Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below up to 20 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
Article title matches
- Tenor horn (3923 bytes)
1: ...embles. In the [[US]] and [[Germany]] the name '''tenor horn''' is identical with [[baritone horn]].
5: ...al, and are usually taken by the solo horns. Most Tenor Horns are pitched in Eb and are transposing instr...
9: Tenor horns are very free-blowing instruments and inter...
17: ''To play a D#(as on the Tenor Horn)''
18: Since the valves only lower the note, the closest harmonic note above ...
Page text matches
- Bagpipes (20858 bytes)
3: ...the singular or plural, although pipers most commonly talk of "pipes" and "the bagpipe".
11: 5) Tenor drones<br>
16: ...ed either by a blowpipe or a set of bellows; the inlet to the bag normally has a one-way [[valve]] whi...
20: ...lown. Sometimes the term is also somewhat mistakenly used to describe the general sound produced by a...
33: ...l known are the [[Great Highland Bagpipe]]s (commonly abbreviated GHBs), which were developed in [[Sco... - Maria Callas (4931 bytes)
9: ...tage a comeback recital in [[1973]] tour with the tenor [[Giuseppe Di Stefano]] but it was a disaster due...
15: ...ional scholarships for young singers, this seems unlikely. A more likely explanation is Callas' overus... - Sofia Gubaidulina (8325 bytes)
49: *''Lauda'' for alto, tenor, baritone, narrator, mixed choir, and large orche...
65: *''Galgenlider ࠳'' fifteen pieces for mezzo-soprano, percu...
66: *''Galgenlider ࠵'' fourteen pieces for mezzo-soprano, flut...
72: *''Johannes-Passion'' for soprano, tenor, baritone, bass, two mixed choirs, organ, and lar...
74: *''Johannes-Ostern'' for soprano, tenor, baritone, bass, two mixed choirs, organ, and lar... - Engraving (3556 bytes)
5: ...nstrument engraving work. Round gravers are commonly used on silver to create bright cuts, as well as...
11: In [[antiquity]], the only engraving that could be carried out is evident i...
18: ...pg|thumb| An example of an ornately-engraved Conn tenor saxophone by Jason DuMars]] - Bassoon (11661 bytes)
2: ...in the [[double reed]] family that plays in the [[tenor]] ranges and below. Also called ''fagott'', in Ge...
6: ... flared slightly at the end. However, there were only six finger-holes and two keys.
20: ...difficult opening solo in [[The Rite of Spring]] only ascending to the D. Low A at the bottom of the r...
30: ...ment. The very tip of a reed blade is frequently only 0.1 mm thick. - Contrabassoon (3761 bytes)
11: ...an octave above sounding pitch in bass clef, with tenor or even (rarely) treble clef called for in high p...
14: ...ing instrument, which came in four parts and had only three keys, was built in 1714. It was around tha... - Cor anglais (2674 bytes)
1: ...a soprano in C, then the "cor anglais" would be a tenor oboe in F (that is, a [[transposing instrument]])...
9: ... reed players, cor anglais players must have not only a strong instrumental technique but also good ma... - Oboe (5230 bytes)
9: ...g concert A (earlier 440 Hz everywhere, now only in the [[United States]]; in [[Europe]] mostly 4...
13: ... (staple). The reed is held on the lips. The commonly accepted range for the oboe extends from B♭...
22: ...te and saxophone. The modern Oboe mechanism is mainly of two types: (a) the French conservatoire syste...
30: Though primarily a [[tenor saxophone]] player, [[Yusef Lateef]] was among th... - Recorder (12954 bytes)
3: ...rto]] in G major (though [[Thurston Dart]] mistakenly suggested that it was intended for [[Tin whistle...
9: ... alto in F (in Britain also known as the treble), tenor in C and basset in F (in Britain known as the bas...
11: ...the base note. This note is either absent or can only be played by covering the end of the instrument,... - Saxophone (14311 bytes)
1: ...xophone, for example, can play lower notes than a tenor saxophone, and an [[octave]] lower than an [[Alto...
3: ... in the mid-[[1840s]]. The saxophone is most commonly associated with [[popular music]], [[big band]] ...
