Metal clarinets

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== Miscellaneous Links ==
== Miscellaneous Links ==
* [http://www.new-orleans-delight.dk/Sidste%20nyt/The%20Clarinet%20That%20Made.html The Clarinet That Made History].
* [http://www.new-orleans-delight.dk/Sidste%20nyt/The%20Clarinet%20That%20Made.html The Clarinet That Made History].
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[[Category:Odd instances of mundane members of mundane families]]
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[[Category:Clarinets]]

Current revision as of 17:35, 14 September 2006

Even a mundane Bb soprano or bass clarinet becomes odd (Category 3) when made of metal. Metal soprano clarinets actually were quite popular during the 1930s and 1940s, being more durable and less susceptible to changes in temperature and humidity than wooden instruments. Plastic clarinets drove metal back into obscurity by the middle of the century, though some musicians (especially in jazz) still favor them.

For the largest (already odd) members of the clarinet family the advantages of metal are more important, and Leblanc France still makes metal contra-alto and contrabass clarinets in both straight and "paperclip" formats. (Leblanc USA makes straight plastic contras.) Metal was also used for the octocontra-alto and octocontrabass clarinets.

[edit] Pictures

[edit] Miscellaneous Links

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