A crumhorn
A Crumhorn is a crook shaped instrumentCrumhorn comes from the German krumhorn (krummhorn, krumphorn), which means curved horn.The reed is a double reed and looks similar to an oboe or bassoon, the leads down to a pipe, curved at the end into a half circle.http://www.courtlymusicunlimited.com/HistoricWinds/Crumhorn-1.html
Double reed instruments include:BassoonOboeEnglish HornBagpipes (An Aerophone, which has a double reed, but that reed never touches your mouth.)Crumhorn (A Capped Reed instrument,which is very similar to an aerophone, but an aerophone is fed air through bags of air; a capped reed you play like a woodwind or brass, where you blow into it.)
A bagpipe chanter. This is a practice instrument for playing bagpipes without having to stand to play and to supply air to the bags while learning new music or while learning the instrument.
There is the Saxophone reed and the Clarinet reed
A crumhorn
1960
A Crumhorn is a crook shaped instrumentCrumhorn comes from the German krumhorn (krummhorn, krumphorn), which means curved horn.The reed is a double reed and looks similar to an oboe or bassoon, the leads down to a pipe, curved at the end into a half circle.http://www.courtlymusicunlimited.com/HistoricWinds/Crumhorn-1.html
Double reed instruments include:BassoonOboeEnglish HornBagpipes (An Aerophone, which has a double reed, but that reed never touches your mouth.)Crumhorn (A Capped Reed instrument,which is very similar to an aerophone, but an aerophone is fed air through bags of air; a capped reed you play like a woodwind or brass, where you blow into it.)
The crumhorn, an instrument similar to the oboe but with a curved tube and a cap covering the reeds, is used in European music from the early fifteenth to the middle seventeenth centuries. It is still being made today for that purpose.
A bagpipe chanter. This is a practice instrument for playing bagpipes without having to stand to play and to supply air to the bags while learning new music or while learning the instrument.
Perhaps the crumhorn, racket, lute, pipes ,drum etc.
The answer is crumhorn. Have a look at www.earlymusicshop.com for more details
There is the Saxophone reed and the Clarinet reed
The Clarinet has a reed in the mouthpiece. It is the reed that vibrates.
Strings· Violin · Viol· Lute· Guitar· Hurdy gurdy· HarpWoodwinds· Cornamuse · Cromorne· Crumhorn· Rauschpfeife· Recorder· Shawm
a Flute does not have a reed so it's neither a single or double reed instrument.