The mouthpiece of a woodwind instrument is the part of the instrument which is placed partly in the player's mouth. Single-reed instruments have mouthpieces while exposed double-reed instruments and open flutes do not have mouthpieces. The oboe and the bassoon are two instruments that have a double reed.
The single-reed and double-reed, that's if you're talking about woodwind instruments.
The reed is the wooden piece that's used to create a sound on a woodwind instrument. Normally, only one reed is used, and it is held against a plastic piece at the top of the instrument. However, in double reed instruments, there are two reeds that are tied together. When you blow air between these reeds, they both vibrate, producing a timbre distinct to double reed instruments.
The Oboe and the English Horn are two double reed instruments.
The oboe is known as a double reeded instrument but this is a red herring as the SINGLE reed is made from one piece of cane folded over. The oboe makes a sound my air causing the two reed sides to vibrate against one another. This is different from a single reeded instrument like a clarinet where the reeed vibrates against the mouthpiece.
The mouthpiece of a woodwind instrument is the part of the instrument which is placed partly in the player's mouth. Single-reed instruments have mouthpieces while exposed double-reed instruments and open flutes do not have mouthpieces. The oboe and the bassoon are two instruments that have a double reed.
The oboe is a reed instrument, but instead of having one bit of cane, it has two, one on top of the other.
You may be referring to a double-reed instrument. An example would be an oboe, or a bassoon, or an English horn. They are of the double-reed family because their reeds consist of two very thin pieces of cane, bound together by a film and twine. When played, the two pieces vibrate against each other, whereas a single-reed instrument, like the clarinet, vibrates against the mouthpiece.
The single-reed and double-reed, that's if you're talking about woodwind instruments.
Flue, piccolo, oboe, clarinet, saxophone, bassoon, bagpipes, recorder...Divided into two groups, flutes and reed instruments.
The reed is the wooden piece that's used to create a sound on a woodwind instrument. Normally, only one reed is used, and it is held against a plastic piece at the top of the instrument. However, in double reed instruments, there are two reeds that are tied together. When you blow air between these reeds, they both vibrate, producing a timbre distinct to double reed instruments.
Double and single reeds are practically the same except that the fact that a double reed is two single ones conjoined that makes a little hole at the top. Also, double reeds can produce a sound while it is not connected to an instrument while a single reed cannot.
The Oboe and the English Horn are two double reed instruments.
A single reed is one piece of wood (normally bamboo) that needs something to vibrate against to create sound. A clarinet or saxophone are single reed instruments, and they both have a mouthpiece, single reed, and ligature to hold the reed against the mouthpiece so it can vibrate. A double reed is two reeds that are like a sandwich and they vibrate against each other, so they don't need a mouthpiece or ligature. An oboe or bassoon use double reeds, and double reeds are harder to blow on than single reeds.
two types of vibration on woodwind are made from double reed and reed
The single-reed and double-reed, that's if you're talking about woodwind instruments.
The oboe is known as a double reeded instrument but this is a red herring as the SINGLE reed is made from one piece of cane folded over. The oboe makes a sound my air causing the two reed sides to vibrate against one another. This is different from a single reeded instrument like a clarinet where the reeed vibrates against the mouthpiece.