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Published byMarian Butler Modified over 9 years ago
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HAVPA
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Violin Viola Cello Bass All usually played with a bow Can be plucked/picked
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Smallest Highest sound Held under chin Two violin sections First violins Second violins
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Slightly larger than a violin Deep/mellow tone Held under chin Hard to tell violin and viola apart
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“violoncello” Much bigger than the violin and viola Lower, deeper sound Rest on floor to be played
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Three other names Double bass Standing bass String bass Player sits on high stool or stand up to play Very low sound
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Piano Harp
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Flute Oboe Clarinet Bassoon All played by blowing into them and using fingers to play the different notes by using keys to cover different holes
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The saxophone is not in this group (rarely in orchestras)
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Can be made of wood (orchestral made of metal) Has no reed More closely related to woodwinds than brass timbre or color fits woodwinds Sound is produced when a player blows across a hole in the side Clear, high sound than can be gentle or piercing
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Very small flute Much more common in bands than in orchestras
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Black Made of wood Can be mistaken for a clarinet Sound is produced when the player blows through two small reed double-reed instrument The player blows between two reeds
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Slightly larger double-reed instrument Deeper, gentler tone Not the same as the French horn
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Black Normally made of wood (sometimes plastic) Single reed Wide range of notes from low to high Many sizes of clarinets Bass Contrabass B-flat clarinet
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Largest Lowest-sounding standard orchestral woodwind Long hollow tube of wood Can often see the tops of bassoons over the rest of the orchestra Double reed The air from the reeds goes through a thin metal tube into the middle of the instrument
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