The Missing Bassoon

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 171

  • @BretNewtonComposer
    @BretNewtonComposer  5 лет назад +34

    To everyone who keeps mentioning "contra-alto bassoon" or some variance thereof, check out this video: ruclips.net/video/luV-VTGQXp8/видео.html
    Contra-alto isn't an acceptable term for any instrument.

    • @PeterGriffin-kb2hf
      @PeterGriffin-kb2hf 4 года назад +10

      I disagree. Just because it isn't official or historical doesn't mean it isn't a logical designation. It simply is an octave lower than alto. The issue is that instrument names are quite relative. for example an octave lower than a alto saxophone is a baritone saxophone, and in order to play contrabass range, you need a subcontrabass saxophone. I think bassoon having bass in it's name is the real issue. It is not really a bass instrument. Really the missing member would be called a bassoon while the current bassoon would logically be called a barisoon or something of the like. Either way naming for instruments by range is based on who decided what range they felt like it was in. I think alto contrabass would be completely appropriate.

    • @bobofthekerbals9797
      @bobofthekerbals9797 4 года назад +14

      Contra-alto is an acceptable term for contra-alto clarinet

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 4 года назад

      @@bobofthekerbals9797 the problem with that though is the Alto Clarinet itself really shouldn't be called the Alto Clarinet (instead be called the tenor clarinet), and it also sounds honestly way worse than even just calling it by it's older name, the Eb Contrabass Clarinet.

    • @mackenlyparmelee5440
      @mackenlyparmelee5440 3 года назад

      Why not just call it a great bassoon?

    • @minka866
      @minka866 2 года назад

      *Contra Alto* clarinete

  • @Subcontrabassoon
    @Subcontrabassoon 8 лет назад +142

    I still like "Greatbassoon" as one compound word. But I'm weird.

    • @shiningarmor2838
      @shiningarmor2838 7 лет назад +2

      I've heard the instrument called "Kontrafagott" as if it were a regular contrabassoon.

    • @fcopaja
      @fcopaja 7 лет назад

      It is, in romance language speaking countries

    • @KimimaruKusanagi
      @KimimaruKusanagi 7 лет назад

      Richard Bobo I prefer "greatbassoon" too. I think it's a good name for this instrument.

    • @aaronh8095
      @aaronh8095 7 лет назад +2

      Do we need a semi-sub contrabassoon now?

    • @nathancarpenter8267
      @nathancarpenter8267 7 лет назад +1

      I think it should be called a sub bassoon

  • @Jerry-hp5sf
    @Jerry-hp5sf 5 лет назад +22

    Take a shot every time he says “bassoon”.

  • @mrslinkydragon9910
    @mrslinkydragon9910 5 лет назад +54

    The contrabassoon looks good in the paperclip style. Clarinets however do not

    • @HelicopterHarmonics
      @HelicopterHarmonics 5 лет назад +6

      The semi-contrabassoon would look good in the paperclip style as well.

  • @ethantran1395
    @ethantran1395 6 лет назад +54

    How about comingsoon

  •  8 лет назад +56

    Fun fact; the normal bassoon can play higher than a tenor bassoon, and as low as the Semi-Contrabassoon. I have a video on my channel where I play up to the high C above Rite of Spring, and another where I play down to contra F. (low Eb is also possible, but I found the fingerings for it after I uploaded the video). Great video though, and certainly Richard's Subcontrabassoon project is fascinating, I see we're both "Contributors" on his homepage to support his project :-)

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  8 лет назад +6

      Oh I very much know it. Those extra low notes via multiphonics I don't put much stock in. I've tried them on many different bassoons and have never had them work well.

    • @Subcontrabassoon
      @Subcontrabassoon 8 лет назад +2

      What's the multiphonic fingering you found for contra Eb? I only know down to contra E.

    • @lucashoffses9019
      @lucashoffses9019 6 лет назад +2

      But wouldn't the tenor bassoon be able to go even higher with the fingerings on the bassoon and the right air pressure?

    • @kimjeongyeon5640
      @kimjeongyeon5640 6 лет назад +1

      Yes. It will go up to F6, which is even difficult for oboe

    • @caterscarrots3407
      @caterscarrots3407 5 лет назад +2

      @@BretNewtonComposer Multiphonics can make the instrument go lower? I have only heard of multiphonics in one context, playing an interval simultaneously instead of arpeggiating it(so like the woodwind equivalent of a double stop on the violin.

