Those are two different things.
~ Clarinet concerto is a type of work that mainly involves a clarinet player (soloist) and an orchestra in the background.
~ Clarinet quintet involves five instruments (what quintet is referring to), it can be a mixture of strings, piano or Oboe, bassoon or french horn. It's also referred commonly as woodwind quintet.
Conclusion, and to answer your question. I clarinet concerto will sound louder than a Clarinet quintet, because of the total amount of musicians pretty much.
For classical symphony orchestras , the woodwind instruments used are , piccolo, flute, clarinet, oboe, and bassoon. The saxophone is not normally used in an orchestra.
it doesn't a clarinet is of a lower pitch than a flute
Like part of "Silent Night" ?
No, the clarinet is a woodwind instrument. A clarinet uses a reed to produce sound instead of using a mouthpiece and the player's embouchure to produce sound like brass instruments do.
Obviously like a clarinet...since this is the section it is in.
Well first off, I have been playing the Clarinet for quite a while now, so to me it might sound different than someone who isn't in band or plays the clarinet...anyway, I think the clarinet is a beautiful instrument and produces a magnificent tone...if the player carries themselves with good posture, then this will improve the tone also. A good reed always helps too! :) Overall the clarinet is a great sounding instrument which produces a sound close to a Bass Clarinet or possibly Oboe or bassoon. mainly the bass clarinet though..hope this answers your question! :)
Like a heavy, fluttery flute? You'd have to listen to it yourself.
Initially, Wolfgang Mozart and Anon StadlerThe clarinet was not very well known in the Baroque period of music (this was when Bach wrote music). Generally, clarinet players would have to travel all around Europe looking for a job. One extremely talented clarinet player was Anton Stadler, who played the bass clarinet. When Wolfgang Mozart heard Stadler play, he was inspired to write his Clarinet Concerto, still known as one of the greatest masterpieces of the clarinet repertoire. The two also became close friends. Most importantly, a famous composer like Mozart writing a concerto for clarinet brought attention to the instrument. This led to many composers writing for the clarinet. While composers such as Weber, Spohr and Crusell did make the clarinet more famous by writing for it, Mozart was the one who initially made the clarinet well known. So, the answer is, the clarinet was initially made famous by either Mozart, for writing his Concerto, or Anton Stadler, indirectly, by inspiring him to do so. The clarinet was made more famous later in time by many people, such as those aforementioned composers and clarinet players like Simon Hermstedt, Heinrich Baermann, Artie Shaw, and Benny Goodman (the last two for making clarinet famous within the jazz genre).
look it up on google, improvisation like a Classical Concerto Cadenza
Well first off, I have been playing the clarinet for quite a while now, so to me it might sound different than someone who isn't in band or plays the clarinet...anyway, I think the clarinet is a beautiful instrument and produces a magnificent tone...if the player carries themselves with good posture, then this will improve the tone also. A good reed always helps too! :) Overall the clarinet is a great sounding instrument which produces a sound close to a bass clarinet or possibly oboe or bassoon. mainly the bass clarinet though..hope this answers your question! :)
Well it depends. if you like clarinet better you like it better. but if you like bassoon better you like it better. i play clarinet so i like clarinet better buts that's just me
Yes. A saxophone is made of brass but makes sound by a vibrating reed like a clarinet.