Английская Википедия:Clarinet family

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Файл:Dietz 9 clarinets.jpg
A group of different clarinets. In order from left to right: bass clarinet, EШаблон:Music alto clarinet, soprano clarinets in C, BШаблон:Music, A, EШаблон:Music, and D, and clarinets in high and low G.
Файл:Deuker Jörgensmann Rolin 30 10 09 Photo by Herb Weisrock (113).JPG
Different instruments of the clarinet family (German system) played by Tribal Clarinet Trio. Left to right: deep G clarinet (Theo Jörgensmann), contrabass clarinet (Ernst Ulrich Deuker), basset horn (Etienne Rolin).
Файл:Clarinets deep en.jpg
The deepest tones (sounding) of all members of the clarinet family.

The clarinet family is a woodwind instrument family of various sizes and types of clarinets, including the common soprano clarinet in B♭ and A, bass clarinet, and sopranino E♭ clarinet.

Clarinets, other than the standard B♭ and A clarinets, are sometimes known as harmony clarinets. There are many differently pitched clarinet types that may be grouped into sub-families, but grouping and terminology vary; the list below reflects popular usage.

List of Clarinets

Файл:10 clarinets.jpg
Clarinets in AШаблон:Music, EШаблон:Music, and BШаблон:Music, basset clarinet in A, alto clarinet, basset horn, two bass clarinets (ranging to low EШаблон:Music and low C), contra alto clarinet, and contrabass clarinet.
  • Octave clarinets — Very rare. Pitched around an octave higher than the BШаблон:Music clarinet.
  • Soprano clarinet — The most familiar type of clarinet.
    • [[E-flat clarinet|EШаблон:Music clarinet/EШаблон:Music sopranino clarinet]] — Fairly common in the United States and western Europe; less common in eastern Europe. Referred to as the soprano in Commonwealth countries. Resurgence in popularity due to the production of affordable instruments in China.
    • D clarinet — Rare in the United States and western Europe. Required in Molter's very early clarinet concertos.
      • Rendall lists the EШаблон:Music and D clarinets, along with obsolete instruments in G, F, and E, as sopranino clarinets.
      • Shackleton lists the EШаблон:Music and D clarinets, along with obsolete instruments in F, and E, as sopranino clarinets.
      • The EШаблон:Music and D clarinets are commonly called piccolo clarinets in eastern Europe and Russia.
    • C clarinet — This instrument became practically obsolete in the orchestras of Europe and the United States in the early twentieth century. The inclusion of the C clarinet, however was not unusual in orchestral scores from the era of Haydn and Mozart right through to the early 20th century. Mahler certainly included them up until his fourth symphony. Much of the orchestral repertoire of Beethoven and Schubert requires the C clarinet. This being the case, the nineteenth century clarinetists were faced with the difficult task of maintaining and alternating between instruments in A, BШаблон:Music and C. Since this was not always necessary or desirable for a first rate clarinetist, who could transpose easily between instruments and may not have wished to change from a warm to a cold instrument, the tendency has been to reduce, with the result that the usage of the C clarinet has gradually declined from the standard classical orchestra.
      • Recently,Шаблон:When however, the C clarinet is enjoying a resurgence, as there is now a renewed interest in playing older works on their authentic instruments. This applies to orchestral music and also to popular folk styles such as klezmer music. At the same time there has been an innovation in Britain to use a simplified cheaper version of the C clarinet, so called clarinéo,[3] as the principal wind instrument for young learners, a position until recently occupied by the recorder.
      • The clarinet in C is sometimes called for in clarinet choirs, often as a substitute for the oboe. This clarinet has been made more common and inexpensive due to the manufacturing of clarinets of all sizes in China.
    • [[Clarinet|BШаблон:Music clarinet]] — The most common type of clarinet.
    • A clarinet — Standard orchestral instrument used alongside the BШаблон:Music soprano. It is required primarily in older, European classical music. Many classical clarinetists own both a BШаблон:Music and an A clarinet, and cases holding both instruments are common. The A clarinet is not commonly used in band music.
