rare bass cornett, which was supplanted by the serpent in the 17th century.

  2. Cornett | Woodwind, Renaissance, Baroque | Britannica

    Cornett, wind instrument sounded by lip vibration against a cup mouthpiece; it was one of the leading wind instruments of the period 1500–1670. It is a leather-covered conical wooden pipe …

  3. Introducing the Cornett - YouTube

    Richard Thomas introduces us to the cornett and explains how and why it became one of the most popular instruments in Europe.

  4. Cornetto (Renaissance) – Early Music Instrument Database

    Without the trumpet, the usual Renaissance brass ensemble consisted of the sackbut with the cornetto, or Zink, as Praetorius and his countrymen termed it (also known in England simply …

  5. Cornet - Wikipedia

    While not musically related, instruments of the Zink family (which includes serpents) are named "cornetto" or "cornett" in modern English, to distinguish them from the valved cornet described …

  6. Cornett

    Create enchanting WebGL effects, motion, and interactivity — in minutes, not hours. Unicorn Studio makes WebGL easy for designers to embed in Framer, Webflow, or any website.

  7. CORNETT | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    CORNETT definition: 1. a long, curved musical instrument with holes for the fingers that is made from wood and covered…. Learn more.

  8. CORNETT Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of CORNETT is a usually treble wind instrument used especially for church choral music of the 16th and 17th centuries with a cup mouthpiece, a straight or slightly curved …

  9. cornett · Grinnell College Musical Instrument Collection · Grinnell ...

    The cornett is a hybrid aerophone in that it has features in common with brass instruments (a cupped mouthpiece) and with woodwind instruments (a tube with fingerholes).

  10. Zink | Musica Antiqua

    The most versatile Renaissance wind instrument was the cornett or zink. Between 1500 and 1650 the zink was used indoors and out, in serious music, dance music, town bands, rural …