you blow in the double reed, they vibrate, which creates sound, the air travels through the instrument and creates different notes/pitches based on the keys that are pressed down
This is an oboe. The wonders of google.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
There is the heckelphone, the bass oboe, the cor anglais, the oboe d'amore, the regular oboe, and the piccolo oboe. Maybe there are others.
there was the shawm (renessance oboe) and the baroque oboe
The English horn, Oboe d' amore ,Piccolo oboe ,Oboe da caccia ,Hecklphone, Contrabass oboe.
Bagpipes. Honk!
This is an oboe. The wonders of google.
The Oboe is in the woodwind family.
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.
There is the heckelphone, the bass oboe, the cor anglais, the oboe d'amore, the regular oboe, and the piccolo oboe. Maybe there are others.
there was the shawm (renessance oboe) and the baroque oboe
The English horn, Oboe d' amore ,Piccolo oboe ,Oboe da caccia ,Hecklphone, Contrabass oboe.
The oboe's mouthpiece is the reed at the top that you take out and put in before playing. This reed makes it a double-reed instrument because of the two pieces of bamboo that form the majority of the reed.
The oboe is in the key of C. When an oboe plays its A, it is 440Hz.
If they are his oboe concertos, then yes, but some of them may be transcribed for oboe.
It does. They are; the Piccolo Oboe (Oboe Musette) the Oboe (including various versions of today's Oboe, including different Baroque, Classical, and Romantic models) the Oboe d'amore the Oboe da Caccia also known as 'taille de hautbois' the English Horn (Cor Anglais or Cor Angle) the Bass (or baritone) Oboe the Contra-Bass Oboe the Heckelphone
Oboe :)