The didgeridoo is possibly one of the oldest woodwind instruments dating back 30,000 years or more. also, a BBC article says that scientists know of a 45,000-year-old Neanderthal Flute made of a hollow bear bone that was dug up in Slovenia in 1995.
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No one knows the answer to this question except that we can be reasonably sure that early man would have used plant material like reeds growing near water to make crude flutes or whistles. It is also easy to speculate that bow strings would make a noise under tension and it would not have been too long before a crude stringed instrument would have been made. Drums were probably the earliest instruments as when you stretch a skin on a drying rack to cure it, it will make a drum sound....not too long after listening to this sound, the natives in Africa (probably) would have made drums.
nobody knows exactly who because instruments date back thousands of years
The flute is the first woodwind instrument.
The modern woodwind instruments were invented by adolphe sax in the 1800's
Around 1690q
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no the recorder is in the flute family
a piccolo
The flute is the only woodwind instrument that does not require a reed. _____________________________ Piccolo also, to be technically correct. There may be others as well.
The woodwind family. This family includes the saxophone and the flute as well. The recorder was popular in medieval times through the baroque era, but declined in the 18th century in favour of orchestral woodwind instruments, such as the flute , oboe, and clarinet.
No, bagpipes are a woodwind instrument.
A recorder
no the recorder is in the flute family
a piccolo
The flute is the only woodwind instrument that does not require a reed. _____________________________ Piccolo also, to be technically correct. There may be others as well.
flute clarinet oboe bassoon recorder (musical instrument)
it was invented in Yugoslav
The woodwind family. This family includes the saxophone and the flute as well. The recorder was popular in medieval times through the baroque era, but declined in the 18th century in favour of orchestral woodwind instruments, such as the flute , oboe, and clarinet.
It would be a part of the woodwind family but the fluteaphone is not a real instrument. The "fluteaphone", as many people call it, is actually called a recorder. The recorder is part of the woodwind family but can be made out of plastic, metal and/or wood.
No, bagpipes are a woodwind instrument.
Double bass
clarinet
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!