oboes and bassoons
(and any instruments in the Oboe and bassoon family, i.e. cor anglais, contra bassoon etc.)
Basoon
A double-reed woodwind instrument in the oboe family.
If you blow into the instrument or if it has a reed, it's a woodwind instrument
The Contra-Bassoon or Double Bassoon or Bass Bassoon.
All reed instruments are part of the woodwind instrument family, but there are some other woodwinds also that are not reed instruments - mainly the flute.
The bagpipe is a woodwind instrument. The melody part of the bagpipe (the chanter) has a double reed, so it could go under the sub-heading "double reed woodwind instrument" - but this depends on the source ethnicity of the instrument in question (the Scottish Highland Bagpipe has a double reed, whereas a Swedish bagpipe may not). :) Peace out!
Oboe's are a double reed instrument of the Woodwind family.
A double-reed woodwind instrument in the oboe family.
If you blow into the instrument or if it has a reed, it's a woodwind instrument
Yes, it is part of the woodwind family and uses a double reed.
the single reed woodwind instruments: Clarinet, Saxophone (family) the single reed woodwind instruments: clarinet, saxophone (family)
The Contra-Bassoon or Double Bassoon or Bass Bassoon.
All reed instruments are part of the woodwind instrument family, but there are some other woodwinds also that are not reed instruments - mainly the flute.
It's a double-reed WOODWIND instrument. It is also a baroque instrument (time period).
The bagpipe is a woodwind instrument. The melody part of the bagpipe (the chanter) has a double reed, so it could go under the sub-heading "double reed woodwind instrument" - but this depends on the source ethnicity of the instrument in question (the Scottish Highland Bagpipe has a double reed, whereas a Swedish bagpipe may not). :) Peace out!
An oboe is a double reed instrument, and it also a woodwind instrument.
woodwind, double reed
Both the oboe and the bassoon are double reed instruments and belong to the woodwind family.