Crossword clues for clarinet
clarinet
- Home with red exterior? Blow me!
- Woodwind instrument
- Reed instrument
- Musical instrument
- Wind instrument
- Jazz instrument
- Goodman's instrument
- Oboe's cousin
- Single reed instrument
- Woody Allen's instrument
- Woody Allen often plays one
- Woody Allen instrument
- Woodwind instrument sometimes called a "licorice stick"
- What Woody Allen plays
- The cat in "Peter and the Wolf"
- Pete Fountain's instrument
- Licorice stick in a pit
- Licorice stick
- Its trill opens "Rhapsody in Blue"
- Instrument whose name means “little trumpet”
- Instrument whose most common type is in the key of Bb
- Benny Goodman's instrument
- Artie Shaw's instrument
- Acker Bilk's instrument
- 23 instrument
- "Rhapsody in Blue" opener
- "Rhapsody in Blue" introducer
- Dixieland band instrument
- Jazz band part
- Mozart solo feature
- Orchestra member
- Fountain piece
- With 59-Across, hint to this puzzle's secret
- Pete Fountain played it
- Feature of a Shaw show
- Mozart was the first major composer to write specifically for it
- A single-reed instrument with a straight tube
- Benny Goodman plays it
- Goodman's music maker
- Music-maker having wine outside home
- Music producer is fashionable in red
- Edit article about new liquorice stick
- Orchestral musician, popular, into red wine
- Woodwind instrument popular in Bordeaux
- Single-reed straight-tubed instrument
- Saxophone's kin
- Arranged recital, including new instrument
- Pipe blown in cold loo — time to go finally
- Pipe blown in cold loo, time to go finally
- It's instrumental in having wine around
- Instrument, note, used in lively recital
- Instrument popular with wine around
- Instrument at home opening red wine
- Instrument at home in dark red cover
- Instrument - litre can
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Clarinet \Clar"i*net`\, n. [F. clarinette, dim. of clarine, from L. clarus. See Clear, and cf. Clarion.] (Mus.) A wind instrument, blown by a single reed, of richer and fuller tone than the oboe, which has a double reed. It is the leading instrument in a military band.
Note: [Often improperly called clarionet.]
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1768, from French clarinette (18c.), diminutive of clarine "little bell" (16c.), noun use of fem. of adjective clarin (which also was used as a noun, "trumpet, clarion"), from clair, cler (see clear (adj.)). Alternative form clarionet is attested from 1784.\n
\nThe instrument, a modification of the medieval shawm, said to have been invented c.1700 by J.C. Denner of Nuremberg, Germany. A recognized orchestral instrument from c.1775. Ease of playing increased greatly with a design improvement from 1843 based on Boehm's flute.\n\nAfter the hautboy came the clarinet. This instrument astonished every beholder, not so much, perhaps, on account of its sound, as its machinery. One that could manage the keys of a clarinet, forty five years ago, so as to play a tune, was one of the wonders of the age. Children of all ages would crowd around the performer, and wonder and admire when the keys were moved.
[Nathaniel D. Gould, "Church Music in America," Boston, 1853]
\nGerman Clarinet, Swedish klarinett, Italian clarinetto, etc. all are from French. Related: Clarinettist.Wiktionary
n. (context musici English) A woodwind musical instrument that has a distinctive liquid tone whose characteristics vary among its three registers: chalumeau (low), clarion (medium), and altissimo (high).
WordNet
n. a single-reed instrument with a straight tube
Wikipedia
The clarinet is a musical-instrument family belonging to the group known as the woodwind instruments. It has a single-reed mouthpiece, a straight cylindrical tube with an almost cylindrical bore, and a flared bell. A person who plays a clarinet is called a clarinetist (sometimes spelled clarinettist).
