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Music | All-Star Orchestra
Course: Music | All-Star Orchestra > Unit 4
Lesson 2: Woodwinds- Piccolo: Interview and demonstration with Nadine Asin
- Flute: Interview and demonstration with principal Jeffrey Khaner
- E-Flat Clarinet: Interview and demonstration with Jessica Phillips Rieske
- Clarinet: Interview and demonstration with principal Jon Manasse
- Bass Clarinet: Interview and demonstration with James Ognibene
- Oboe: Interview and demonstration with principal John Ferrillo
- English Horn: Interview and demonstration with Pedro Diaz
- Bassoon: Interview and demonstration with principal Nancy Goeres
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E-Flat Clarinet: Interview and demonstration with Jessica Phillips Rieske
Created by All Star Orchestra.
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- What kind of wood did she say the bell and barrel made of? What type of wood was the body of the clarinet made of? Are all clarinets made of the same type of wood? Isn't there another clarinet the A-flat clarinet? How does this differ from the B-flat and E-flat clarinet?(10 votes)
- Ms. Phillips said atthat the bell and barrel on her instrument are made out of tulipwood. 6:22(13 votes)
- Does the E-flat Clarinet have the same notes or fingerings as the B-flat Clarinet?(10 votes)
- Yes. All members of the clarinet family have the same, or very similar, fingering setups. The only difference is the pitch that is being produced.(8 votes)
- Why would the quality of the wood effect the sound of the clarinet?(5 votes)
- I'm by no means an expert, and I may be wrong on this, but here's my guess: Some woods are more or less dense and have different grain patterns, which would affect the tonal quality of the music the instrument produces.(4 votes)
- How many E-Flat clarinets are in an orchestra? What differs from the E-Flat clarinet to a regular clarinet? If the E-Flat clarinet is higher, why don't they just play a higher note on the clarinet? I don't play a woodwind so I don't know any of this stuff...(4 votes)
- Depends. The key it plays in. It's a few notes off, same fingerings. (I play Bb and Eb).(4 votes)
- i was wondering, in a regular concert band, the wood winds are towards the front of the band, brass in the back, low reeds in the middle and percussion to the back. why is the strings towards the front?dos it make difference where they are?is it because of the volume the have?(3 votes)
- Percussion is in the back because they can get even louder than brass instruments. Also, percussionists usually stand, so in order to see everybody, percussion is in the back.(4 votes)
- What instrument is more fun the e-flat or the flute?(2 votes)
- I personally love the flute. It has a beautiful sound!(5 votes)
- is the clarinet the second highest or the second lowest in the woodwind family?(2 votes)
- The clarinet family, in the traditional orchestra, is the second highest sound. The usual order is flutes, oboes, clarinets, (saxophones, if any), and bassoons/bass clarinets.(4 votes)
- What are all of the types of Clarinet?(2 votes)
- According to Graham Nasby's Online Resources, the types of clarinet include these:
Bb bass clarinet, basset horn, A clarinet, Bb clarinet, C clarinet, Eb clarinet, BBb contrabass clarinet, Eb alto clarinet, Eb contrabass clarinet, basset clarinet, D clarinet, and Ab piccolo clarinet.
So yeah, there are a lot of different clarinets out there.(4 votes)
- Is the Eb clarinet common in middle school bands? I play Bb and I want to play Eb, but I'm not sure.(2 votes)
- It's not common in middle school bands but there are middle school level pieces with it written in. At my high school we do a side-by-side with the middle school and there was an Eb part that my director had me play. It was fairly easy considering it was a mix between 3rd Bb clarinet and low brass/woodwinds. Eb is usually used more in high school level bands if you really want to play it. Most schools have one. I know mine has at least 2.(3 votes)
- Is precusion important is band cause my band teacher doesn't agree(2 votes)
- All parts of the band are very important to the group as a whole. The percussion section is the "metronome" of the band and is just as important as the wind instruments.(3 votes)
Video transcript
("Symphony No. 5" by Dmitryi Shostakovich) - This is the E-flat clarinet also known as the piccolo clarinet. So it plays in the high register. I started on B-flat clarinet which is what most people
begin on when they start to play clarinet and have lessons. And this is a different voice it's a really high voice and
it's a lot of fun to play. It's a character in the orchestra. It plays very loud and very angry or it plays a kind of snake
charmer beautiful melody but it's basically a
mini me of the clarinet. And this particular
instrument has been customized for me and this is tulipwood barrel. This is what we call the barrel. So this is the mouth
piece and the ligature. The reed goes here and the reed vibrates against the mouthpiece and
that's really what the sound is. Then this is tulipwood barrel and this is Granadillo wood and then this is also a tulipwood bell. And it's very beautiful
everybody always comments it's very pink, but it changes the color of the sound so I use it to actually kind of make the sound darker,
and warmer, and richer. This is kind of a new thing, a new concept even in the past five to 10 years where we're
using different woods to create different colors in the sound. Maybe darker something that
might project or be louder. Something that would be softer if you're playing chamber music. So we can play around with it a little bit and have some fun with
all the accessories. ("Symphony No. 2" by Gustav Mahler) This clarinet was made for me by a Canadian maker actually, Backun. And I worked with him, we tuned it. He added some keys. He bored out the
instrument and so I worked with him a lot on customizing
it for me for my fingers. The E-flat clarinet is great for me I have really small hands. So it fits me perfectly and a lot of people who play B-flat
clarinet when they start as kids they play on E-flat 'cause it's a little bit smaller. So that's also a fun
way to do it but it's, it's a fun instrument in that it is small it fits me perfectly. So I've worked with him to customize this and I helped him invent
this barrel actually. We had this cut away, its flat and it helps the reed fit on the barrel. So I worked with him a lot with that and on the bell as well. The hole in the bell is tuning, it's a vent it just basically tunes. When you put all your fingers down, this hole actually vents air as well because it's so short so it helps to tune the lowest note there. ("Daphnis and Chloe - Suite
No. 2" by Maurice Ravel) This was about third grade. I went to a music arts summer camp and you could either do
theater or play the clarinet or do something like that and I wanted to do a musical instrument
and I didn't know what. And I remember sitting
on my grandfather's porch and talking to him and he said, "Well you should play the clarinet, Benny Goodman played the clarinet." And I thought okay great and I think probably I
wouldn't have picked it if I had known there was
so many little parts to it. ("Daphnis and Chloe - Suite
No. 2" by Maurice Ravel) So I did it in the summer
and then I did like it. I grew up in a household that loved music. We had the metropolitan
opera Saturday broadcast on in the house on Saturday
afternoons all the time. But nobody made me practice in fact my parents were actually very good about you do what you wanna do. And I just started to
grow and love the music, the clarinet so much that I kept with it. You know fifth grade and sixth grade I got into a youth orchestra and
I loved playing in that. Playing Beethoven's First Symphony and playing all these wonderful pieces and also I had friends
and it was so much fun. And I think I got very
serious my senior year. Actually probably junior,
senior year of high school. So 16, 17 years old and I had an amazing teacher who really
inspired me, Julie Vaverka. She was my teacher in Boston and she really inspired me
she was a wonderful musician. Just completely opened the world up to me of what I could do musically. It was no longer about playing clarinet it was about being a musician. ("Daphnis and Chloe - Suite
No. 2" by Maurice Ravel)