the french horn is a left handed instrument with three valves derived from multi-coiled hunting horns first seen in france in the late sixteenth century. if the horn has an additional trigger (as most modern horns do), it is a double horn; the trigger allows the musician to alternate between the keys of F and Bb (B flat) (and can help extend the range of experienced players). horns without the Bb trigger are called single horns.

most french horn players will insist that the proper name for the instrument is simply horn, and that they are hornists, however most non-musicians associate the word horn with a broad classification of musical instruments.

The right hand of the musician is held inside the rim of the bell primarily to soften and round out (or de-brass, if you will) the sound. The tuning is adjusted by slides and the instrument is tuned with the hand in the bell. The hand should be held in a c-shaped cup, to deflect the air, rather than actually muffle it. the hand position can be changed during play to mute, change the tone colour, and alter intonation, but these techniques are difficult for all but experienced horn players.



daily maintenance:

remove "water" (spit) after each use. remove skin acid from the valves and bell with a soft cloth.

weekly maintenance:

unscrew the caps near the valves and oil the bearing. oil inside the valve slides and spin the horn to oil the valve itself. grease the slides and mouthpiece. wipe mouthpiece with silver cloth to prevent tarnishing.

monthly maintenance:

run a bathtub or deep sink full of warm water. remove all the slides and pour some dish soap into each. flush the horn with water, spinning it to circulate it, until the water comes out without bubbles. let the horn dry as you clean each of the slides. dry and regrease the slides, reassemble the horn and oil the valves.

periodic maintenance:

check the strings which control the valves for weakness and fraying and replace them when these are noticed. otherwise replace strings twice per year with braided nylon. check the rubber or cork of the spit valve (if the horn has one, many don't), if it isn't seated properly the horn can sound airy.