Basset clarinet

The basset clarinet is member of the clarinet family similar to the usual soprano clarinet but longer and with additional keys to enable playing several additional lower notes. Typically a basset clarinet has keywork going to a low (written) C or B, as opposed to the standard clarinet’s E or E. The basset clarinet is most commonly a transposing instrument in A, although basset clarinets in C and B and very seldom in G also exist. The similarly named basset horn is also a clarinet with extended lower range, but is in a lower pitch (typically F); the basset horn predates, and undoubtedly inspired, the basset clarinet.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basset_clarinet

Basset clarinet was last modified: December 31st, 2021 by Jovan Stosic

The Symphony Prof. Greenberg-Fine Arts & Music

Average 45 minutes each

1
Let’s Take It From the Top!

2
The Concerto and the Orchestra

3
The Pre-Classical Symphony

4
Mannheim

5
Classical Masters

6
Franz Joseph Haydn, Part 1

7
Franz Joseph Haydn, Part 2

8
Mozart

9
Beethoven

10
Schubert

11
Berlioz and the Symphonie fantastique

12
Mendelssohn and Schumann

13
Franck, Saint-Saens, and the Symphony in France

14
Nationalism and the Symphony

15
Brahms, Bruckner, and the Viennese Symphony

16
Gustav Mahler

17
Nielsen and Sibelius

18
The Symphony in Russia

19
Charles Ives

20
Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber

21
Roy Harris and William Schuman

22
The Twentieth-Century British Symphony

23
Olivier Messiaen and Turangalila!

24
Dmitri Shostakovich and His Tenth Symphony

 

Source: The Symphony Prof. Greenberg-Fine Arts & Music

The Symphony Prof. Greenberg-Fine Arts & Music was last modified: December 28th, 2021 by Jovan Stosic