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 5 лет назад +15

    Contratenoroon maybe? This is a 1 word term that describes the range of the instrument. Contra for octave below and instead of bassoon in the name, there is tenoroon in the name, referencing the fact that this instrument is in the same key as the tenoroon.

  • @gregfaris6959
    @gregfaris6959 Год назад +3

    I am not convinced this is the most meaningful approach if we are to imagine expanding the bassoon family. The reason I say this is that improvement in instrument mechanisms and players’ technique have vastly expanded the useful range of both the bassoon, and to a lesser extent the contrabassoon, to where the ranges seamlessly cover everything from sub-bass to high alto, and many bassoonists also have a low “A” bell (or a rolled-up magazine) to get that one semitone. The “altered” version played here to justify a “bass bassoon” is actually easily and musically played by contrabassoonists today (listen to Amrei Liebold’s video and her beautiful playing).
    If there were to be a useful “new” bassoon, I believe it would be in the form of a transposing instrument, similar to what clarinetists do with their A and Bb instruments. The bassoon, though it is a “concert” instrument, is really an “F” instrument, and F-major is the closest thing to an open scale on the instrument. F#, C# and B natural are weak and difficult to tune, and most bassoonists are less comfortable playing sharp keys (G, D, A, E major and their relative minors) as opposed to flat keys (F, Bb, Eb etc). A transposing bassoon sounding in G or A would allow bassoonists to play in the sharp keys with the same boldness and ease with which they play in the more comfortable flat keys today.

    • @brandtbecker1810
      @brandtbecker1810 Год назад

      I think your idea is better than trying to develop an entirely new instrument (-:

  • @bernhardkirchner5447
    @bernhardkirchner5447 3 года назад +8

    I have seen and heard a bassoon and in low F, and have have heard of quintbassoon, there are also videos nowadays of dulcian ensembles which use tenor and alto dulcians , it's quite a unique sound!

  • @sashakindel3600
    @sashakindel3600 8 лет назад +24

    The "bassoon quint" terminology is confusing, because elsewhere I've always seen "quint bassoon" to refer to a tenor bassoon a fifth *higher* than a bassoon.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  8 лет назад +4

      The better term is "Quint Bass Bassoon." In German, the term Hochquintfagott or Tiefquintfagott were sometimes used.

  • @windyrunner3847
    @windyrunner3847 5 лет назад +8

    Welp, forget about my tuition fee, lmao

  • @mason11198
    @mason11198 4 года назад +9

    I WANT THE SUB CONTRABASSOON !!!!!!!!!! I already wrote a subcontra solo that sounds amazing for Tuba, now I need it for a bassoon!!!!

  • @TheSammywammybar
    @TheSammywammybar 6 лет назад +10

    In the Tuba world we have both Bass and Contrabass tubas. Basses are pitched in F and Eb and Contrabasses are pitched in CC and BBb. Why can't we name a semi-contrabassoon just a bass bassoon?

    • @greymountain7107
      @greymountain7107 4 года назад +2

      Because the redundant name is confusing.

    • @jmwoods190
      @jmwoods190 2 года назад +1

      I for one would call it a "subbassoon"- lower than a bassoon but not quite as low as a contrabassoon.

  • @SammieSeville
    @SammieSeville 4 года назад +7

    I feel like the semi-contrabassoon would look better if it had the same shape and style as the contrabassoon.

  • @kendrickpereira37
    @kendrickpereira37 5 лет назад +2

    Food for thought. And it's nice to see the bassoon family recognised as a distinct family from the oboe family. The two families overlap in range. You mention the tenor bassoon. Let's not forget there is also an alto bassoon and until well after WW2 (though on the way out) there was a bass oboe. No, not a baritone oboe but a bass oboe, an octave lower than the cor anglais.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  5 лет назад +3

      Can you show me an example of a Bass Oboe in F? I've spent over 25 years researching the topic and have come across a single example (a museum piece) from the middle of the 1700s. As for the Alto Bassoon, until someone makes it an instrument for professionals and not for children, we can't really consider it a useable option.

  • @aycc-nbh7289
    @aycc-nbh7289 4 года назад +4

    What about the third tenor trombone and bass trombone in bands? Could we perhaps get a baritone trombone in F/C/Db/A?

