|
|
|
Orchestral Musical Instrument
Classification
|
In an orchestra
-
All the strings are bowed lutes (except for the harp - a harp - and
the piano - a struck zither).
-
Flutes and piccolos are blow hole
aerophones.
-
Clarinets are single reed
aerophones.
-
Oboes and bassoons are double reed
aerophones.
-
All the brass are cup mouthpiece
aerophones.
-
Tympani are vessel
membranophones.
-
The other drums are cylindrical tubular
membranophones.
-
Melody percussion are percussion idiophones.
-
Cymbals and gongs are concussion idiophones.
-
Tamborines are frame drum idiophones.
-
Triangles and some bells are percussion idiophones.
-
Maracas, eggs, and some bells are shaken idiophones.
|
|
The typical
orchestra is divided into four groups of instruments: strings,
woodwinds, brass, and percussion. The typical Western marching
band, school band, or wind ensemble (woodwinds and brass
together are winds) leaves out the
strings, but otherwise uses most of the same instruments as
the orchestra.
|
Strings
There are four
stringed instruments commonly used in the modern orchestra:
the violin, viola, cello, and bass. All are made of wood and
have four strings. All are usually played by drawing a bow
across the strings, but are also sometimes played by
plucking the strings.
The violin
is smallest, has the highest sound, and is most numerous;
there are normally two violin sections (the first violins
and second violins), but only one section of each of the
other strings.
The viola
is only a little bit bigger than a violin, with a slightly
deeper and mellower tone. A nonmusician can have trouble
telling a viola from a violin without a side-by-side
comparison.
The cello
is technically the "violoncello", but few people
call it that anymore. There is no mistaking it for a violin
or viola; it is much bigger, with a much lower, deeper
sound. Whereas violins and violas are held up under the chin
to be played, cellos and basses have to rest on the floor to
be played.
The bass,
also called the "double bass" (its official name),
"standing bass" or "string bass", is so
big that the player must sit on a high stool or stand up to
play it. It has a very low sound.
|
|
Woodwinds
The woodwind
members of the orchestra are the flute, oboe, clarinet, and
bassoon. There can be two, three, or four, of any of these
woodwinds in an orchestra, depending on the size of the
orchestra and the piece being played. All of the modern
woodwinds are played by blowing into them and fingering
different notes using keys that cover various holes.
the saxophone is
not here. This is the one instrument that is always found in
bands and wind ensembles, but only very rarely plays in the
orchestra. Saxophones are transposing
instruments
Although flutes
can be made of wood, the orchestral flute is made of metal.
It also does not have a reed. It is grouped with the
woodwinds partly because it is in fact more closely related
to those instruments than to the brass, but also because the
color
of its sound fits in the woodwind section. The sound is
produced when the player blows across a hole in the side
(not the end) of the instrument. It has a clear, high sound
that can be either gentle or piercing. An even
higher-sounding instrument is the piccolo,
a very small flute that is much more common in bands than in
orchestras.
The oboe
is the instrument that traditionally sounds the first
"A" that the orchestra tunes to. It is black, made
of wood, and at sight can be mistaken by the nonmusician for
a clarinet. But its sound is produced when the player blows
in between two small reeds, and its high
"double-reed" sound is not easily mistaken for any
other instrument. The cor anglais,
or English horn, is a slightly
larger double reed instrument with a deeper, gentler tone,
that is sometimes called for in orchestral music.
The clarinet
is also black and normally made of wood, although good
plastic clarinets are also made. It uses only a single reed.
It is a versatile instrument, with a very wide range of
notes from low to high, and also a wide range of different
sound colors
available to it. In the orchestra, clarinets are no more
numerous than the other woodwinds, but it is usually the
most numerous instrument in bands and wind ensembles because
of its versatility and usefulness. There are many sizes of
clarinet available, including bass and contrabass clarinets,
but the most common is the B flat clarinet. The clarinet is
the only common orchestral woodwind that is usually a transposing
instrument, although there are less common woodwinds,
such as English horn, that are also transposing instruments.
The bassoon
is the largest and lowest-sounding standard orchestral
woodwind. (Bass clarinet and contrabassoon are used only
occasionally.) It is a long hollow tube of wood; you can
often see the tops of the bassoons over the rest of the
orchestra. Like the oboe, the bassoon is a double
reed - the player blows between two reeds - but the
player does not blow into the end of the bassoon. The air
from the reeds goes through a thin metal tube into the
middle of the instrument.
|
|
Brass
The orchestral
brass are all made of metal, although the metal can be a
silvery alloy instead of brass. The sound is actually
produced by "buzzing" the lips against the
mouthpiece; the rest of the instrument just amplifies and
refines the sound from the lips so that it is a pretty,
musical sound by the time it comes out of the bell
at the other end of the instrument. A slide, or three or
four valves, help the instruments get different notes, but
