Yet Again
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Grizzly Bear Yet again we're the only ones No surprise, this is often…


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Comments from YouTube:

Cake Cakes

Love the intricacies of orchestral Instruments and exploring everything about them. Thank you for Bassoon representation. I wish I could find people just like you for every orchestral instrument :)

Josh Woods

Yes, R. Strauss on Tenoroon!! Would love to hear Salome on the tenoroon too. Although it doesn't require the extended notes below A2, I think it's worth a shot too as I think the tenoroon's timbre suits the work well. Of course the heckelphone is what it's meant to be played on, but when you can't obtain one a tenoroon IMHO is still a better sub than a bass oboe in terms of range & timbre!

RatchetOfVaporex / Thomas Håkanson

What’s a Whisper Key lock? Heck, what’s a whisper key?

Schegilator

@Theo SK - Multitracks As far as I understand it, the whisper key is a key actuated by the left thumb, (although on French bassoons and some German ones that have it as a custom option can have a redundant key on the left pinky) that closes a vent on the bocal. The vent is supposed to be like a poor octave vent and is a holdover from when it was more difficult to manufacture woodwind keys. When open it makes the probability of the octave, first overtone, second harmonic, whatever you want to call it of speaking more equal to the fundamental speaking then if it were closed. It was added to early bassoons to make hitting the upper octave easier, but not guaranteed, so the lower octave could still be hit without a key to close it.

To a modern bassoonist it is like a reverse octave key (press for low octave, release for high octave) but it is not an almost guaranteed octave, like on a saxophone for example, because it is two high on the bore for that; it is not close to where the pressure nodes fall for the second octave notes. It requires a fast enough air stream and potentially help from other keys to cross the break.

Then we mix in the flick/vent keys of another historical origin, and things get complicated.

A whisper key lock locks the whisper key lock down in a more permanent way than the key. It is useful if you have a passage with wide downward jumps to low C or lower, or you want to play in a 'venting' style were you just use the A, C, and D vent keys and forget the whisper key all together.

Typically, when playing it like an American, the whisper key is closed from Ab3 and lower (the low E closes it automatically though), G4, Ab4, and ideally A4 and Bb4, although only some bassoons have a mechanism for closing it when playing those notes. Hopefully I got the numbers right. I hope that is good summery.

Theo SK - Multitracks

The whisper key is one of the left thumb keys on a bassoon, if I recall correctly. Normally it’s held down when playing beneath Middle F (Middle C on the tenoroon), and it helps with volume control

Some actual bassoonist is probably going to slap me and correct everything I just said, but I think that’s the gist of it

Mark William Garcia

I'm here for Tenoroon music theft! I do the same with recorder to flute/violin/oboe or anything I want to play.

PressPlay

i was orchestrating a piano piece and guess what, i added a subcontrabbassoon to the score

Kent Reuber

The Hecklephone doesn’t have a range to low F, so borrowing seems like a fine idea. The Wolf lupophone Hecklephone variant does descend to F.

Mirko Jorgovic

Is tenoroon transposed instrument in F or in G like English horn ?

Richard Bobo

I prefer to notate it in concert pitch tenor clef.

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