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History of the Clarinet: From past to present

Clarinets have been around for quite a long time, although not in their present form. The history of the clarinet goes as far back as the late 1600s, when an instrument known as a chalumeau was in occasional use in orchestras. The chalumeau is commonly considered to be a forerunner of our modern clarinet, although it bore little resemblance to the ones we play today.

The chalumeau was a cane pipe measuring about 20cm (about 9 inches) long. It had seven holes, including a thumb hole, and a range of not much more than an octave. The name chalumeau suggests a French origin for this little instrument. But it was Johann Denner, a leading German woodwind maker, who was credited with improving it, and in doing so inventing the early clarinet. Sometime around 1700, Denner added two keys to the chalumeau, expanding its range by giving it an upper register. He also may have given it a separate mouthpiece and reed.

The history of the clarinet continued to develop as two-keyed clarinets underwent a variety of improvements and were introduced to France and England. By about 1750, the clarinet body had taken the basic shape we see today, but the key work continued to evolve. In about 1780, five keys were being used. And by 1820 or 1830, clarinets were commonly in use that had 12 or 13 keys. By 1850 or so Boehm system key work had been introduced. This system, based on the key work then being used on the flute, managed to eliminated some very difficult fingerings. It is the system most commonly used today although Albert fingering systems are also still in use, primarily in Europe. In North America, it is rare to see a clarinet that does not use Boehm key work.

In the mid to late 1700s, composers had begun writing musical pieces that included, or were specifically written for, clarinets. The instrument became much more prominent in the 1800's, and large volumes of music were written for it in the early 1900's.

We will likely see continued minor changes, although it will probably happen very slowly, over decades. Today, there are minor variations in different models. Manufacturers use slightly different bore diameters and shapes, and occasionally additional keys. Most modern clarinets have 17 or 18 keys.

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Comments / Replies

  • mutoku Says:
    19 February, 2007 at 6:02 am

    Thanks for the info!!
    it helped!^-^

  • brittney Says:
    12 September, 2007 at 6:52 am

    i have to do a clarinet project in music and this info really really help me thanks

  • kmit Says:
    21 October, 2007 at 4:08 am

    this info got me an a+ thanks so much

  • Tom Pinder Says:
    2 November, 2007 at 9:50 am

    this can't be true Johann Christoph Denner created the clarinet by improving the chalumeau with the help of his son

  • lexiiiii Says:
    22 January, 2008 at 3:45 pm

    wow so intresting !!!

  • Erin Says:
    5 February, 2008 at 6:05 pm

    I have to do a project on the clarinet for music class and this info was incredibly helpful! ^^ thanks!

  • cheyanne Says:
    21 February, 2008 at 8:58 pm

    thanx for the info it helped because i had to do a report on the clarinet and it really helped!!!!!!!! thanx

  • agirl Says:
    29 July, 2008 at 5:37 pm

    haha im doing a report on the history of the clarinet (woot) and this helped like TOOOOONNNNNSSS = ) =) thanks

  • sarah bear Says:
    3 September, 2008 at 5:28 pm

    OMG!!! THANKYOU SOOOOO MUCH 4 HELPING ME ON MY CLARINET PROJECT!

    UR A LEGEND!

    ILY! LOL

  • Don T. Says:
    23 October, 2008 at 6:44 pm

    Did everyone use this amazing info just for a project? I was able to find out much from this incredible source, I just wanted to find out the origin of my instrument.

  • Hubert Says:
    2 March, 2009 at 4:05 pm

    Thanks for making this article.
    @Tom Pinder
    That's what it says.

  • Jillian Quigley Says:
    14 March, 2010 at 9:26 am

    My band teacher is making us do this project on the history of our instrument..... boring... and this helped me sooooo much! thanx.... :)

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