- For other meanings of oboe see Oboe (disambiguation).
The oboe is a double reed musical instrument of the woodwind family. The word "oboe" is derived from hautbois, the name of the instrument in French (meaning "high wood"). A musician who plays the oboe is called an oboist. Careful manipulation of embouchure and air pressure allows the player to express a large timbral and dynamic range.
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Contents
- 1 The instrument
- 1.1 Baroque oboe
- 1.2 The Classical oboe
- 1.3 Modern oboe
- 2 Other members of the oboe family
- 3 Classical works featuring the oboe
- 4 The oboe in non-classical genres
- 4.1 Traditional and folk music
- 4.2 Jazz
- 4.3 Other oboists performing in non-classical genres
- 5 Famous oboists
- 6 Fictional oboist
- 7 Oboe manufacturers
- 8 Notes
- 9 External links
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The instrument
In comparison to other modern woodwind instruments, the oboe has a very clear and somewhat piercing tone, because it expresses a large range of harmonics. [1] Its uniquely penetrating timbre gives it the ability to be audible over other instruments in large ensembles, making it easily heard for tuning. Orchestras will usually tune by by listening to the oboe play a concert A. Setting the pitch of the oboe is achieved by changing the position of the reed in the instrument, or by permanently altering the scrape of the reed itself. Subtle changes in pitch are also possible by adjusting the embouchure.
Beginners often produce a nasal, often out-of-tune, and strident tone that is difficult to blend with other instruments, but an advanced oboist can produce a rich, warm, and beautiful tone. It is pitched in C.
Baroque oboe
Baroque Oboe, Stanesby Copy
The baroque oboe first appeared in French courts under Jean-Baptiste Lully in the late 17th century, where it was called hautbois. It was developed from the shawm, an instrument widely used in the Medieval and Renaissance periods, but considered too raucous for Baroque music. Musician and instrument maker Jacques Hotteterre was responsible for many of the new instrument's early developments, though it quickly spread to other parts of Europe (including England, where it was called "hautboy"). It was the main melody instrument in early military bands until ousted by the clarinet.
Hautboys were generally made from boxwood and had three keys; the great and two side keys. (The side key was often doubled to facilitate use of either the right or left hand on the bottom holes) In order to produce higher pitches the player had to "overblow," or increase the air stream to cause a jump in the harmonic series. Notable oboe-makers of the period are the German Denner and the English Stanesby Sr. and Jr. The range for the Baroque oboe comfortably extends from C4 to D6. With the resurgence of interest in early music in the mid 1960s, a few makers began producing copies to specifications from surviving historical instruments.
The Classical oboe
In the classical period, the oboe became outfitted with several keys, among them the G♯-key and eventually the octave-key, which allowed the player to play in the higher ranges without excessive overblowing of the instrument. The range for the Classical oboe extends from C4 to F6.
Modern oboe
The oboe was further developed in the 19th century by the Triebert family of Paris. Using the Boehm flute as a source of ideas for key work, Guillaume Triebert and his sons Charles and Frederic devised a series of increasingly complex yet functional key systems. A variant form using large tone holes; the Boehm system oboe, was never popular for orchestral use, but was used in military bands in Europe into the 20th century. F. Lorée of Paris developed the modern oboe further. Minor improvements to the bore and key work have continued through the 20th century, but there has been no fundamental change to the character of the instrument for several decades. 21st century oboes are louder and often have more even scales than their equivalents of a century ago. [2].
The modern oboe is most commonly made from grenadilla (or African blackwood), though some manufacturers also make oboes out of other members of the dalbergia family of wood (cocobolo, rosewood, violetwood), or high-quality plastic resin. The oboe has an extremely narrow conical bore. It does not have a mouthpiece like the clarinet or saxophone; instead it has a double-reed consisting of two thin blades of cane tied together on a small-diameter metal tube (staple). The reed is held between the lips. The commonly accepted range for the oboe extends from B♭3 to about G6, over two and a half octaves, though its common tessitura lies from C4 to E♭6.
The modern oboe has more than 20 keys which are usually silver-plated or occasionally gold-plated. The oboe is fingered similarly to the saxophone. The modern oboe mechanism is mainly of two types: (a) the French conservatoire system and (b) the English thumbplate system. There is also a combination system where the French system has a thumbplate added, and also a German system involving fully automatic octaves.
In Vienna, a unique oboe has been preserved with its bore and tonal characteristics remaining unchanged in use to the present day. This Akademiemodel oboe, invented in the early 20th century by Hermann Zuleger, is now made by a select few makers, notably Guntram Wolf and Yamaha. Apart from its use in the major Viennese orchestras, which continue to exploit the Akademiemodel's unique color, it is not used.
Other members of the oboe family
The oboe has several siblings. The most widely known today is the cor anglais, or English horn, the tenor (or alto) member of the family. A transposing instrument, it is pitched in F, a perfect fifth lower than the standard oboe. The oboe d'amore, the alto (or mezzo soprano) member of the family, is pitched in A, a minor third lower than the oboe. J.S. Bach used both the oboe d'amore as well as the taille and oboe da caccia, Baroque antecedents of the cor anglais, extensively. Even less common is the bass oboe (also called baritone oboe), which sounds one octave lower than the regular oboe. Delius and Holst both scored for it. Similar to the bass oboe is the more powerful heckelphone, which has a wider bore and larger tone than the bass oboe. Only 165 heckelphones have ever been made, and competent players are hard to find [3]. The least common of all is the musette (also called oboe musette or piccolo oboe), the sopranino member of the family; it is usually pitched in E-flat or F above the standard oboe.
