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- Oboe - Wikipedia
The least common of all are the musette (also called oboe musette or piccolo oboe), the sopranino member of the family (it is usually pitched in E ♭ or F above the oboe), and the contrabass oboe (typically pitched in C, two octaves deeper than the standard oboe)
- Oboe | Definition, History, Facts | Britannica
Oboe, treble woodwind instrument with a conical bore and double reed Though used chiefly as an orchestral instrument, it also has a considerable solo repertoire The oboe proper was the mid-17th-century invention of two French court musicians, Jacques Hotteterre and Michel Philidor
- 4 Different Types of Oboes - MusicalHow
Although the Baroque Oboe exists and is still in use today, it’s considered to be the predecessor of the modern oboe It’s the most simplistic of the instruments as well, with only three keys along its body
- Oboe: the rich, soulful instrument that can give you playful . . .
Read on for our insider's guide to this soulful woodwind instrument What is the oboe? The oboe is a woodwind instrument with a conical bore (a cone-like tube), metal keys, a flared bell and a double reed, which vibrates when the player blows through it
- Oboe History
Oboe d'amore (d'amour) - This instrument was first used by Christoph Graupher and frequently thereafter by J S Bach and G P Telemann However, it fell out of use until the 19th century when composers such as Strauss and Debussy revived it
- The Story of the Birth of the Oboe - Yamaha Corporation
Although the precise year when the oboe was invented is unknown, it is said to have originated sometime around the mid 17th century in France Of course, double-reed wind instruments such as the reed flute were in use in Europe even before then
- History of the Oboe - The Instrument Place
How well do you know the history of the Oboe? Learn about the most influential innovators players of this instrument!
- Woodwinds | The Oboe Family - Timbre and Orchestration Resource
The oboe, in the hands of an advanced player, is capable of playing fast passagework with a facility that rivals the flute, executing particularly quick single-tongued articulation Double- and triple-tonguing are not common on the oboe
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