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I have little to add beyond a classic "go for it!! "
Horn sections and jazz trumpets are frickin awesome
And @Cranky, good idea, here's your first lesson, free!
Yes I did some gigs with a trumpetist a few years ago and he spoke highly of the plastic ones.
If you listen to some pre war blues the trumpet effectively has the role that the electric guitar took on later, if your guitar playing experience includes blues it's, sort of, a natural second instrument. Although the singer in my old band, who was a music teacher to establish his credentials, took up trumpet in his fifties and after several years could only play about three notes cleanly.
A cornet is a bit of a softer sounding alternative. A tenor horn will teach you all the right fingerings and embouchure for a beginner and makes a mellow sound that nobody will complain about.
Best way to learn is to get the scales under your fingers, start with C major, then learn to sing a melody in C major then play it. Nursery rhymes, hymns, carols, folk songs or diatonic jazz standards will all help. This sing-then-play is the best way to learn articulation, which makes a huge difference to how good you sound on brass instruments.
Note that brass instruments need a bit of maintenance, occasional oil and grease, and Youtube is your friendly tutor for these aspects.
With trumpet I’ve been looking at options, including mouthpieces. I think I would pay more for a bigger cup size, at least to begin, as I would rather play more common frequencies with ease rather than struggle with lip mechanics on a smaller cup that would let me play high notes.
Technically I think I would prefer a cornet. But those are harder to find and really I’m not caring all that much. I will make a trumpet sound mellow.
As for scales and melodies, if I may, I think those come fairly naturally to me. I can’t explain it. Once a couple years ago I picked up a bugle and played “Taps” on it perfectly right off the bat. It just made sense to me. Never saw a bugle irl before that.
If you're a natural then you'll progress very quickly - instinctive isn't good for classical but as I only play jazz standards to backing tracks it doesn't matter.
Shepherds crook cornets are common in the UK, Boosey & Hawkes being the usual, and always Blessings or Yamaha on Ebay. Straight cornets are usually US and are halfway to a trumpet. I have learned that I like the older US trumpet sounds, Conns, Olds, etc.
Once you've bought one, you'll buy more!
But more importantly, I would like to update this thread. It’s a flugelhorn that I’m after, not a trumpet. The flugel darn near brings a tear to my eye.
I've been listening to a lot of Jeremy Pelt recently
https://open.spotify.com/album/3uF0eDO6FcdBSJcR4wdwms?si=2hDn_KC0TmqNcj_XYYgfXQ
https://speakerimpedance.co.uk/?act=two_parallel&page=calculator
I don’t even feel remotely bad about this. I’m wildly excited. I’m working on sight reading and piano, relearning guitar, bass mandolin and ukulele to be conscientious about notes and harmony, and now my brass section. My theory has come along these past couple of years and a melodic instrument like this will help all of that plus my ear training. And it’s a flugelhorn! The sound just melts my heart.
Helps, I suppose, that I got a solid deal on an intermediate-level horn, a Bach fh600. If it comes to it (which it won’t), I won’t lose much or any money on it. But mainly I just don’t like “beginner” equipment that is of such questionable quality that it makes people not want to play. I’m a grownup. I’m spending money on nice things for myself and anyone else that I love.
There may be a cornet on the horizon, too.
Middling Yamaha cornets are much easier to find. I can grab a good condition MIJ horn for around $250.
I also came across a Thomann flugel of the same model, FH-600, which I steered clear of for obvious reasons. But I wondered if the folks at Bach had a problem with Thomann, of Harley Benton fame, ripping off their exact model/name.
*insert basically any instrument into this joke format
No gentleman knows how to play banjo.