Author: rsholmes
Date: 2008-07-10 20:44
But also note the use of "clarino" instead of "clarion". There are those who says this is wrong, but a Google Books search turns up the following uses of "clarino register" in relation to clarinets:
* Anthony Baines, Woodwind Instruments and Their History
* Albert R. Rice, The Clarinet in the Classical Period
* Nicholas Cox, in Colin Lawson (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Clarinet
If it's a mistake, it's a mistake being made by some pretty major authorities. (I note, though, that Rice uses both "clarino" and "clarion", and that "clarion" seems to be the much more common term.)
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