A horn is any of a family of musical instruments made of a tube, usually made of metal and often curved in various ways, with one narrow end into which the musician blows, and a wide end from which sound emerges. In horns, unlike some other brass instruments such as the trumpet, the bore gradually increases in width through most of its length—that is to say, it is conical rather than cylindrical. In jazz and popular-music contexts, the word may be used loosely to refer to any wind instrument, and a section of brass or woodwind instruments, or a mixture of the two, is called a horn section in these contexts.
Variations include:
Lur (prehistoric)
Shofar
Roman horns:
Cornu
Buccina
Dung chen
Dord
Sringa
Nyele
Wazza
Alphorn
Cornett
Serpent
Ophicleide
Natural horn
Bugle
Post horn
French horn
Vienna horn
Wagner tuba
Saxhorns, including:
Alto horn (UK: tenor horn), pitched in E
Baritone horn, pitched in B
Valved bugles, including
contrabass bugle
Tuba
Sousaphone
As the name indicates, people originally used to blow on the actual horns of animals before starting to emulate them in metal or other materials. This original usage survives in the shofar (שופר), a ram's horn, which plays an important role in Jewish religious rituals. The genus of animal-horn instruments to which the shofar belongs is called קרן () in Hebrew, in Akkadian, and κέρας () in Greek.
The olifant or oliphant (an abbreviation of the French cor d'olifant/oliphant, "elephant horn") was the name applied in the Middle Ages to ivory hunting or signalling horns made from elephants' tusks. Apparently of Asian origin, they reached Europe from Byzantium in the tenth or eleventh century, and are first mentioned in French literature in the early 12th century. In Europe they came to be symbols of royalty.
From late antiquity there are mentions of "alpine horns", but the earliest secure description of the wooden instrument now called an "alphorn" dates from the sixteenth century.