Subject: Pianist and French horn player here!
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Posted on: 2015-10-11 23:03:00 UTC

Piano is a lot easier to play if you have long fingers; means you can stretch for some of the more difficult chords. And you'd better hope your fingers aren't slippery when you play, or that's asking for a disaster. :P

I don't know about other players, but for me, I learn my pieces by muscle memory, so if I mess up with my fingering, it can throw me off pretty badly. I've learned to hide my recoveries over the years, but just one slip can be scary.

French horn is played like other brass instruments; you put your mouth on the mouthpiece, purse your lips, and make a raspberry noise. Since the horn has a small mouthpiece, you have to purse your lips more than you would for, say, a trombone.

http://data.yamaha.jp/sdb/local/products/images/8961/12001/8961_12001_1.jpg
http://accentmusicalinstruments.com/accent/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/HR952L.jpg

This here is a nice shint single horn (top) and a double horn (bottom). The double horn has a thumb key, whereas the single horn has a thumb hook to hold the horn. Since the double has an extra key, that means a lot more tubing, and it's consequently a lot heavier than the single horn. Single horns tend to be the go-to instrument for beginning horn players, since the double horn has a lot more key combinations to memorize for the different notes. Not to mention the double horn can be played as either an F horn or a B flat horn, while the single horn is F only.

(Also, random fun fact, the French horn was actually invented in Germany. :P)

There's also a triple horn, which I know combines F, B flat, and alto F into one instrument, but I've never played one myself, so I won't get into discussing that one. :)

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