  • @ScottlenBrown
    @ScottlenBrown 3 месяца назад

    Good work Brent I love your videos and I am commenting on the one that started it all 7 years later and I hope that you can get this project done and keep teaching. I am the only high-school Contra-bassoonist in montana so I get if you feel alone

  • @musicmania62
    @musicmania62 6 лет назад +3

    Before Easter vacation my orchestra played Bach's St John's Passion. The conductor wanted a massive continuo section and justified his orchestration ideas on the last edition that Bach made. I read up on the subject and it seems that this last version's inclusion of a fagotto grosso came from an orchestral part from a couple years before Bach's death where someone had written that term. In any case, among all these commentaries of the use of bassoon s in Bach's music there was mention of a quart bassoon obligato part in one of Bach's cantatas. An instrument in G. Back to the Passion, the continuo was 2 basses, contra, bassoon, 4 cellos, a huge organ, harpsichord, theorba. No matter how soft we played it was just wrong and fortunately the stubborn conductor desisted. I had played this piece on baroque bassoon, one bass, 2 cellos, a positive organ and even then it was delicate playing. It's a choral piece for heaven's sake. By the way, I think that the sub contra bassoon is not a very useful idea. Even organs that have a 32 foot register use that stop just to rumble you can't really get the note.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  6 лет назад +2

      So, we do know for a fact that the Bassono grosso in the St. John Passion was indeed a Contrabassoon. One made by Eichentopf in Leipzig. That exact instrument still exists and is the model for which all historical reproductions have been made. As for the "G Quart Bassoon," we now know that this was not the case. I've talked to the leading historical scholar (Kevin Hall) on Bach's use of such instruments in his cantatas and it is a strange situation where the wind instruments were using French-made instruments tuned to A=396 while the Organ and strings were tuned to Hochkammerton at A=466. This difference between these is a minor third and fully accounts for the low Gs in the Bassoon part. On the performance, we you using modern or period instruments?

    • @musicmania62
      @musicmania62 6 лет назад +1

      Bret Newton - Composer ... very interesting regarding the different tunings and coming together in the practical world. I'd just like to say that following the continuo part's fagotto grosso indications to the letter (playing exactly where indicated) made for a bottom heavy sound. Technically I was delighted. What was confusing was that there wasn't any indication when it was just bassoon. Trying to make sense of the orchestration as an accompyment to a choir and soloists I came.to the conclusion that the bassono grosso was à typo that was really basso grosso. The indication just didn't make sense and was confusing. The vast majority of recordings on RUclips use just a bassoon. Of course this is the discretion of the conductor and what is available to him. I am just saying that from a practical performance based criteria the bassono grosso indication is wired and awkward. Regarding the big bassoon I'd love having that in the orchestra!

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  6 лет назад

      Sorry for the late response. For whatever reason, your reply went to the spam folder. Basso grosso wouldn't really make sense (I'm assuming that you're referring to the Double Bass). Bach used with Violone or Violino Grosso for the lowest string instrument, Bassono (or some variant thereof) was Bach preferred terminology for the bassoon while Fagott(o) would be his terminology for the dulcian. The reason you don't see the Contrabassoon on most RUclips recordings is that many ensembles won't spring for the expense of renting such an instrument for the performance (only a few such instruments are extant).

  • @คณพศซ้วนตั้น

    Let call it an "F contrabassoon "

  • @HelicopterHarmonics
    @HelicopterHarmonics 7 лет назад +4

    Bass trumpets, baritone horns, and euphoniums sound different from each other because of different cylinder to cone ratios. (Resulting in tubas having a rounder sound than contrabass trombones for example). Saxophones and clarinets sound different from each other because of the different ends ratio. (Resulting in clarinets pitched a fifth lower than saxophones of the same transposition, and clarinets having only odd/2n+1 harmonics while saxophones have all/1n+1 harmonics). So what makes bass oboes and octave bassoons sound different, even though they are double reeds, conical, and have the same harmonic series? BTW, I'm going to invent a single reed instrument that has 3n+1 harmonics. And I have a keyless prototype of one on my channel.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад

      Oboes and bassoons are fundamentally different instruments. Take a look at the reed design and you'll see they work in different ways. Secondly, the bore structure, while both conical, is radically different from one another. Bassoons do not have an even cone, whereas oboes do.

