Recover password. Remembered your password? Back to login. Already have an account? Login here. A Clarinets The A Clarinet is better suited for the advanced and professional players, as it is known to be more complicated to play. It's known to be different to the Bb Clarinet in the way it sounds and the way you play. Some may struggle if you are playing between the A Clarient and the Bb Clarinet but with practice this problem should be resolved. Bb Clarinets This is the most popular and frequently used clarinet and is the most common type of soprano clarinet.
It's popular amongst the younger generation and for beginners. It is used in the Wind Orchestra and for Jazz and Classical music; it produces beautiful harmonies with a unique tone and rang.
The Plastic Clarinets are ideal for children and are easier to hold which is ideal for those smaller hands. Bass clarinet is usually pitched in Bb and regularly performs in orchestras, wind ensembles and concert bands. It's one of the larger clarinets and is quite heavy; for some too heavy to hold in your hand so a carrying strap is often required. The Flute is a reedless wind instrument and produces its sound through the flow of air across an opening.
Flutes are the earliest known instrument and were originally made from wood, stone and clay. They are commonly made of silver, gold or platinum. The flute is available for all levels and abilities. The Flute is played by holding in sideways with both hands and blowing across the mouthpiece hole. The player uses their fingers to change the pitch by opening and closing the holes.
Piccolos and Harmony Flutes The Piccolo is half the size of a Flute and is more suitable for children due to its size. Bassoon This long, narrow woodwind instrument has a double reed. Its wooden tube is doubled back on itself to reduce its height and ends with a bell that points up.
Bassoons play the low notes in the woodwind family. Clarinet A woodwind instrument consisting of a black cylindrical tube that has a mouthpiece with a single reed at one end, and a bell at the other end. The wooden tube has holes covered by metal keys, which are pressed to change the instrument's pitch. Contrabassoon This instrument is also called a double bassoon. Bassoons usually play lower harmonies, but you will sometimes hear their hollow low notes featured in a melody.
You play the bassoon by holding it upright and blowing through the double reed. The air travels down the tube and then makes a u-turn and goes up and out the top. Just like the oboe, you use both hands to press on the keys to open and close the holes and change the pitch. Imagine a longer bassoon with a wider pipe. The contrabassoon is the grandfather of the wind section and is so much larger than a regular bassoon that its tube is doubled over twice to allow the player to hold it.
It takes a lot of breath to make sound come out of such a long pipe! The lone contrabassoon plays the lowest notes in the entire orchestra. Experience a fun and unique video series from the Oregon Symphony designed for pre-K through elementary aged children and their families to experience popular story books. A couple of times every week, enjoy one-minute videos created for you, by your Oregon Symphony musicians. Join the Oregon Symphony for a collective musical celebration of the people who are essential in our lives.
Piccolo A shorter version of the flute is called the piccolo , which means small in Italian. Oboe The oboe is a 2 foot long black cylinder with metal keys covering its holes, and its mouthpiece uses a double reed, which vibrates when you blow through it. English Horn Despite its name, it isn't English and it isn't a horn.
Clarinet The clarinet could easily be mistaken for an oboe, except for the mouthpiece, which uses a single reed. E-flat Clarinet The smaller E-flat clarinet is just like a standard clarinet, but about half the length.
The common element to all these instruments is their use of toneholes to vary the effective length of their air column. If you wish to pursue a more in-depth analysis of woodwind instruments, perhaps for your class project, a unique collection of research materials is maintained here at CCRMA. The Musical Acoustics Research Library MARL is a collection of independent archives or libraries assembled by distinguished groups or individuals in the field of musical acoustics research.
Coltman Archive. Our current understanding of woodwind instrument acoustic behavior owes much to the work of Arthur Benade, John Backus, and John Coltman.
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