The Oboe BBoard
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Author: Bucky Badger
Date: 2003-05-17 03:01
I learned way back that you cannot simply pull out a reed that plays sharp. What you have done is created a gap where water can collect and gurgle.If you make your own reeds you can scrape/cut to bring it in-tune. At this point in your oboe playing, play against a tuner maybe and relax the lips. My muscle action alone you can sharpen/flatten the pitch when playing quite a bit. Usually with a too soft reed and muscles not yet in full control you will pinch up and play sharp. You could get a stronger reed but you may lose some reed control.
Personally when starting oboe I would go with the soft reed and relaxing the lips. Try for a good tone on the instrument even if sharp. It will take a teacher and some modelling techniques to get a pleasant vibrato on the instrument rather than the sound of blowing thru a pipe. It will come in time thru listening to records and the instructor.
The beginning things to concentrate on are a decent tone,and measured breathing so you don't pass out. Learning Technique is down the list of things to do now.
I only know of "french cut" and "german cut" reeds. Each person homes in on the sound they want and work the reed to give the results; which I suppose can be called the "American cut" if you happen to be American. But I learned the instrument 1961 to 1967 basically and we only talked about the two main cultures contributions to the oboe--french/german.
jim buchholz
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Corey |
2003-05-17 02:20 |
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Re: Tuning on the Oboe new |
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Bucky Badger |
2003-05-17 03:01 |
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Kai |
2003-05-19 09:16 |
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Bucky Badger |
2003-05-19 14:02 |
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TorusTubarius |
2003-07-22 03:57 |
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Bucky Badger |
2003-07-23 02:21 |
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TorusTubarius |
2003-07-23 21:45 |
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Bucky Badger |
2003-07-25 14:19 |
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Frank3947 |
2003-09-22 22:21 |
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Bucky Badger |
2003-09-24 14:08 |
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ChrisM |
2003-07-23 21:48 |
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Frank3947 |
2003-09-14 04:25 |
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