yes, there are different wraps, different bores, different metals, different bell sizes, single, double and triple horns, and all horns have a different feel to them
About 12 feet for the single French Horn, although the double horn and some different models could have slight variations.
There is the French Horn and a Bb Horn.
There is the French Horn and a Bb Horn.
Don't. Always play a horn before you buy it, every single horn is different.
The French horn is a brass instrument with a curved shape and a flared bell, while the English horn is a woodwind instrument with a double reed and a pear-shaped bell. They produce different sounds and are used in different types of music.
The reason why the french horn is called a french horn is because, even if it started to develop in Germany it was completed in France, heinz the name French Horn
The French horn is a brass.
No, they're entirely different. The French horn's range is more of an alto or even soprano. Baritones are pitched considerably lower... at least an octave, and generally more like an octave and a half.
The French horn as it is known in America is actually the German version of the horn. The variation between the two has to do with the valves. Most horns in America use the German rotary valves, while some variations of horn such as the Vienna horn use the real French system of piston valves. The rotary valves shut off air by spinning and the piston valves move up and down.
The French horn. Though a brass instrument it most often sits with the woodwinds.
A horn is 'une corne' (fem.) in French.
ang french horn ay./.........