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  2. Contrabass saxophone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contrabass_saxophone

    Saxophone ensembles were also popular at this time, and the contrabass saxophone was an eye-catching novelty for the groups that were able to obtain one. By the onset of the Great Depression , the saxophone craze had ended, and the contrabass, already rare, almost disappeared from public view.

  3. J'Élle Stainer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J'Élle_Stainer

    In the 2000s, J'Élle Stainer made contrabass saxophones for the popular large church orchestras of the Christian Congregation in Brazil. In 2010 they produced the first working subcontrabass saxophone, albeit in a more compact form than originally envisaged, more than 160 years after Sax first described it in his 1846 patent. [1]

  4. Subcontrabass saxophone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subcontrabass_saxophone

    Although described in Adolphe Sax's patent in 1846, a practical, playable subcontrabass saxophone did not exist until the 21st century. [2] An oversized saxophone that might have qualified was built as a prop circa 1965; it could produce tones, but its non-functional keywork required assistants to manually open and close the pads, and it was reportedly incapable of playing a simple scale.

  5. Tubax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubax

    The tubax is a modified contrabass saxophone developed in 1999 by the German instrument maker Benedikt Eppelsheim.Although it has the same fingering as the saxophone, Eppelsheim's design reduces the amount of expansion of its conical bore in relation to the length of tubing, resulting in a smaller volume of resonant air column.

  6. Sarrusophone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarrusophone

    The EE♭ contrabass has also been used as an alternative to the EE♭ contrabass saxophone, which due to its large size is impractical in many musical situations, especially marching bands. The English composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji used the contrabass sarrusophone in various of his orchestral works.

  7. Contrabass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contrabass

    Contrabass (from Italian: contrabbasso) refers to several musical instruments of very low pitch—generally one octave below bass register instruments. While the term most commonly refers to the double bass (which is the bass instrument in the orchestral string family, tuned lower than the cello), many other instruments in the contrabass register exist.

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