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  2. Oboe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oboe

    This oboe was developed further in the 19th century by the Triébert family of Paris. Using the Boehm flute as a source of ideas for key work, Guillaume Triébert and his sons, Charles and Frederic, devised a series of increasingly complex yet functional key systems. A variant form using large tone holes, the Boehm system oboe, was never in ...

  3. Free Play: Improvisation in Life and Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Play:_Improvisation...

    Free Play can be described as the creative activity of spontaneous free improvisation, by children, artists, and people all around the world. According to Stephen Nachmanovitch, free play is more than improvisation. It runs deeper than our activities involving music and art. It is the essence of our being, something we were born with then ...

  4. Oboe d'amore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oboe_d'amore

    The oboe d'amore was invented in the eighteenth century and was first used by Christoph Graupner in his cantata Wie wunderbar ist Gottes Güt (1717). Johann Sebastian Bach wrote many pieces—a concerto, many of his cantatas, and the Et in Spiritum sanctum movement of his Mass in B minor—for the instrument.

  5. Bass oboe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_oboe

    The bass oboe or baritone oboe is a double reed instrument in the woodwind family. It is essentially twice the size of a regular (soprano) oboe so it sounds an octave lower; it has a deep, full tone somewhat akin to that of its higher-pitched cousin, the English horn. The bass oboe is notated in the treble clef, sounding one octave lower than ...

  6. Piston (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piston_(music)

    The bore is similar to that of a baroque or classical oboe. The pistoñ uses a fairly stiff reed based on cane of an approximate diameter of 12mm, very similar in size to those of the baritone oboe (approximately 9 mm in width at the tip), English horn and baroque oboe. Unlike these other oboes, however, the pistoñ reed's brass staple ...

  7. Register key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Register_key

    The modern oboe has two octave keys, sometimes three, often interconnected, the one for E5 to G#5 near the left thumb, and the one for A5 to C6 to the right of and above the front keys, depressed by the edge of the left index finger. Oboes are now available with automatic octaves.

  8. Contrabass oboe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contrabass_oboe

    The contrabass oboe is a double reed woodwind instrument in the key of C or F, sounding two octaves or an octave and a fifth (respectively) lower than the standard oboe.

  9. Wiener oboe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiener_Oboe

    It has a wider internal bore, shorter and broader reed and a different fingering schema than the Conservatoire oboe. In their definitive historical work The Oboe, Geoffrey Burgess and Bruce Haynes write (page 212) "The differences are most clearly marked in the middle register, which is reedier and more pungent, and the upper register, which is ...

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