|  The Fingering Forum 
 
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    | Author: Trey Date:   1999-12-27 02:18
 
 Recently I have been interested in the oboe.  I visit sites on the Internet that sell oboes.  When they use the term, full mechanism, what do they mean? What is the F reconasonce key?
 
 
 
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    | Author: bLUEpeACE Date:   2000-01-16 01:30
 
 The F reconasonce kev is used fot forked F, typicly out of tuen ( when you use the 1st and 3rd fingure on your right hand) this healps it stay in turn, full mechanism, i bilieve is just a plane oboe, nothing special, but Full conservetory is when it coomes with almost all the bells and whistles.
 
 
 
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    | Author: Chris Date:   2000-05-07 04:30
 
 Both mean the same thing. The extra key. The Recanasonce key is a key that gives the oboe another way of playin that note.
 Chris
 
 
 
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    | Author: Andrea Date:   2000-06-16 23:03
 
 Hi, trey!
 What a wonderful thing the discovery of planet Oboe...
 Under 'F resonance key' are commonly described several
 arrangements of a device, present at this time at least
 in three configurations, designed to cure the tone and
 tuning problems that cross fingerings, also called 'fork fingerings', give on many instruments of the woodwind
 family having a certain bore-to-scale (air column operating
 lenght) ratio. Since the early days this ratio, simply
 called 'mensure', was in knowledge of the makers (albeit
 their technology only allowed trial and error approaching)
 who in turn were aware of the connection between tone-hole
 size and their placement on the instrument's body.
 It turns out that in designing an instrument capable of
 producing every semitone of scale (as opposed as being diatonic) some compromise is called for, because we humans
 have in our hands less fingers than the 12 semitones on which Western music is conceived. Such problems were dealt
 with designing for any given instrument a pattern for
 tone-hole placement that allowed each note to be sounded, either by lifting fingers from their hole or alternating
 open and stopped holes, thus flattening the pitch of the
 last open hole in the fingering. The complex and subtle
 waveforms that rule recorder fingering is such an example.
 The advent of full mechanisation that occurred since
 the early '800 on all woodwind provided each instrument
 with basic keywork, on wich all modern systems developed.
 This proceeded somewhat in bound and leaps, and was not until 1907 that the oboe received its F resonance key, at last allowing the instrument to sound a really good
 F natural. This is the Bonnet key, still the same today.
 It opens a vent (similar in size to the Eb key) on the
 right side of the lower joint when the right middle
 finger is raised for 'forked F' but not when raised for
 other purposes. This is standard of every modern oboe today
 and should always be part of the basic keywork. In practise
 is fitted by default only on the three basic configurations of the Conservatoire oboe, i.e. the standard French oboe or
 Gillet model, the English thumbplate model and the Italian
 Prestini model. Other styles and varieties does not always
 incorporate it, neither do many 'student' model that are othervise true Conservatoire oboes. I am Italian and until
 now I have never seen oboes without the F resonance key,
 unless were replicas and reissues of historical designs, too old to be 'baroque' yet too young to boast all the technical advances that went on until recently.
 As I mentioned before, the Bonnet key is not the only one
 in use: the clarinet too employs the Acton mechanism to
 improve such a note, but I don't know exactly if only
 on German-style clarinets (Whose fingering pattern is
 strictly related to that of the oboe) or on Boehm system
 also (whose fingering is related with that of modern
 flutes and saxophones). Hoping to have been useful, I just
 remember always to seek for the F resonance key in buying
 an oboe, although the third F key is fairly common nowadays
 on all first-rate oboes and othervise available on request
 on many lesser models. Should your oboe lack this essential device, keep your right pinky at hand for Eb key, assisted by a subtle change of embouchure,  is the only way to play
 a good forked F.
 Good luck!
 Andrea
 
 
 
 
 
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