    • G clarinet — An instrument that today appears in various guises: a "Turkish clarinet" with Albert system keywork and a range to low E, a Boehm or Oehler system instrument to low E made predominantly in Germany, Italy or China, and as a Boehm system instrument with range to low C (basset clarinet in G) in part a revival of the clarinet d'amore. Primarily used in contemporary art music and certain kinds of ethnic music. This type of clarinet is rare but is becoming more common due to renewed interest. The “Turkish” G clarinet primarily and traditionally uses Albert System key work. Chinese mass production of clarinets in G has brought a slow resurgence to this rare clarinet, however professional standard instruments are available principally in Germany and Italy.
      • Rendall lists the C, BШаблон:Music, and A clarinets along with the obsolete instrument in B as sopranos, and the clarinet d'amore in AШаблон:Music and G and the clarinet in G as obsolete altos.
      • Shackleton lists the C, BШаблон:Music, A, and G clarinets along with obsolete instruments in B and AШаблон:Music as sopranos, noting that the AШаблон:Music and G often occurred as clarinette d'amour in the mid-18th century.
      • Rice classifies G clarinets with flared bells as altos, with pear- or bulb-shaped bells as clarinets d'amour.[4]
  • Basset clarinet — Essentially a soprano clarinet with a range extension to low C (written).
    • A basset clarinet — Most common type.
    • Basset clarinets in C, BШаблон:Music, and G (see also clarinet d'amore) also exist.
      • Rendall includes no basset clarinets in his classifications. Shackleton has three in his collection: Numbers 5389 (BШаблон:Music and A set) and 5393 (in A). See Catalogue of the Sir Nicholas Shackleton Collection, Edinburgh University Collection.
  • Basset horn — Alto-to-tenor range instrument with (usually) a smaller bore than the alto clarinet, and a range extended to low (written) C.
    • F basset horn — Most common type.
      • Rendall lists basset horns in G (obsolete) and F as tenors.
      • Shackleton lists also basset horns in G and D from the 18th century.
      • Neither Rendall nor Shackleton lists A, E, or EШаблон:Music basset horns though these apparently existed in the eighteenth century.[5][6]
  • Alto clarinet — Pitched a perfect fifth (or, rarely, a perfect fourth) lower than the BШаблон:Music soprano clarinet.
    • EШаблон:Music alto clarinet — Most common type. Range usually down to low EШаблон:Music (written). Referred to as the tenor in Commonwealth countries.
      • Rendall lists the EШаблон:Music alto and F tenor clarinets as tenors (along with the basset horns).
      • Shackleton lists the F alto clarinet as obsolete.
  • Bass clarinet — An octave below the BШаблон:Music clarinet often with an extended low range.
    • BШаблон:Music bass clarinet — The standard bass. Common variants extend to either low C or low EШаблон:Music.
    • “A” bass clarinet — Very rare today, more common around 1900, though bass clarinets in A and C as well as BШаблон:Music were being advertised at least through 1927.[7] Nineteen surviving examples have been cataloged, seven of which are playable,[8] though others exist in private hands and occasionally appear on the used instrument market.[9]
    • C bass clarinet — Obsolete. Few examples have survived in playable condition.
      • Rendall and Shackleton list C, BШаблон:Music, and A; Rendall lists only C as obsolete, while Shackleton calls A "rare". Rendall groups these in baritone and bass.
  • Great Bass Clarinets — An octave below the alto clarinet, in between the bass and contrabass.
  • Contrabass clarinet — An octave below the bass clarinet.
    • BBШаблон:Music contrabass clarinet. Common in the 20th century, getting rarer now.
      • Rendall lists also contrabass clarinet in C as obsolete, and groups it and the BBШаблон:Music contrabass in baritone and bass.
      • Shackleton lists only the BBШаблон:Music contrabass, grouping it in contrabass (pedal) clarinets
  • Two larger types have been built on an experimental basis:

References

  1. F. Geoffrey Rendall. The Clarinet. Third Edition. London: Ernest Benn Limited, 1971, pp. 3-4.
  2. Nicholas Shackleton. "Clarinet", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed 21 February 2006), grovemusic.com Шаблон:Webarchive (subscription access).
  3. Origins of the Clarinéo (archived)
  4. Albert R. Rice. From the Clarinet D'Amour to the Contra Bass: A History of Large Size Clarinets, 1740-1860. Oxford University Press, 2009, pp. 9-10.
  5. Шаблон:Cite journal
  6. Шаблон:Cite journal
  7. Шаблон:Cite web
  8. Шаблон:Cite journal
  9. Шаблон:Cite web
  10. Шаблон:Cite web

Шаблон:Clarinet