Piccolo clarinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ripamonti A♭ clarinet
Ripamonti A♭ clarinet

The piccolo clarinets are members of the clarinet family, smaller and higher pitched than the more familiar soprano clarinets in E♭ and D. None is common, but the most often used piccolo clarinet is the A♭ clarinet, playing nearly an octave higher than the familiar B♭ clarinet. Shackleton also lists obsolete instruments in C, B♭, and A. Some writers call these sopranino clarinets or octave clarinets. The boundary between the piccolo and soprano clarinets is not well-defined, and the rare instruments in G and F might be considered as either.

Clarinets pitched in A♭ appeared frequently in Europeans wind bands, particularly in Spain and Italy, at least through the middle of the 20th century, and are called for in the stage-band parts for several operas by Verdi.[1]

A famous example of extensive use of a high clarinet in a small ensemble was the Schrammel quartet, consisting of two violins (the brothers Johann and Josef Schrammel), a bass guitar, and G clarinet, played by Georg Dänzer, during the 1880s.[1]

Size comparison among the A♭, E♭, and B♭ clarinets
Size comparison among the A♭, E♭, and B♭ clarinets

The A♭ clarinet is not uncommon in clarinet choir arrangements--for instance, those of Lucien Calliet, including Mozart's Marriage of Figaro overture--though the instrument is often optional or cued in other voices. There are parts for A♭ clarinet in Béla Bartók's Scherzo for Piano and Orchestra, op. 2 ("mostly in unison with the E♭ or piccolo") and in John Tavener's Celtic Requiem (1969).[1] Several chamber works of Hans-Joachim Hespos employ the A♭ clarinet,[2] including the wild go which also features soprano sarrusophone, heckelphone, and tárogató. Hespos also uses the A♭ clarinet in the orchestral work Interactions.[3]

Size comparison of the B♭, E♭, and A♭ reeds; note the greater difference between A♭ and E♭ reed sizes than between E♭ and B♭.
Size comparison of the B♭, E♭, and A♭ reeds; note the greater difference between A♭ and E♭ reed sizes than between E♭ and B♭.

At least four manufacturers currently produce A♭ clarinets: Leblanc, L. A. Ripamonti, Orsi Wind Instruments and Schwenk and Seggelke. As of 2003, the Leblanc A♭ was only being made under special order.[4] Ripamonti produces both German and French system (including Full Boehm) A♭ clarinets. Schwenk and Seggelke make German system clarinets in A♭ and high G.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Basil Tschaikov, "The high clarinets," in Colin Lawson, The Cambridge companion to the clarinet, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 52-55.
  2. ^ Hans-Joachim Hespos - Complete work (engl.) - Ensemble works. Hans-Joachim Hespos web site. Retrieved on 2007-02-07.
  3. ^ Hans-Joachim Hespos - Complete work (engl.) - Orchestral works. Hans-Joachim Hespos web site. Retrieved on 2007-02-07.
  4. ^ Post by Diz to the Clarinet List, 2003-06-27 based on information from Leblanc Sydney

[edit] References

[edit] External Links

L. A. Ripamonti's A-flat clarinet page

Schwenk and Seggelke's A-flat clarinet page, including a recording of a work for Schrammel quartet