Both the Oboe and the French horn are both particularly difficult instruments. The fact that an oboist has to make his own reeds doesn't make it harder, but unless he's a good reed maker, he'll be unreliable. Oboe playing depends so much on the quality of the reed that you have to be very good at making them. I can't tell you much about the French horn but I think it's quite hard to place the right note before playing it, the oboe doesn't have this problem.
The oboe is a very difficult instrument to produce a good, musical sound on. "Playing" it is easy. But making it sound the way it's supposed to sound is the hard part, and also why you're considered gifted if you can play it that way.
No, both of them are extremely easy to play ... badly.
I personally like Bierce's definition of an oboe: "An instrument of torture operated by someone with cotton in his ears."
However, they aren't really that different from other woodwinds and brass instruments respectively.
That is an opinion. I cant say that it is the hardest but it does tend to get frustrating.
It's known as one of the hardest instruments to play along with the French horn.
It depends on how much you practice, and what kind of experience you have.
oboe
Woodwind players use a stiffer reed for much the same reason guitar players often user thicker gauge strings: Energy out = energy in. Though they demand 'more' from the musician, the resulting tone is often more robust. Beginning players are typically best served by thinner reeds until they develop a strong embouchure (they have a difficult-enough challenge as it is.) Once the necessary muscles develop, they typically migrate to heavier reeds to achieve improved tone.
In top-tier orchestras you usually 4 oboists, though typically one of them is officially the English Horn player. A typical band or orchestra has two to three oboes. It's usually the number of oboes required by a composer in any given piece. A Haydn symphony may require two oboes (or in some of his symphonies: NONE) while a tone-poem by Richard Strauss may require triple WW or more.
oh yeah......since there are little people that play the french horn, many scholarships are available to them. (ima french horn playa!) :] oh yeah......since there are little people that play the french horn, many scholarships are available to them. (ima french horn playa!) :]
Justin since Justin is a proper name and not of french origin it is pronounced the same
The most common reason given is that the oboe is the most difficult to tune and always is tuned to because is piercing and loud. This reason is actually false. The reason the oboe tunes the orchestra is because when orchestras started to develop during Handel's time, the oboe was the most common instrument in the orchestra. It was easier to tune to the oboes since there was so many of them.
Since in french is NOT the same thing in french its depuis!
Woodwind players use a stiffer reed for much the same reason guitar players often user thicker gauge strings: Energy out = energy in. Though they demand 'more' from the musician, the resulting tone is often more robust. Beginning players are typically best served by thinner reeds until they develop a strong embouchure (they have a difficult-enough challenge as it is.) Once the necessary muscles develop, they typically migrate to heavier reeds to achieve improved tone.
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The French had the place since 1881.
Crickets could eat reeds and algae but, since crickets are not well adapted to aquatic life they typically would not. There are examples of non-aquatic algae (such as lichens) that crickets could eat without getting their feet wet if you care to argue.
It had been a French colony since 1887.
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It is a woodwind instrument because, like other woodwinds, it also uses reeds. Think about a clarinet, for example. Clarinets are woodwinds because when you blow on them, the reed vibrates and makes a sound. Accordions are like having a bunch of different reeds all contained in one instrument. When you press a key down, it opens a reed so that air can flow over it and it can vibrate. Then you have to move the bellows to get air moving over the reed. Since it has reeds, it can be thought of as a woodwind instrument. However, it must be noted that the reeds are usually made of steel, not wood.
It's "omelette" in both English and French, since it's a French word.
The French currency before 2002 was the French franc. Since then it is the Euro.
French GuianaFrench Guiana was a colony of France since 1817. French Guiana can be found in northeast South America. It is called an overseas region of France.
Chinese is certainly widely spoken, but... that's in China. Chinese ( I mean Mandarin, since there are several Chinese languages) isn't of great use if you want to travel the world. Another fact is that is is a really difficult language, while French is quite easy to learn (has the same alphabet, the vocabulary often stems from the same roots - and indeed English has many words drawn from French)