Helicon (instrument)
The helicon is a brass musical instrument in the tuba family. Most are B basses, but they are also built in E or F, and occasionally in tenor or even smaller sizes.
The helicon has a wide, roughly-circular shape designed to be worn around the player's body, with the tubing wrapped under one arm and the bell resting on the opposite shoulder.
The instrument is very popular in Central and Eastern Europe and is a common instrument for a military band and a mounted band. It is used by Ed Neuhauser of the traditional folk band Bellowhead.
The range of the B helicon is two octaves below that of a B cornet, thus similar to that of the more common B bass tuba.
The sousaphone is a specialized version of the helicon. The first sousaphone, a non-production prototype made by J. W. Pepper & Son, Inc., had an upright bell, hence the nickname "rain catcher" because of its shape. Later production versions differ primarily in two ways: a bell shaped to face forward with a larger flare and a bell diameter of, and a "goose-neck" leadpipe which offers greater adjustability of mouthpiece position at the expense of tone quality.
History
The helicon is derived from the saxhorn or the saxtuba. Helicons were first used in the 1860s in cavalry and artillery mounted bands, then later used in military marching bands.Helicon family
The Slovenian composer Igor Krivokapič invented a new family of helicons which were produced by the German manufacturer Melton:- Soprano in E
- Alto in B
- Tenor in E
- Baritone in B
- Bass in F
- Contrabass in BB