players rely heavily on the harmonic
series of their instruments to get the full range of
notes. The orchestral brass instruments are the trumpet,
French horn, trombone, and tuba. As with the woodwinds, the
number of each of these instruments varies depending on the
size of the orchestra and the piece being played. There are
usually two to five each of trumpets, horns, and trombones,
and one or two tubas.
The trumpet
is the smallest, highest-sounding orchestral brass
instrument. Its shape is quite cylindrical (it doesn't flare
much until the very end), giving it a very clear, direct
sound. Trumpets may read in C or may be B flat transposing
instruments. The cornet, which
is more common in bands than in orchestras, is very similar
to the trumpet and the two instruments are often considered
interchangeable. The cornet has a more conical,
gently-flaring shape and a slightly mellower sound.
The French
horn, or horn, is much more
conical than the trumpet and has a much mellower, more
distant sound. It has a wide range that overlaps both the
trumpet and trombone ranges, and in the orchestra is often
used to fill in the middle of the brass sound. Its long
length of tubing is wrapped into a circular shape and the
bell faces backward and is normally rested on the player's
leg. It is a transposing
instrument that usually reads music in F.
The trombone
is the only valveless brass instrument in the modern
orchestra. One section of its tubing - the slide
- slides in and out to specific positions
to get higher and lower pitches,
but, as with the other brass, it uses the harmonic
series to get all the notes in its range. Its range is
quite a bit lower than the trumpet, but it also has a
brassy, direct (cylindrical-shape) sound.
There are a few
instruments in the middle and low range of the brass section
that are commonly found in bands, but very rare in the
orchestra. The baritone and euphonium
play in the same range as the trombone, but have the more
cylindrical shape and a very mellow, sweet sound. In
marching bands, the horn players often play mellophone and
the tuba players play the sousaphone. The mellophone
is an E flat or F transposing
instrument with a forward-facing bell that is more
suitable for marching bands than the French horn. The sousaphone
was also invented for use in a marching band; its tubing is
wrapped so that the player can carry it on the shoulders.
The tuba
is the largest, lowest-sounding orchestral brass instrument.
It is a conical brass instrument, with a much mellower,
distant sound than the trombone. Its bell (and the bell of
the baritone and euphonium) may either point straight up or
upward and forward.
|
|
Percussion
In a Western
orchestra or band, anything that is not classified as
strings, woodwinds, or brass goes in the percussion section,
including whistles. Most of the instruments in this section,
though, are various drums and other instruments that are hit
with drumsticks or beaters. Here are some of the more common
instruments found in an orchestra percussion section.
Timpani
are large kettledrums (drums with a rounded bottom) that can
be tuned to play specific pitches.
An orchestra or wind ensemble will usually have a few
tympani of various sizes.
Other common
drums do not have a particular pitch. They are usually
cylindrical, sometimes with a drum head on each end of the
cylinder. They include the small side
drum, which often has a snare
that can be engaged to give the drum an extra rattling
sound, the medium-sized tenor drum,
and the large bass drum. All
orchestral drums (including tympani) are played using hard
drum sticks or softer beaters. Drums that are played with
the hands, like bongos, are rare in traditional orchestras
and bands.
Cymbals
can be clashed together, hit with a beater, or slapped
together in "hi-hat" fashion. For smaller
ensembles, various cymbals and drums may be grouped into a drum
set so that one player can play all of them. Gongs
are usually larger and thicker than cymbals and are usually
hit with a soft beater.
There is only
one group of common percussion instruments on which it is
easy to play a melody.
In these instruments, bars, blocks or tubes are arranged in
two rows like the black and white keys of a piano keyboard.
Orchestral xylophones and marimbas
use wooden bars arranged over hollow tubes that help amplify
their sound. The glockenspiel uses
metal bars (like the familiar children's xylophone), and tubular
bells use long, hollow, metal tubes.
Common
percussion extras that add special color and effects to the
music include the tambourine, triangle, maracas and other
shakers, castanets, claves and various wood blocks, and
various bells and scrapers.
|
|
Orchestral Instruments section by:
Catherine
Schmidt-Jones |
Next: How Musical Instruments Work
|
|
|
Personal -
Informational - Not For Profit Website

Please
sign my guest book!
Website
Design by:

EWS
WEBSITE DESIGNS

Background Music: Climb Every Mountain
Sequenced by:
David Doig 1996
*DISCLAIMER* All above songs have been
placed here purely
for entertainment and educational purposes only, without any
commercial
interest whatsoever or profit of any kind. All titles are
copyrighted
by their respective artists and record companies. Please buy any music
you want from an Authorized reseller.Click Refresh
Button to Replay Music
 
Deutschland - Germany
Rheinland - Pfalz - Rhineland - Palatinate
Website
Optimized for 800x600 & 1024x768 screen resolution
Copyright©ReinholdSedlįček 2006
|
|
|