    • @HelicopterHarmonics
      @HelicopterHarmonics 7 лет назад

      So the reed and differently shaped conical bore is what sets them apart. I know they're not in the same family since they look and sound too different, but for some reason, people think bass oboes sound like bassoons even though they're not the same pitch. Thanks for the info BTW.

  • @reidoha1066
    @reidoha1066 Год назад

    This reminds me of this idea I had when I was learning how to play the bassoon after having learned the clarinet. I thought that it would have made things a little easier & more consistent between all of the woodwinds if the bassoon had been written as if it were in the key of F (without actually changing the instrument any) & gave the instrument the key name layout of the oboe, flute, & saxophone.
    So, open F would become a C & the low Bb would become an F, then write the music in treble clef. You would only have to learn 1 clef instead of 3 different clefs, & doubling between the woodwinds would be easier.
    Oh well, it was just a thought I had like 15 years ago. 😅

  • @narekavakianmusique
    @narekavakianmusique 7 лет назад +2

    Ravel have also part for sarousophonium in Rhapsodie Espagnole wich is played by bassoonist.

  • @zacharycoronado6749
    @zacharycoronado6749 8 лет назад +20

    Maybe call it the
    G bassoon?

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  8 лет назад +4

      The instrument I digitally create is actually one in F. However, simply calling it an "F Bassoon" would be confusing as there is also a Tenor Bassoon in F, not to mention that the Bassoon itself is actually fundamentally in F (at least its scale is based on F).

    • @zacharycoronado6749
      @zacharycoronado6749 8 лет назад +1

      Oh I see. Mentally, I always accidentally refer to bassoon as an instrument in C. Maybe because I first learned music from the perspective of Bb Clarinet. F Bassoon, or Bassoon in F could work out if one also used the terms designated as quartbassoon and quintbassoon, for the G and F tenor bassoons.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  8 лет назад +1

      However, quart and quint have also been used historically for the lower instruments as well as the higher ones.

  • @iwantmy2dollars662
    @iwantmy2dollars662 6 лет назад +17

    I would love to play the semi-contrabasoon...

  • @SuperJxl
    @SuperJxl 2 года назад +1

    Tenor Bassoon, Bassoon, Eb Contrabassoon, Contrabassoon, Subcontrabassoon, Octobassoon.

  • @OboeFiles
    @OboeFiles 6 лет назад +3

    Just found this channel! Pretty into it

  • @bobjacobson858
    @bobjacobson858 Год назад

    I hope this instrument comes to fruition.

  • @mason11198
    @mason11198 4 года назад +1

    5th lower sounds kind of like a Tuba. Much more warm and broad.

  • @McJays
    @McJays 7 лет назад +4

    Hi. Great video and a good idea! What software did you use to lower your recording a fifth?

  • @tomsheft4223
    @tomsheft4223 5 лет назад +1

    I suppose, instead of buying a new car, one could commission one from an instrument maker.

  • @aidanknox2430
    @aidanknox2430 3 года назад +4

    Does contrabassoon play in the bass range instead of contrabass range like how bassoon plays in the tenor range instead of the bass range quite often?

    • @RobinHillyard
      @RobinHillyard 2 года назад +3

      Generally, no. I’ve never seen a contra part that should/could be written in tenor or treble clef, for instance. It’s unusual for contra to play above F (although, if I recall, Beethoven has a few Gs).

  • @andrewbell1595
    @andrewbell1595 2 года назад +1

    Anyone gonna mention how he says the semi-contrabassoon would be the normal bassoon's range down a fifth, but has a graphic up showing how it's range is shorter by atleast a step and a half. Doesn't matter, but just found it funny.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  2 года назад +1

      High range of all woodwind instruments is an arbitrary limit. Different players can reach different notes.

    • @andrewbell1595
      @andrewbell1595 2 года назад

      @@BretNewtonComposer um, if you're talking about beginner to intermediate then yes?? But that's the same for brass too? Woodwind instruments really do have limits depending on the instrument. I cant go higher than Eb on a bassoon that doesn't have a E key. I was just pointing out something I found funny, but I think the statement you just said tends to be pretty false? I'd agree it changes with players more on certain instruments(brass only to my knowledge), but 100% not bassoon unless you put holes in your bocal (depends more on equipment not player).

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  2 года назад

      @@andrewbell1595 with any wind, brass, or string instrument, there’s no limit to how high you can play. The only limit is the player’s technique.

