Clarinet.
Yes there are you tube videos about building a clarinet reed.
A crumhorn
No, the flute is a woodwind but is not a reed instrument because it produces sound by directing air across the edge of a hole in a cylindrical tube. Reed instruments focus air into a mouthpiece causing the 'reed' to vibrate. Examples include the clarinet, saxophone, the oboe and the bassoon.
The metal tube is called th boacle. It is where the reed is placed and what the musician blows air into to create a sound.
Clarinet.
A woodwind instrument with a single-reed mouthpiece, a cylindrical tube of dark wood with a flared end, and holes stopped by keys
Johann Denner invented the clarinet in 1690. Which is also the year ketchup was invented
Yes there are you tube videos about building a clarinet reed.
A crumhorn
No, the flute is a woodwind but is not a reed instrument because it produces sound by directing air across the edge of a hole in a cylindrical tube. Reed instruments focus air into a mouthpiece causing the 'reed' to vibrate. Examples include the clarinet, saxophone, the oboe and the bassoon.
The metal tube is called th boacle. It is where the reed is placed and what the musician blows air into to create a sound.
Straight tube boiler and bend tube boiler
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The vibrations start at the reed, but the pitch is changed by the length of the tube the vibrations go down. Therefore, closing more holes causes the tube length to increase and the pitch to decrease. There are also some changes in the way the vibrations are formed at the reed for the higher octave pitches.
The most common double reed instruments are oboe, English horn (cor anglais) and bassoon. The oboe is a soprano instrument, the English horn is essentially an alto oboe, the tenor or baritone range of the oboe family is occupied by the now-rare Baritone oboe. The Bassoon is considered the bass of the double-reed family, although its range covers from Bass to high tenor. The Contrabassoon, used in some very large orchestral pieces, is essentially a bassoon, but twice as long, and therefore an octave lower. While these are the common orchestra and band instruments which use a double reed, there are others. For instance, the Bagpipes almost invariably use a double reed for the melody-tube (chanter), and the basque Bombarde is essentially a bagpipe chanter without a bagpipe. (The bagpipe drones are sounded with a unique type of single reed.) Double reed instruments predate single-reed melody instruments in Western Civilization music, although in Africa, single reed instruments (with a reed on much the same design as bagpipe drone reeds) are not uncommon. In ancient Greece, the double reed instruments were the Aulos (soprano) and Phagotum (a folded bass which may have given the European name to the bassoon: fagotto.)
bows and arrows spearsthey make hallow tube from the reed to suck ground...............