14: ... the [[oboe]] than to the [[clarinet]]. However, unlike the [[oboe]], whose tube is a single cone, mos...
16: ...le fingering system, the modern saxophone is commonly considered an easy instrument to learn, especial...
25: ...le high baffles (and the resulting tone) are commonly associated with metal mouthpieces, any mouthpiec... - Alto saxophone (1789 bytes)
2: ...these, only the soprano through baritone are commonly used. The less tubing an instrument has, the hig...
8: ... exist. It has great versatility and is used commonly in concert, jazz, funk, blues, pop, and rock mus...
10: .... The alto and tenor saxophones are the most commonly played. Some companies that produce saxophones a... - Brass instrument (5234 bytes)
28: * [[Tenor Horn]]
41: ...tural''' brass instruments, where the player can only play notes in the instrument's [[harmonic series... - Baritone horn (1537 bytes)
1: ...s. It has a forceful tone, as if sounding like a tenor [[trumpet]].
3: ...like the soprano range Bb [[flugelhorn]] and Eb [[tenor horn]] (alto horn in the US). In the UK the barit...
5: ...e quarters to three-valve euphoniums being mistakenly called baritones and four-valve instruments bein... - Cornett (5160 bytes)
10: ...et mouthpiece ground down on a [[lathe]] so that only the cup and a minimal stub which fits the cornet...
16: ...izes being the high cornettino, the cornetto, the tenor cornett (or lizard) and the rare bass cornett (th...
22: ...no modern instrument; that is, the main tube has only the length of a typical woodwind, but the mouthp... - Euphonium (3735 bytes)
5: ...uphonium''' is a valved [[brass instrument]], the tenor member of the [[tuba]] family. The appearance of...
12: ...an baritone), and the German '''baryton''' and '''tenorhorn'''. All trace their descent to the '''[[Serp...
14: ...ser specifically requested it is a euphonium (or "tenor tuba") used in orchestras (such as in [[Gustav Ho... - Sackbut (3802 bytes)
4: ...rgan]]. Compared to a modern tenor trombone, the tenor sackbut has a considerably smaller [[bore]], and ...
7: ...ass. The common standards now are the alto in Eb, tenor in Bb, and bass in F (quart) or Eb (quint). The b...
10: ...466. Other period sources describe an alto in D, tenor in A, and bass in D; some groups are beginning to... - Tenor horn (3923 bytes)
1: ...embles. In the [[US]] and [[Germany]] the name '''tenor horn''' is identical with [[baritone horn]].
5: ...al, and are usually taken by the solo horns. Most Tenor Horns are pitched in Eb and are transposing instr...
9: Tenor horns are very free-blowing instruments and inter...
17: ''To play a D#(as on the Tenor Horn)''
18: Since the valves only lower the note, the closest harmonic note above ... - Trombone (15819 bytes)
9: ...ike the [[cornet]], [[euphonium]], and [[tuba]]. Tenor trombones typically have an interior bore of betw...
12: ...refer to the earlier form of the instrument, commonly used in early music ensembles.
22: === Tenor trombone ===
23: [[image:trombone.750pix.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Tenor trombone]]
25: The standard ''tenor trombone'' has a [[fundamental]] [[note]] of B	... - Trumpet (13239 bytes)
28: ...g was a guarded craft, its instruction occurring only within highly selective [[guild|guilds]]. The tr...
37: ...Method for Trumpet (Cornet Or E-flat Alto, B-flat Tenor, Baritone, Euphonium and B-flat Bass in Treble Cl...
50: ... the embouchure (muscles of the face). Some commonly accepted ways to do this are:
53: ...uthpiece''': playing exercises on the mouthpiece only, without the trumpet. Without the resonating ch...
291: ...mpet Guild] - a trumpet players' group with many online resources including a frequently-updated diary... - Tuba (3116 bytes)
3: There is usually only one tuba in an orchestra, and is used as the bas...
13: Tubas are found in various pitches, most commonly in F, Eb, C, or Bb.
15: ...rabass tuba. The "French tuba" corresponds to the tenor tuba, but is pitched in C.
23: .... Many jazz bands actually use a sousaphone, commonly if technically incorrectly called a "tuba" in th...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).