    • @andrewbell1595
      @andrewbell1595 2 года назад

      @@BretNewtonComposer ykw, you're right, im gonna go play C8 on a contrabassoon now : ). You're not trying to word it like that, but uh, it's just a bad look at this point chill out. Instruments have limits, and adding modifications to instruments to make them go lower or higher is not *player technique* is all I was getting at.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  2 года назад +1

      @@andrewbell1595 I’m totally chill. Maybe it’s not a good look to try and correct people on the internet.

  • @broccolifireminecraft6367
    @broccolifireminecraft6367 8 лет назад +4

    Would there be more balance for a bassoon midway between contrabassoon and the Subcontrabassoon?

    • @skylerhester6220
      @skylerhester6220 8 лет назад +1

      maybe how clarinets have a contralto and contrabass clarinet, but since we don't a subcontrabassoon invented yet, we will have to see

  • @LowReedExpert1
    @LowReedExpert1 7 лет назад +3

    They could just name it wrong like the Contraalto Clarinet, although it's becoming more normal to call it Eb contra

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +2

      The term Contra-Alto should really be avoided for all instruments except the Clarinet. It's a hybrid term and really has a poor definition. It literally means "against the (contr)alto," as such, it means an instrument an octave below the also.

    • @LowReedExpert1
      @LowReedExpert1 7 лет назад +1

      Yeah, best to keep that naming convention quarantined

    • @shiningarmor2838
      @shiningarmor2838 7 лет назад

      This would not work because there is little, if any evidence of an alto bassoon, and if there were, the octave below it would be higher than the regular bassoon.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +4

      I'm not sure where you're getting your information from, but the Alto or Octave Bassoon most assuredly exists. I've had the pleasure of playing on several made by Wolf.

    • @kimjeongyeon5640
      @kimjeongyeon5640 6 лет назад +2

      Contra-tenor bassoon will be more accurate. One octave below tenor bassoon.

  • @JoshLemer
    @JoshLemer 6 месяцев назад

    But why not just write these parts for contrabassoon? Why would we need an instrument half way when there's already so much overlap in range between contra and regular bassoon?

  • @coloradocrustaceans
    @coloradocrustaceans 6 лет назад +1

    Love your videos!!!

  • @nextleveljourney6612
    @nextleveljourney6612 3 года назад +2

    Solution:
    Tenor-oon
    Bassoon
    Semi-Contra 😝
    Bassoon
    Contra-Bassoon

  • @HelicopterHarmonics
    @HelicopterHarmonics 7 лет назад +1

    There is actually a video that has a semi-contrabassoon in it, (with semi-real samples too).

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +1

      Can you provide a link? I know of none.

    • @HelicopterHarmonics
      @HelicopterHarmonics 7 лет назад

      For some reason, all comments I make with links get deleted, unless they're on my videos. So the video is call "Bassoon Family" made by TruncatedTriangle.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад

      Sounds like general MIDI to me.

    • @HelicopterHarmonics
      @HelicopterHarmonics 7 лет назад

      That happens when recorded samples are cropped to only a single waveform, which is what I meant by semi-real.

  • @Malcoladdin
    @Malcoladdin 5 лет назад +1

    What about the subcontrabassoon? It feels absolutely necessary

  • @James-io8lj
    @James-io8lj Год назад

    the last will pop your eyes out and stuff at 13.25 Hz

  • @larry2125
    @larry2125 5 лет назад +3

    Great video Bret! I have a question. Is the (regular) bassoon acoustically pitched an F instrument, or is it acoustically pitched in C? I know it reads in bass clef C, but how about the instrument itself? The fingering XXX|XXXX on other woodwinds makes their C, but on the bassoon it's a concert F, so I'm really confused. So is the bassoon technically an F instrument, and if so, what key would that make the tenoroon? Any help is appreciated :)

    • @RobinHillyard
      @RobinHillyard 2 года назад

      Good point. You could argue that the bassoon is an oboe that has been transposed down an octave and a half (a twelfth) down to F just below the bass clef. However, the XXX|Xoo fingering is B natural rather than B flat (so that it counts as an instrument "in C"). We should also note that, whereas the oboe's lower "extension" is only one whole tone (C to B-flat), the bassoon's "extension" is a fifth (F to Bb).

  • @organist1982
    @organist1982 Год назад

    Hi, Bret, have you made a video about the octave bassoon or mini bassoon that is a full octave above the standard bassoon?