The word clarinet may have entered the English language via the French clarinette (the feminine diminutive of Old French clarin or clarion), or from Provençal clarin, "oboe". It would seem however that its real roots are to be found amongst some of the various names for trumpets used around the renaissance and baroque eras. Clarion, clarin and the Italian clarino are all derived from the medieval term claro which referred to an early form of trumpet. This is probably the origin of the Italian clarinetto, itself a diminutive of clarino, and consequently of the European equivalents such as clarinette in French or the German Klarinette. According to Johann Gottfried Walther, writing in 1732, the reason for the name is that "it sounded from far off not unlike a trumpet". The English form clarinet is found as early as 1733, and the now-archaic clarionet appears from 1784 until the early years of the 20th century.
While the similarity in sound between the earliest clarinets and the trumpet may hold a clue to its name, other factors may have been involved. During the late baroque era, composers such as Bach and Handel were making new demands on the skills of their trumpeters, who were often required to play difficult melodic passages in the high, or as it came to be called, clarion register. Since the trumpets of this time had no valves or pistons, melodic passages would often require the use of the highest part of the trumpet's range, where the harmonics were close enough together to produce scales of adjacent notes as opposed to the gapped scales or arpeggios of the lower register. The trumpet parts that required this speciality were known by the term clarino and this in turn came to apply to the musicians themselves. It is probable that the term clarinet may stem from the diminutive version of the 'clarion' or 'clarino' and it has been suggested that clarino players may have helped themselves out by playing particularly difficult passages on these newly developed "mock trumpets".
Johann Christoph Denner is generally believed to have invented the clarinet in Germany around the year 1700 by adding a register key to the earlier chalumeau. Over time, additional keywork and airtight pads were added to improve the tone and playability.
These days the most popular clarinet is the B clarinet. However, the clarinet in A, just a semitone lower, is commonly used in orchestral music. Since the middle of the 19th century the bass clarinet (nowadays invariably in B but with extra keys to extend the register down a few notes) has become an essential addition to the orchestra. The clarinet family ranges from the (extremely rare) BBB octo-contrabass to the A piccolo clarinet. The clarinet has proved to be an exceptionally flexible instrument, equally at home in the classical repertoire as in concert bands, military bands, marching bands, klezmer, and jazz.
Usage examples of "clarinet".
From his first works onwards, he proceeded along the true symphonic path, and an orchestra of two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, drums, and the usual strings fairly represents the result of his contributions to its development up to the first successful experiments of Mozart.
An oboe and two clarinets lay on a table beside another untidy pile of music, and round the room and on all the bedroom chairs which filled most of the floor space lay a profusion of white silk handkerchiefs, rosin, coffee cups and batons.
Both composers used clarinets rarely, but Haydn certainly did not reveal the real capacity of the instrument or establish its position in the orchestra as Mozart did.
My grandfather, who had sat through the clarinet serenades as he sat through everything, aware of their significance but unconvinced of the wisdom of getting involved, now glared at his son.
And in the boardinghouse on Cadillac Boulevard, Tessie Zizmo paints her toenails and hears the sound of a clarinet.
Now he has a clarinet lesson every two weeks from a teacher recommended by Mr Kelly.
His clarinet teacher suggested playing in a chamber group, which is something he has never tried before.
His dream is to play the Brahms clarinet quintet, but he knows that his technique is not good enough.
An advantage of the clarinet is that Martin can practise in his bedroom.
Idly he wonders how it might affect his playing, but he cannot be bothered to get out his clarinet to find out.
I should have done, especially since I was an ex-convict, was to march back down to the front desk immediately and to say that I was the involuntary custodian of a drawerful of clarinet parts and that perhaps the police should be called.
There were notices in every music store in the country, it turned out, saying that the police should be called immediately if a customer started talking about buying or selling sizeable quantities of clarinet parts.
Thumbtacked to the bulletin board in the gazebo was a circular that advised him to call the police in case anyone expressed interest in buying or selling clarinet parts.
When old Delmar Peale showed the two policemen the circular about the stolen clarinet parts, when he explained what I was to be arrested for, I even smiled.
Milton had been third clarinet in the Southeastern High School orchestra.