Heinrich Grenser but also adolphe sax patented a Bass Clarinet in 1834 when he was 24 years old
It's not the bass clarinet.The octocontrabass clarinet (also known as octo contrabass clarinet, octo contra bass clarinet, or subcontra bass clarinet) is the largest and lowest member of the clarinet family. It is pitched an octave below the contrabass clarinet, or three octaves lower than the standard B♭ soprano clarinet.The Guinness Book of World Records lists the octocontrabass clarinet as having the lowest range of any orchestral instrument, capable of playing B♭-1 concert pitch (the B♭ below the lowest note of the piano).
The contrabass clarinet can be almost twelve feet long.
I think that It is a competition between a Baritone Sax or a contrabass Clarinet,
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
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!
like 8 Bb, A, Contrabass, Piccolo, Alto Contrabass, Bass, and Eb ithimk its all theyre may be more though
It's not the bass clarinet.The octocontrabass clarinet (also known as octo contrabass clarinet, octo contra bass clarinet, or subcontra bass clarinet) is the largest and lowest member of the clarinet family. It is pitched an octave below the contrabass clarinet, or three octaves lower than the standard B♭ soprano clarinet.The Guinness Book of World Records lists the octocontrabass clarinet as having the lowest range of any orchestral instrument, capable of playing B♭-1 concert pitch (the B♭ below the lowest note of the piano).
The contrabass clarinet can be almost twelve feet long.
I think that It is a competition between a Baritone Sax or a contrabass Clarinet,
The clarinet was invented in Germany
Albert R. Rice has written: 'From the clarinet d'amour to the contra bass' -- subject(s): Alto clarinet, Bass clarinet, Basset horn, Clarinette d'amour, Contrabass clarinet, History
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
The clarinet family includes the regular clarinet, a smaller version that is still straight called the E-flat clarinet, and then several larger ones that have bends or curves in them, including (in size order) the alto clarinet, the bass clarinet, the contra-alto or E-flat contrabass, and the B-flat contrabass. A soprano saxophone looks somewhat like a metal clarinet, and has a single-reed mouthpiece like the clarinet, but it is part of the saxophone family, not the clarinet family - the bore of the instrument and the fingering system are entirely different from the clarinets.
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 was invented in Germany by Johann Christoph Denner.
If you're refering to Mozart's Clarinet Concerto then the instruments are Flute, Bassoon, Horn in A, Clarinet in A, Violin 1, Violin2, Viola, Violoncello, and Contrabass.
violin, viola, cello, contrabass, guitar, harp, basset clarinet, basset horn, clarinet d'amour, classical clarinet, chalumeau, clavichord, piano, organ, bassoon, oboe, flute, picollo, timpani