English: Contrebass de cornet à bouquin. This instrument was labeled in the Paris Conservatoire Museum exhibit as Cornet à bouquin basse. However, musical-instrument historians Sibyl Marcuse and Anthony C. Baines did it should it should be called contrebass. That is because the name bass already has a tradition of being used with the instrument that the British call tenor cornett (which is the same as Italian Cornone and German Basszink).[1][2]
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