Syncrat - An article website that focuses on Music, Dating & Relationships and Business & Money. Learn about music, improve your dating or learn to make your money go further.

Oboe

The Oboe is a musical instrument of the woodwind family. It is a descendant of the shawm. In the 17th century Jean Hotteterre and Michel Danican Philidor modified the shawm, so that the new oboe had a narrower bore and a reed which is held by the player's lips near the end. Henry Purcell was the first composer to specifically score for it. Careful manipulation of pressure on the reed allows the player to express a huge range of emotions and moods. A musician who plays the oboe is sometimes called an Oboist.

The oboe is most commonly made from grenadilla (or African blackwood), but some manufacturers also make oboes out of high-quality plastic resin. The oboe has an extremely narrow conical bore, and double reed mouthpiece consisting of two thin blades of cane tied together on a small-diameter metal tube. This setup leads to overblowing at the octave (compared to the clarinet, which overblows a twelfth). The commonly accepted range for the oboe extends from Bb3 to A6, nearly three octaves. Together with the flute and recorder it is one of the oldest woodwind instruments.

Compared to woodwind instruments such as the flute or clarinet, the oboe is very difficult to play and produce a good sound on. Amateur players often produce an unpleasant, out-of-tune strident tone that blends badly with other instruments. It was the main melody instrument in military bands before it was ousted by the clarinet.

Because the oboe has a very penetrating tone which can be heard through other sounds on the concert platform, it is widely called upon to set the pitch for orchestras.

The oboe has several sibling instruments. The most widely known today is the cor anglais (English Horn), which evolved from the Baroque oboe da caccia. Both are pitched a perfect fifth lower than the standard oboe. The oboe d'amore, also popular during the Baroque period, is pitched a minor third lower than the oboe. Johann Sebastian Bach used the oboe d'amore extensively. Even less common is the baritone or bass oboe, which sounds an octave lower than the regular oboe. Delius and Holst both scored for it, but today it is almost a museum piece. Instead, the more powerful heckelphone is used.

Oboe image

Tags: , ,

Related Items:

Comments / Replies

Add Comment / Reply

The address of your website or social networking page. Make sure that you include http://
You can not use HTML in this field. If you wish to add a URL, write the full URL including http://
 

This website follows the ideas of the No Nofollow, I Follow, DoFollow, No-NoFollow movement. Leave a helpful comment and you will get a link without NoFollow (U Comment, I Follow).

Web Hosting

If you are looking for web hosting then I would recommend my current web host. They have been good to me, suiting both beginners and advanced users.

Advertising

Using a transparent and trusted advertising network always helps to generate more revenue on a website. One of the networks I use achieves this more than the others.

Donations

If you would like to help pay the web hosting bill for this site, you can donate through my host

Your Ad Here

Web Hosting

If you are looking for web hosting then I would recommend my current web host. They have been good to me, suiting both beginners and advanced users.

Advertising

Using a transparent and trusted advertising network always helps to generate more revenue on a website. One of the networks I use achieves this more than the others.

Donations

If you would like to help pay the web hosting bill for this site, you can donate through my host