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  Год назад +1

      I never have. I should have done it when I had one borrowed for the first Oonmoot (technically, Richard and I covered it in the first Oonmoot video on his channel).

  • @brandtbecker1810
    @brandtbecker1810 Год назад

    Tchaikowsky and Ravel - I think are the two best composers to turn to for learning orchestrational techniques. Please look at gregfaris6959's take on this a bit farther down. Bret - when I first came across this, I thought you were going to talk about the "long lost" Tenoroon and how there are those who have advocated that it was the instrument Rossini had in mind for the famous solo in the "William Tell Overture" - the tenoroon being pitched a 5th higher than the regular bassoon. I liked your vlog on the ophicleide (-:

  • @Ivytheherbert
    @Ivytheherbert 3 года назад +1

    If bass bassoon sounds redundant, why not double bassoon?

    • @RobinHillyard
      @RobinHillyard 2 года назад

      Because "double bassoon" is already the name of the instrument pitched down an octave (and so double the length), at least in the Anglo-French-speaking world.

  • @LordFloofTM
    @LordFloofTM 5 лет назад +1

    Subbassoon or Contraltoon maybe?

  • @alexalestareon695
    @alexalestareon695 5 лет назад +1

    How about the great bassoon??

  • @kimjeongyeon5640
    @kimjeongyeon5640 6 лет назад +1

    Contrabassoon in F

  • @MagmaForce_
    @MagmaForce_ 19 дней назад

    Barisoon?

  • @jesusoliveira2
    @jesusoliveira2 4 года назад +1

    Pardon me for my ignorance and for been off-topic but, could someone please explain why the composer wrote D C# D Db in bar 19? Would that be just to avoid confusion with the subsequent C in bar 20? Thanks.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  4 года назад

      The D-C#-D is essentially an embellishment of a D while the Db serves as a passing tone to the C natural.

    • @jesusoliveira2
      @jesusoliveira2 4 года назад

      @@BretNewtonComposer Thank you but I was not very clear: why not just write D C# D C# ?

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  4 года назад +1

      @@jesusoliveira2 because it has to do with the function of the notes. The C#s all lead back to D while the Db leads to C.

  • @jrk1666
    @jrk1666 2 года назад

    The Altobassoon ?

  • @MrBeugh
    @MrBeugh 9 месяцев назад

    Baritone bassoon?

  • @filiphauangundersen3228
    @filiphauangundersen3228 10 месяцев назад +1

    I vote for contra tenoroon😊

  • @ProactiveYellow
    @ProactiveYellow 7 лет назад +7

    what about a "double bassoon?" not as low as a contra, but lower than a standard bassoon

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад

      Well, the term double literally means double the length of the Bassoon, so it wouldn't be a good fit at all.

    • @ProactiveYellow
      @ProactiveYellow 7 лет назад

      Bandestration I suppose, but the term bassoon itself describes The bass double Reed instrument, using vocal terms you'd have a basso profundo between bass and contrabass (as I understand.) perhaps we ought to get out of the mindset of a "___bassoon" and treat it like an English Horn, giving it its own name.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад

      Basso profundo is just a subcategory of bass opera singer (like basso buffo and basso cantante) and not a completely different fach. English Horn is a term I'm trying to use less and less in favor of Alto Oboe.

    • @theawesomepianoman
      @theawesomepianoman 7 лет назад +2

      A double bassoon is simply another name for the contrabassoon

    • @Nova-mp5ow
      @Nova-mp5ow 6 лет назад

      "double bassoon" is just contrabassoon under a different name

  • @bobschaaf2549
    @bobschaaf2549 2 года назад

    Sir Arthur, not Sir Sullivan!

  • @PeteLamont
    @PeteLamont 3 года назад

    Captain Muttonchops!

  • @cutecrittersandfriends
    @cutecrittersandfriends 4 года назад +1

    3:10
    Baritone bassoon

    • @jaxw2628
      @jaxw2628 4 года назад +1

      But baritone is higher than bass.

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 4 года назад

      @@jaxw2628 SubBarisoon then :P
      all joking aside, I think Great-bassoon was the right call though.

