i need the answer too....
you can usually find it on the bell and the barrel, sometimes even the ligature that came with it, of your clarinet.
The notes are AAA (HIGH)AGGEDC REPEAT
for the mouth piece, you can wash it with a wet paper towel if you keys are sticky. putting a dollar bill under the key and then pressing down a few times can help get the stickiness away for the inside, the clarinet cleaner that probably came with your clarinet should do
Johann Christoph Denner of Nuremburg with the help of his son Jacob improved the chalumeau In 1843, the clarinet was further improved when Klose adapted the Boehm flute key system to the clarinet. Mozart was the first composer to use the clarinet in a symphony.
See Jack Brymer's superior text, Clarinet, ISBN 0-02-871440 According to Brymer ( 1976) any single reed instrument is, technically, a member of the Clarinet family. The earliest single reed insturments were crafted in ancient Egypt, and there are medieval precursors, the chalumeau being the major prototype for the clarinet. According to Brymer, the clarinet was invented rather than evolving , by J.C. Denner in the year 1700 in Germany.
Piccolo clarinet From the smallest to the biggest, here it is: ~ Soprano clarinet ~ Basset clarinet ~ Basset horn ~ Alto clarinet ~ Bass clarinet ~ Contra-alto clarinet ~ Contrabass clarinet
bass clarinet
no, the buffet clarinet is
The clarinet(and piano in the episode where Patrick got smart and Patrick played it)
There is the Bb Soprano Clarinet, Ab Piccolo Clarinet(rare), Eb Soprano Clarinet, D Soprano Clarinet, C Soprano Clarinet(rare, cos people thinks it's too bright), A Clarinet, Basset Clarinet, Basset Horn, Alto Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Contra-Alto Clarinet, and Contrabass Clarinet!
The clarinet came from a popular instrument in Europe called a chalumea. This instrument had only two keys and a single reed. The chalumea range was low. In the 1700s a German instrument maker named Denner is credited to making the clarinet becuse he improved the chalumea by adding three more keys. Then in 1844 two French musicians, Buffet and Klose, used the Boehm flute key system to the clarinet. Doing this made the clarinet we know today.