The Clarinet was developed from an instrument called the Chalemeau.
Joseph Denner is credited with making changes to the chalemeau and developing the what we now call the clarinet.
In the late 1700's many improvements were made and keys were added to the clarinet and Iwan Muller came up with a 13 keyed model that stayed in favor into the 1800's
In the 1840's Klose and Buffet then adapted the fingering system of the Flute to the clarinet to create the instrument we are familiar with today.
The first clarinet was created when someone added a register key to a baroque instrument called the "chalumeau", which was a recorder-like instrument but had a reed attached to the mouthpiece. Adding the register key increased the range of notes achievable.
the chalumeau
the chalumeau
It is the telling of all that has happened in relation to what is known today as the modern clarinet since it's beginning in the 18th century.
Johann Christoph Denner invented the clarinet in Germany around the turn of the 18th century by adding a register key to the earlier chalumeau.
it was invented in Germany
the chalumeau
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!
clarinet and 2nd clarinet
No, my clarinet is not.
The clarinet mouthpiece is called the mouthpiece. It doesn't have a special name.
The bass clarinet, in the form we know it today, was invented in 1838, in Belgium by Adolph Sax, who later invented the saxophone. There were earlier instruments which were clarinet like and that played in the bass register, but they were generally not much like soprano clarinets of the time.
classical
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
Well, if you can't play clarinet, and you want to play almost any song, I suggest getting a Stewart's Music clarinet music book. it will tell you fingerings, song and history about it. it is not expensive, and useful. (also, you will need a 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
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!
clarinet and 2nd clarinet
Colin Lawson has written: 'Brahms, clarinet quintet' 'The technique of writing for the clarinet in eighteenth-century music' 'The Cambridge history of musical performance' -- subject(s): Performance, Music, History 'The chalumeau in eighteenth-century music' -- subject(s): Chalumeau (Single-reed musical instrument), History and criticism, Music
There is no compass "of" or "on" the clarinet.