Many of the 'horn' bands of the late 60s and early 70s, such as Chicago and Blood, Seat & Tears used flugal horns in their brass sections. Probably the best known flugal horn player was Chuck Mangione, a jazz artist, who had a major hit with Feels So Good in 1977. More information may be found about Chuck Mangione at www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:gifexqy5ld6e~T1.
flugelhorn
Trevor Horn
Not quite. It's more of a marching band version of the French horn.
Trumpet, French horn, trombone, tuba, in an orchestra; euphonium and baritone horn in a concert band; tenor horn and alto horn in a British-style brass band.
the marching band was as loud as a train horn.
not really as this changes its effectivenets and the piping used is already very thin. In the ideal world changing these would be the same as using a flugal horn
there are bongo drums, piccalos, flutes, bagpipes, sitar, banjos, flugal horns, and the occassional glockenspiel :]
the french horn the highest is the C cornet/ trumpet followed by the Flugal horn which looks like a cornet but is normally E Flat. the you go to french and tenor horns .
flugelhorn
A French horn is most likely to be found in a concert band or a brass band, although there are jazz bands with French horns. French horn is in its element, however, in a symphony orchestra.
Is seven horn n seven eyes is a chirstian rock band
This requires a safe word. Just find a word not commonly used like flugal horn. And get him to do more bad stuff and just keep getting worse and worse until you say this word.
Trevor Horn
yes
Trevor Horn
Not quite. It's more of a marching band version of the French horn.
Trumpet, French horn, trombone, tuba, in an orchestra; euphonium and baritone horn in a concert band; tenor horn and alto horn in a British-style brass band.