|
SAXOPHONE (Ger. Saxophon, Ital. sassofone) , a See also: modern hybrid musical instrument invented by Adolphe See also: Sax, having the See also: clarinet mouthpiece with single See also: reed applied to a conical See also: brass See also: tube
.
In general appearance the saxophone resembles the See also: bass clarinet, but the tube of the latter is cylindrical and of See also: wood; both See also: instruments are doubled up near the See also: bell, which is shaped somewhat like the flower of the See also: gloxinia
.
The mouthpiece in both is fixed to a See also: serpentine tube at right angles to the See also: main See also: bore
.
On the saxophone, owing to its conical bore, the production of See also: sound materially differs from that of the clarinet, and resembles that of the oboe
.
The reed mouthpiece in combination with a conical tube allows the performer to give the ordinary See also: harmonic series unbroken, which means in practice that the octave or second member of the harmonic series is first overblown when the pressure of the breath and the tension of the lips on the reed are proportionally increased
.
The saxophone is there-fore one of the class known as octave instruments
.
The fundamental note given out by the tube when the lateral holes are closed is that of an open See also: organ See also: pipe of the same length, whereas when, as in the clarinet See also: family, the reed mouthpiece is combined with a cylindrical bore, the tube behaves as though it were closed at one end, and its notes are an octave See also: lower in See also: pitch
.
Hence the bass'clarinet to give the same note as a bass saxophone would need to be only See also: half as long
.
The closed pipe, moreover, can only overblow the uneven numbers of the harmonic series, and therefore first gives the 12th instead of the octave, which
necessitates an entirely different arrangement of holes and keys and a different scheme of fingering
.
The bore of the saxophone is large, and there are from 18 to 20 keys covering holes of large diameter to produce the fundamental See also: scale
.
The first 15 semitones are obtained by opening successive keys, the rest of the compass by means of
octave keys enabling th'e performer to
—_ sound the harmonic octave of the funda-
See also: mental scale
.
The compass of the various
= saxophones extends over 2 octaves and
a fifth with chromatic intervals, being one octave less than the clarinet
.
The See also: complete family consists of the accompanying members
.
The See also: treble clef is used in notation., and all saxophones are transposing instruments, the See also: music being written in a higher See also: key, according to the difference in pitch between the fundamental note of the instrument and the
See also: standard C of the
notation
.
The keys given above are of the orchestral saxophones; the instruments used in military bands are a See also: tone lower
.
The quality of tone of this family of instruments is inferior to that of the clarinets and has See also: affinities with that of the harmonium
.
According to See also: Berlioz it has vague analogies with the timbre of 'cello, clarinet and See also: cor anglais,with, how-ever, a brazen tinge
.
To a See also: clock-maker of See also: Lisieux named Desfontenelles, who made a clarinet with a conical bore and an upturned bell in 1807, is due the combination of single reed mouthpiece with a conical tube
.
In 1840 Adolphe Sax, in trying to produce a clarinet that would overblow an octave like the See also: flute and oboe, in-vented the saxophone, which at once leapt into popularity in See also: France and Belgium, where the See also: alto, tenor and baryton have super-
seded & Co., Ltd.) seded the bassoon in almost all
(Besson military bands
.
Many modern French composers, See also: Meyerbeer, Massenet, Ambroise See also: Thomas and others, have scored for it in their operas
.
Kastner introduced it into the orchestra in
See also: Paris in 1844 in Le Dernier Roi de Judo
.
The saxophone has been adopted in See also: England at the Royal
Military School of Music at See also: Kneller See also: Hall
.
(K
.
|
|
|
[back] SAXONY (Ger. Provinz Sachsen) |
[next] SAY |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.