A hornist or a horn player
a banana that play the french horn dur
French Horn in F plays a G
Hornists are what French horn players are called. The French horn is a true horn. It's a member of the brass instrument family.The term 'hornist' also is applied to players of basset and English horns. But basset and English horns aren't true horns. They aren't members of the brass instrument family. Instead, they're woodwinds.Players of the Basset horn more rightly may be called clarinettists. The basset horn really is a tenor clarinet. Players of the English horn may be called oboists. The English horn really is an alto oboe.
Some people call it the F Horn or just a Horn. Also 'como'.
I think it is the french horn, when the New England Brass Band comes to my school, the lady that plays the french horn sticks her hand in the horn.
Either men or women can play the French Horn, and both do. There is nothing about a person's gender that makes them a better or worse French Horn player (that goes for all musical instruments).
An alphornist is a person who plays the alphorn - a long, curved horn used by mountain-dwellers in the alps, originally to call cattle but now as a musical instrument.
Yes, Vanessa Williams plays the Violin, she also plays the French horn and piano
A baritonist is a person who plays the baritone saxophone or the baritone horn.
A baritone hornist is a person who plays the baritone horn.
A basset hornist is a person who plays the basset horn.
The correct name for the instrument is simply the horn, or F horn, or horn in F. That F refers to the key in which it plays. People erroneously thought the F stood for French, and the name stuck. There was something unsatisfying about calling an instrument the horn without adding a modifier to the name.