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The clarinet: the ‘wood’ bit of the instrument

How the wood affects the sound the instrument makes

A modern clarinet

The biggest part of the clarinet is the long black tube covered with metal ‘keys’, that is, circular pieces of metal that cover holes which once were covered by the player’s fingers.

Like every woodwind instrument the wood affects the sound the instrument makes, though less so than the mouthpiece and the way it is blown. No words quite describe how an instrument sounds, but when played from quietly to not very loud the clarinet sounds quite ‘woody’, more ‘woody’ than, say, the oboe or the flute. In its earliest form when playing loudly it could almost sound like a quiet trumpet.

Open QuoteIt’s the little fingers that get busy reallyClose Quote

Joy Farrall was asked to pull her instrument apart, to show how each part fits together. She also shows how the keys work and demonstrates why the modern clarinet has so many. It’s quite a feat of engineering.

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