To the best of my knowledge, you can't use a boehm ligature on an oehler Clarinet. Even if you could, I would not recommend it because it could cause some damage to the mouthpiece. I hope this helps.
Bass clarinet is the correct English name. Scores often have the instrument names in other languages but clarinetto basso (Italian), clarinette basse (French) and bassklarinette (German) are pretty obvious. On a lighter note, I once knew a follow who called his bass clarinet Susie, and I've heard the instrument called a variety of colorful names after a particularly difficult passage.
Nobody knows who first introduced the clarinet (which originated as the chalumeau), but the clarinet that is played today was introduced by Johann Christoph Denner. if you have any more clarinet questions, email me at: claireAnet@aol.com.
American born of German, French and Dutch ancestry.
No. He is French, German, Dutch, and Native AmericanNo, his ancestors are Dutch, French, German, and Native American.
They are German so they speak German to each other.
The clarinet came from a popular instrument in Europe called a chalumea. This instrument had only two keys and a single reed. The chalumea range was low. In the 1700s a German instrument maker named Denner is credited to making the clarinet becuse he improved the chalumea by adding three more keys. Then in 1844 two French musicians, Buffet and Klose, used the Boehm flute key system to the clarinet. Doing this made the clarinet we know today.
The Clarinet came from a town in Germany called Nuremburg by Johann Christoph Denner a German woodwind instrument maker.
"German" in French is "Allemand".
German mean " allemand" in french
allemand = German, les allemands = the Germans
French cuisine is obviously famous, varied, and creative. There is a popular joke involving German and French: "paradise is where the mechanics are German, and the cooks are French. Hell is the other way: the mechanics are French and the cooks are German"
German!
Bass clarinet is the correct English name. Scores often have the instrument names in other languages but clarinetto basso (Italian), clarinette basse (French) and bassklarinette (German) are pretty obvious. On a lighter note, I once knew a follow who called his bass clarinet Susie, and I've heard the instrument called a variety of colorful names after a particularly difficult passage.
the German assassin is " l'assassin allemand " in French.
Hello in French is "Bonjour", German is "Hallo", and Dutch is "Hallo" as well.
The clarinet (johan frostily denier)
Nobody knows who first introduced the clarinet (which originated as the chalumeau), but the clarinet that is played today was introduced by Johann Christoph Denner. if you have any more clarinet questions, email me at: claireAnet@aol.com.