Contrabass clarinet

Contrabass clarinet
Besson contrabass clarinet, post-1890

The contrabass clarinet is the largest member of the clarinet family that has ever been in regular production or significant use. Modern contrabass clarinets are pitched in BB, sounding two octaves lower than the common B soprano clarinet and one octave lower than the B bass clarinet. Some contrabass clarinet models have a range extending down to low (written) E, while others can play down to low D or further to low C. Some early instruments were pitched in C; Arnold Schoenberg's Fünf Orchesterstücke specifies a contrabass clarinet in A,[1] but there is no evidence of such an instrument ever having existed.

The contrabass clarinet is also sometimes known by the name pedal clarinet, this term referring not to any aspect of the instrument's mechanism but to an analogy between its very low tones and the pedal tones of the trombone, or the pedal division of the organ.

Subcontrabass clarinets, lower in pitch than the contrabass, have been built but only on an experimental basis.

The EE contra-alto clarinet is sometimes referred to as the "EE contrabass clarinet".

Contents

History

The earliest known contrabass clarinet was the contre-basse guerrière invented in 1808 by a goldsmith named Dumas of Sommières; little else is known of this instrument.

The batyphone (also spelled bathyphone, Ger. and Fr. batyphon) was a contrabass clarinet which was the outcome of W. F. Wieprecht's endeavor to obtain a contrabass for the reed instruments. The batyphone was made to a scale twice the size of the clarinet in C, the divisions of the chromatic scale being arranged according to acoustic principles. For convenience in stopping holes too far apart to be covered by the fingers, crank or swivel keys were used. The instrument was constructed of maple-wood, had a clarinet mouthpiece of suitable size connected by means of a cylindrical brass crook with the upper part of the tube and a brass bell. The pitch was two octaves below the clarinet in C, the compass being the same, and thus corresponding to the modern bass tuba. The tone was pleasant and full, but not powerful enough for the contrabass register in a military band. The batyphone had besides one serious disadvantage: it could be played with facility only in its nearly related keys, G and F major. The batyphone was invented and patented in 1839 by F.W. Wieprecht, director general of all the Prussian military bands, and E. Skorra, the court instrument manufacturer of Berlin. In practice the instrument was found to be of little use, and was superseded by the bass tuba.

A batyphone bearing the name of its inventors formed part of the Snoeck collection which was acquired for Berlin's collection of ancient musical instruments at the Hochschule für Musik.[2]

Soon after Wieprecht's invention, Adolphe Sax created his clarinette-bourdon in B.

In 1889 Fontaine-Besson began producing a new pedal clarinet (see photograph). This instrument consists of a tube 10 feet (3.0 m) long, in which cylindrical and conical bores are combined. The tube is doubled up twice upon itself. There are 13 keys and 2 rings on the tube, and the fingering is the same as for the B clarinet except for the eight highest semitones. The tone is rich and full except for the lowest notes, which are unavoidably a little rough in quality, but much more sonorous than the corresponding notes on the double bassoon. The upper register resembles the chalumeau register of the B clarinet, being reedy and sweet.[3]

None of these instruments saw widespread use, but they provided a basis for contrabass clarinets made beginning in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by several manufacturers, notably those designed by Charles Houvenaghel for Leblanc, which were more successful.

Producers

There are several present-day producers of the contrabass clarinet. Selmer Paris makes a rosewood version (model 41) looking much like a longer version of the bass clarinet, with full keywork, and Leblanc USA has a plastic instrument in a similar long-body design. Leblanc Paris builds two versions made of metal, model 340 (known as a paperclip contrabass due to its folded shape) with range to low C, and the model 342 (similar in shape to the Selmer and Leblanc USA models, with range to low Eb). In 2006 Benedikt Eppelsheim introduced a metal contrabass clarinet with a folded shape somewhat resembling that of a baritone saxophone, described as a full Boehm system instrument with a full set of four right hand trill keys. Eppelsheim has also built the "infrabass clarinet" as a custom job; its range extending down to Bb-1 with a frequency of 14.57Hz.

Ernst Deuker, a German jazz musician, with the Selmer instrument.

Performers

Probably the best known musician who has made significant use of the contrabass clarinet as a solo instrument is Anthony Braxton. Other performers (most of whom use the instrument in the genres of jazz and free improvised music) include James Carter, Douglas Ewart, Vinny Golia, Mwata Bowden, Wolfgang Fuchs, Hans Koch, Ernst Ulrich Deuker, Paolo Ravaglia, Hamiet Bluiett, and Edward "Kidd" Jordan. Leroi Moore, saxophone/woodwind player of the Dave Matthews Band, played a contrabass clarinet on the song "So Right" from the 2001 album Everyday.[citation needed]

Musical compositions using contrabass clarinet

Solo literature for the instrument is relatively scarce. Examples include:

  • Scherzo Fantastique by Alfred Reed
  • Ombra by Franco Donatoni
  • Anubis, Nout by Gérard Grisey
  • interference by Richard Barrett - also employing the player's voice and a pedal bass drum.
  • Celephaïs by Héctor Moro - with electronics created manipulating contrabass clarinet sounds -
Clarinet family from left to right: Leblanc BB♭ contrabass, Leblanc EE♭ contra-alto, Buffet B♭ bass, E♭ alto and B♭ soprano

Some compositions making notable use of the contrabass clarinet include:

  1. ^ Arnold Schoenberg, Five Orchestral Pieces (Courier Dover, 1999)
  2. ^ This description of the batyphone is quoted, with minor revisions, from  Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "batyphone". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.  This in turn derived its description mainly from a manuscript treatise on instrumentation by Wieprecht, in 1909 in the possession of Herr Otto Lessmann (Berlin), and reproduced by Capt. C.R. Day, in Descriptive Catalogue of the Musical Instruments of the Royal Military Exhibition, London, 1890 (London, 1891), p. 124. The Britannica article is by Kathleen Schlesinger.
  3. ^ This description of the Besson pedal clarinet is condensed from  Schlesinger, Kathleen (1911). "pedal clarinet". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.  The date of 1889 is from Rendall.
  4. ^ see liner notes for e. g. Lumpy Gravy, London Symphony Orchestra, The Yellow Shark, Civilization Phaze III

References

  • F. Geoffrey Rendall. The Clarinet. Second Revised Edition. London: Ernest Benn Limited, 1957.
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

External links


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