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- Heckelphone - Wikipedia
The heckelphone is a double reed instrument of the oboe family, but with a wider bore and hence a heavier and more penetrating tone It is pitched an octave below the oboe and furnished with an additional semitone taking its range down to A
- All the heckelphones ever made
Every country shown in the legend and unlabelled in the figure have had one heckelphone delivery recorded Frederick's list covers only instruments completed between 1904 and 2010, Hurd Howe's list ends at 2002, and Reiter's list goes up to 2012
- Heckelphone | Woodwind, Double-Reed, Oboe-Like | Britannica
heckelphone, double-reed woodwind instrument resembling the baritone oboe It was perfected by Wilhelm Heckel in 1904 as a result of a request from the composer Richard Wagner about 20 years earlier for a low-register instrument combining the qualities of the oboe and the alphorn
- What the heck is a heckelphone? | School of Music and Dance
According to Steve, the heckelphone is a hybrid between those two instruments in several ways Its range is exactly between the bassoon and oboe The fingerings are like that of an oboe, and it is made from maple, which is the same as the bassoon
- Heckelphone – Wilhelm Heckel GmbH
The heckelphone is one octave lower in tone than the oboe and has a powerful and lush-sonorous, yet sweet and lovely sound The sound of the heckelphone is often described as giving the impression of hearing a human voice
- The Heckelphone: A Rare, Intriguing and Surprisingly Versatile Member . . .
The heckelphone is a double reed instrument invented by Wilhelm Heckel and his sons at the turn of the last century, inspired by Richard Wagner and prominently used by Richard Strauss, Frederik Delius and a surprising number of other composers
- HECKELPHONE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of HECKELPHONE is a woodwind instrument of the oboe family pitched an octave below the normal oboe
- Heckelphone
A relative of the oboe, the heckelphone is a double reed instrument invented in the early 1900s by German instrument maker Wilhelm Heckel It was intended to fill the gap between the cor anglais (English horn) and the bassoon
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