Keyless folk versions of the oboe (most descended from the shawm) are found throughout Europe. These include the musette (France) and bombarde (Brittany), the piffero and ciaramella (Italy), and the xirimia (Spain). Many of these are played in tandem with local forms of bagpipe. Similar oboe-like instruments, most believed to derive from Middle Eastern models, are also found throughout Asia as well as in North Africa.
Classical works featuring the oboe
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Oboe Concerto in C major, Quartet in F major
- Antonio Vivaldi, Oboe Concerti
- Johann Sebastian Bach, Brandenburg Concertos nos. 1 and 2, Concerto for Violin and oboe, lost oboe concerti, numerous oboe obbligato lines in the sacred and secular cantatas
- Tomaso Albinoni, Oboe (and two oboe) Concerti
- George Frideric Handel, The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba, Oboe Concerti and Sonatas
- Georg Philipp Telemann, Oboe Concerti and Sonatas
- Richard Strauss, Oboe Concerto
- Joseph Haydn (spurious), Oboe Concerto in C major
- Vincenzo Bellini, Concerto in E♭ major (arranged)
- Luciano Berio, Sequenza VII
- Domenico Cimarosa, Oboe Concerto in C major (arranged)
- Francis Poulenc, Oboe Sonata
- Benjamin Britten, Six Metamorphoses after Ovid, Temporal Variations
- Robert Schumann, Three Romances for Oboe or Violin
- Carl Nielsen, Two Fantasy Pieces for Oboe and Piano
- Alessandro Marcello, Concerto in D minor
- Ralph Vaughan Williams, Concerto for Oboe and Strings, Ten Blake Songs for oboe and tenor
- Rutland Boughton, Oboe Quartet
Oboist Albrecht Mayer preparing reeds for use. Oboists scrape their own reeds to achieve the desired tone and response
The oboe in non-classical genres
While the oboe is rarely used in musical genres other than Western classical, there have been a few notable exceptions.
Traditional and folk music
Although keyless folk oboes are still used in many European folk music traditions, the modern oboe has been little used in folk music. One exception was the late Derek Bell, harpist for the Irish group Chieftains, who used the instrument in some performances and recordings. The U.S. contra dance band Wild Asparagus, based in western Massachusetts, also uses the oboe, played by David Cantieni. REM, a rock band from Athens, GA features the oboe in several tracks of their album Out of Time, most notably as the lead melodic instrument on the wordless song "Endgame."
Jazz
Although the oboe has never been featured prominently in jazz music, some early bands, most notably that of Paul Whiteman, included it for coloristic purposes. The multi-instrumentalist Garvin Bushell (1902-1991) played the oboe in jazz bands as early as 1924 and used the instrument throughout his career, eventually recording with John Coltrane in 1961.[1] Though primarily a tenor saxophone player, Yusef Lateef was among the first (in 1963) to use the oboe as a solo instrument in modern jazz performances and recordings. The 1980s saw an increasing number of oboists try their hand at non-classical work, and many players of note have recorded and performed alternative music on oboe.
Other oboists performing in non-classical genres
- Marshall Allen (with Sun Ra Arkestra), jazz, free jazz
- Kyle Bruckmann, free improvisation
- Garvin Bushell, jazz
- Joseph Celli, free improvisation, contemporary classical music
- Brian Charles
- Gene Cipriano
- Lindsay Cooper, art rock
- Jean-Luc Fillon, jazz
- Caroline Glass, indie rock
- Robbie Lynn Hunsinger
- Joseph Jarman, jazz, free jazz
- Karl Jenkins
- Rahsaan Roland Kirk
- Marta Konicek
- Yusef Lateef, jazz
- Caris Liebman
- Andy Mackay (with Roxy Music), art rock
- Charlie Mariano
- Paul McCandless (with Paul Winter Consort and Oregon), jazz
- Makanda Ken McIntyre, jazz
- Janey Miller (with New Noise)
- Mitch Miller
- Roscoe Mitchell, jazz, free jazz
- Manuel Munzlinger
- Romeo Penque
- Dewey Redman, jazz
- Don Redman, jazz
- Nancy Rumbel easy listening
- Brenda Schumann-Post world, jazz
- Matt Sullivan
- Sufjan Stevens, indie rock
Famous oboists
See this list of oboists.
Fictional oboist
- Tess Bagthorpe (in the Bagthorpe Saga by Helen Cresswell)
Oboe manufacturers
A majority of professional oboists in the United States favor instruments made by the French company F. Lorée. Following is a list of the major oboe manufacturers.
- Buffet
- Cabart ( A Division of F. Lorée )
- Covey
- Fossati
- Fox
- Frank
- Howarth
- A. Laubin
- F. Lorée
- Marigaux
- Mönnig
- Patricola
- Rigoutat
- Selmer
- Yamaha
Notes
- ^ This is in contrast to the clarinet, whose tone emphasizes the odd-numbered harmonics, giving it a more mellow timbre. The clarinet emphasizes these odd-numbered harmonics because its nearly cylindrical bore and pressure-controlled reed make it behave approximately like an ideal closed cylindrical pipe, unlike the oboe which behaves approximately like a conical pipe.
- ^ See: Robert Howe. "The Boehm Oboe and its Role in the Development of the Modern Oboe". Galpin Society Journal, 2003.
- ^ See: Robert Howe and Peter Hurd. "The Heckelphone at 100". Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society, 2004.
External links
- Bruce Haynes: Music for oboe Online bibliography of literature for oboe written between 1650 and 1800.
- Experiments in Jazz Oboe by Alison Wilson (archive link, was dead)
- The All Oboe Page
- oboeinsight
- OboeSpace: Oboe information
- Oboists Online
- ASU Oboe Homepage
- Oboes for Idgets
- Russian Oboe Page
- Oboe fingering guide
- A site for oboe reed customers to share information
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oboe"
Categories: Woodwind instruments | Oboes | Oboists |
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