  • @nebula4287
    @nebula4287 3 года назад

    Bassoon Altoon

  • @jnbplaysgames
    @jnbplaysgames Год назад

    contraltosoon

  • @RobinHillyard
    @RobinHillyard 2 года назад +1

    Unless I missed it, you didn't mention Bach's well-known composition for the "quint-bassoon" (tief): BWV 155: Mein Gott, wie lang, ach lange? (#2 duet with remarkable quint bassoon obligato) “Du mußt glauben, du mußt hoffen.” Score: imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/d/df/IMSLP01417-BWV0155.pdf

  • @ethancampbell9096
    @ethancampbell9096 5 лет назад +1

    Contra alteroon!

  • @michealfemino5079
    @michealfemino5079 6 лет назад +4

    Subcontrabassoon?! Shirley you jest! Even as a lower octave doubling of the contrabassoon (you're talking about a full octave below the range of the piano) such an instrument would be virtually useless and certainly not worth the extreme expense. Maybe you're thinking it would have the same effect as those pedal tones on a pipe organ, but I seriously doubt it would create the same effect. Pipe organs have a smooth homogenous sound in that range where a double reed could not. Just my opinion of course, perhaps someone will build one and prove me wrong!

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  6 лет назад +2

      I never jest! (Well, except when I do.) But this is absolutely a real thing and very much worth it.

    • @michealfemino5079
      @michealfemino5079 6 лет назад +1

      I guarantee orchestras will not pick up on it even if it is built. All the notes of the lower octave are below the range of human hearing and far too low to add anything of value. Let's wait till they build it and then we'll see!

    • @markhall7646
      @markhall7646 5 лет назад

      No jesting, and don't call me Shirley.

    • @gammafoxlore2981
      @gammafoxlore2981 5 лет назад +1

      Contrabombardes on large organs are the example of a reed sound, Subcontrabassoons would have a similar effect in the orchestra.

    • @gammafoxlore2981
      @gammafoxlore2981 5 лет назад +1

      @@michealfemino5079 We can hear them as implied tones because of the overtone series. (The brain will simulate the fundamental tone, allowing things like 32 ft stops on organs to work.)

  • @logandubois5293
    @logandubois5293 6 лет назад

    The missing link

  • @fusiontricycle6605
    @fusiontricycle6605 5 лет назад

    Quintabasson?

  • @toddrhone9420
    @toddrhone9420 Год назад

    Contraltosoon

  • @lstockl5901
    @lstockl5901 7 лет назад +1

    You forgot the contra-forte bassoon, and the baroque and French bassoon. But you don't really see them in orchestras.

    • @lstockl5901
      @lstockl5901 7 лет назад

      Sorry and the tenoroon.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +4

      The Baroque Bassoon is a historical instrument that cannot be used with modern instruments. The French Bassoon is the same thing as the regular Bassoon, just a different system. The Contraforte is simply a redesigned Contrabassoon and not a separate instrument. The Tenor Bassoon is included, however. Thank you for trying to correct me, though... ummm... yeah...

  • @finnmcool2
    @finnmcool2 2 года назад

    I'm trying to so hard to find sympathy for you from over here in the tuba section.

  • @MiraDaWulf
    @MiraDaWulf 5 лет назад

    Bassoon in F.

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  5 лет назад

      The problem with this is that the Bassoon itself is already in F.

  • @robertperez2262
    @robertperez2262 3 года назад

    BABOON!

  • @Jack-zb3cd
    @Jack-zb3cd 5 лет назад

    Contra alto bassoon

  • @narekavakianmusique
    @narekavakianmusique 7 лет назад

    Bariton basson.

  • @stonex3077
    @stonex3077 7 лет назад

    contrabass oboe in f, problem solved

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +2

      Oboe =/= bassoon

    • @stonex3077
      @stonex3077 7 лет назад

      close enough

    • @BretNewtonComposer
      @BretNewtonComposer  7 лет назад +2

      Not really. Ask any bassoonist to pick up an oboe and most won't be able to play it and visa versa.

    • @stonex3077
      @stonex3077 7 лет назад

      yeah, different reeds, different air, different fingers. Really an oboe is that odd child of a flute and a clarinet.
      the instrument the video is about could more easily be named contraltosoon in f or bassoon in f

    • @stonex3077
      @stonex3077 7 лет назад

      I have seen a clarinet player in honor band pick up an oboe and play a scale without any prior knowledge of how to play that instrument

  • @rachelray0219
    @rachelray0219 4 года назад

    i play the bassoon