enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Clarinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarinet

    The clarinet is widely used as a solo instrument. The clarinet evolved later than other orchestral woodwind instruments, leaving solo repertoire from the Classical period onward, but few works from the Baroque era. Many clarinet concertos and clarinet sonatas have been written to showcase the instrument, for example those by Mozart and Weber. [95]

  3. Michael Lowenstern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Lowenstern

    Michael Lowenstern (born August 23, 1968) is an American musician, composer and educator, specializing in bass clarinet.He is well known for his YouTube channel Earspasm [1] and for his many recordings featuring the bass clarinet as a solo instrument in classical, jazz, and electronica formats.

  4. Saxonette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saxonette

    In fact, some manufacturers sold instruments having both clarinet- and saxonette-style barrels and bells. [citation needed] The curvature of the bell has little effect on the sound of the instrument. In particular, very few notes on a woodwind instrument vent through the bell, so its effect on most notes is negligible.

  5. Clarinet family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarinet_family

    The clarinet family is a woodwind instrument family of various sizes and types of clarinets, including the common soprano clarinet in B♭ and A, bass clarinet, and sopranino E♭ clarinet. Clarinets that aren't the standard B♭ or A clarinets are sometimes known as harmony clarinets.

  6. Boehm system (clarinet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boehm_system_(clarinet)

    The clarinet was an inelegant instrument in the early 19th century despite the eight keys it had acquired. In 1812, Iwan Müller remodeled the instrument and raised the number of keys to 13. Other makers made small improvements to Müller's design, but the Boehm system clarinet represented the first complete redesign of the key system after ...

  7. Schwenk & Seggelke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwenk_&_Seggelke

    All instruments are individually configurable in terms of equipment (bore, type of wood, mechanical equipment, and their finishing). [6] There are also replicas of 10 historical instruments in different moods, of which two models are offered in B ♭ and A. [ 7 ] Not in the program: the alto clarinet in E flat (looks similar to a basset horn ...

  8. Reform Boehm system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reform_Boehm_system

    Schmidt named the instrument the "Reform Boehm clarinet". In the second half of the 1940s, master clarinet maker Fritz Wurlitzer, based in Erlbach, [a] Vogtland / Saxony, built a clarinet with Schmidt's instructions. [1] They had collaborated earlier in producing the Schmidt-Kolbe clarinet, a variant of the German clarinet. [2]

  9. Silva-Bet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silva-Bet

    The Silva-Bet, which debuted in 1925, is generally acknowledged to have been the first successful metal clarinet. [1] [2] Shortly after the appearance of the Silva-Bet, other woodwind makers entered the metal clarinet market, including Selmer Paris in 1927 [3] with their Master Model as well as American companies Buescher with their True Tone model and H. N. White with the Silver King.