The Oboe BBoard
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Author: EaubeauHorn
Date: 2020-01-28 01:15
I was taught that the crow is with your lips practically touching the cork, so that they are not affecting what the reed does. The first crow should be a C and without the lips touching the reed, if it is a stable reed, it will be difficult to get it to change its pitch much. The second crow is lips in same position but blowing harder, and the C an octave below should sound. There should be no "squawk" at all. Ever. Supposedly "pro" reeds I have bought that have a squawk are extremely hard to play in tune, while the ones that crow as described above require very little embouchure adjustment to play in tune. A stable reed does not imply a stiff reed, either.
Post Edited (2020-01-28 01:17)
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Barry Vincent |
2019-08-06 04:57 |
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Hotboy |
2019-08-06 19:44 |
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Barry Vincent |
2019-08-07 00:55 |
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Hotboy |
2019-08-07 03:20 |
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Barry Vincent |
2019-08-07 04:26 |
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Barry Vincent |
2019-08-07 10:05 |
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oboist2 |
2019-08-07 01:34 |
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mschmidt |
2019-08-07 08:06 |
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EaubeauHorn |
2019-10-17 01:11 |
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Barry Vincent |
2019-10-17 05:42 |
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Hotboy |
2019-12-14 03:10 |
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Re: Reeds that play very flat. new |
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EaubeauHorn |
2020-01-28 01:15 |
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