Dictionary Definition
oboe n : a slender double-reed instrument; a
woodwind with a conical bore and a double-reed mouthpiece [syn:
hautboy, hautbois]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A soprano and melody wind instrument in the modern orchestra and wind ensemble. It is a smaller instrument and generally made of grendilla wood. It is a member of the double reed family.
Derived terms
Translations
a soprano and melody wind instrument
- Catalan: oboè
- Croatian: oboa
- Czech: hoboj
- Danish: obo
- Dutch: hobo
- Esperanto: hobojo
- Estonian: oboe
- Finnish: oboe
- French: hautbois
- Galician: óboe
- German: Oboe
- Hungarian: oboa
- Icelandic: óbó
- Ido: hoboyo
- Indonesian: obo
- Italian: oboe
- Japanese: オーボエ
- Norwegian: obo
- Polish: obój
- Portuguese: oboé
- Russian: гобой
- Slovene: oboa
- Spanish: oboe
- Swedish: oboe
- Turkish: obua
- Vietnamese: kèn ôboa
See also
Italian
Etymology
From hautbois, transcribed phonetically.Noun
Extensive Definition
The oboe is a double reed
musical
instrument of the woodwind family. In English
prior to 1770, the instrument was called "hautbois", "hoboy", or
"French hoboy". The spelling "oboe" was adopted into English ca.
1770 from the Italian oboè, as close as possible a representation
in that language's orthography of the 17th-century pronunciation of
the French word hautbois, a compound word made of haut ("high,
loud") and bois ("wood, woodwind"). A musician who plays the oboe is
called an oboist. Careful
manipulation of embouchure and air pressure
allows the player to express a large timbral and dynamic
range.
Sound
In comparison to other modern woodwind instruments, the oboe has a clear and penetrating voice. The Sprightly Companion, an instruction book of 1695, describes the voice as "Majestical and Stately, and not much Inferior to the Trumpet." Similarly, the voice is described in the play Angels in America as sounding like that of a duck if the duck were a songbird. The timbre of the oboe is derived from the oboe's conical bore (as opposed to the generally cylindrical bore of flutes and clarinets). As a result, oboes are readily audible over other instruments in large ensembles.The oboe is pitched in concert C and
has a mezzo-soprano to soprano range. Orchestras will
usually tune by listening to the oboe play a concert A (usually
A440, but
sometimes higher if the orchestra tunes to a higher pitch). The
pitch of the oboe may be adjusted by permanently altering the
scrape, removing cane from the reed, or
changing the position of the reed in the instrument (although the
latter method should only be used as a last resort, because
adjusting the position of the reed may cause some notes to warble).
Subtle changes in pitch are also possible by adjusting the
embouchure.
History
Baroque
The baroque oboe first appeared in the French court in the mid-17th century, where it was called hautbois. The basic form of the instrument was derived from the shawm, an instrument widely used in the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Musician and instrument maker Martin Hotteterre was responsible for many of the new instrument's early developments, according to one source, while another credits Jean Hotteterre and Michel Philidor, ca. 1657. The instrument quickly spread throughout Europe (including England, where it was called "hautboy", "hoboy", "hautboit", "howboye", and similar variants of the French name). It was the main melody instrument in early military bands, until it was succeeded by the clarinet.The baroque oboe was generally made of boxwood and had three keys; a
"great", and two side keys. (The side key was often doubled to
facilitate use of either the right or left hand on the bottom
holes) In order to produce higher pitches, the player had to
"overblow," or increase the air stream to reach the next harmonic.
Notable oboe-makers of the period are the German Denner and
Eichentopf, and the English Stanesby Sr. and Jr. The range for the
baroque oboe comfortably extends from c1 to d3. With the resurgence
of interest in early music
in the mid 20th century, a few makers began producing copies to
specifications from surviving historical instruments.
Classical
The classical period brought an oboe whose bore was gradually narrowed, and the instrument became outfitted with several keys, among them were those for the notes D♯, F, and G♯. A key similar to the modern octave key was also added called the "slur key," though it was at first used more like the "flick" keys on the modern German bassoon. Only later did French instrument makers redesign the octave key to be used in the manner of the modern key (i.e. held open for the upper register, closed for the lower). The narrower bore allowed the higher notes to be more easily played, and composers began to more often utilize the oboe's upper register in their works. Because of this, the oboe's tessitura in the Classical era was somewhat broader than that found in baroque works. The range for the Classical oboe extends from c1 to f3, though some German and Austrian oboes were capable of playing one half-step lower. Classical-era composers who wrote concertos for oboe include Mozart (both the solo concerto in C major K. 314/285d and the lost Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat major K. 297b), Haydn, (both the Sinfonia Concertante in B-flat Hob. I:105 and the spurious concerto in C major Hob. VIIg:C1), Beethoven (the F major concerto, Hess 12, of which only sketches survive, though the second movement was reconstructed in the late twentieth century), and numerous other composers including Johann Christian Bach, Johann Christian Fischer, Jan Antonín Koželuh, and Ludwig August Lebrun. Innumerable solos exist for the oboe in chamber, symphonic, and operatic compositions from the Classical era.Viennese oboe
In Vienna, a unique oboe has been preserved with its bore and tonal characteristics remaining relatively unchanged in use to the present day. The Akademiemodel Wiener oboe, developed in the early 20th century by Hermann Zuleger, is now made by several makers, such as André Constantinides, Karl Rado, Guntram Wolf and Yamaha. In their definitive historical work "The Oboe", Geoffrey Burgess and Bruce Haynes write (page 212) "The differences are most clearly marked in the middle register, which is reedier and more pungent, and the upper register, which is richer in harmonics on the Viennese oboe". Apart from its use in the major Viennese orchestras, it is not used elsewhere.Modern
The oboe was developed further in the 19th century by the Triebert family of Paris. Using the Boehm flute as a source of ideas for key work, Guillaume Triebert and his sons, Charles and Frederic, devised a series of increasingly complex yet functional key systems. A variant form using large tone holes; the Boehm system oboe, was never in common use, though it was used in some military bands in Europe into the 20th century. F. Lorée of Paris made further developments to the modern instrument. Minor improvements to the bore and key work have continued through the 20th century, but there has been no fundamental change to the general characteristics of the instrument for several decades.The modern oboe is most commonly made from
grenadilla wood
(African blackwood), though some manufacturers also make oboes out
of other members of the dalbergia family of woods,
which includes cocobolo, rosewood, and violetwood. Ebony (genus Diospyros) has
also been used. Student model oboes are often made from plastic
resin, to avoid instrument cracking that wood instruments are prone
to, but also to make the instrument more economical. The oboe has
an extremely narrow conical
bore. The oboe is played with a double reed consisting of two
thin blades of cane tied together on a small-diameter metal tube
(staple), which is inserted into the reed socket at the top of the
instrument. The commonly accepted range for the oboe extends from
b♭0 to about g3, over two and a half octaves, though its common
tessitura lies from c1 to e♭3. Some student oboes only extend to
b0; the key for b♭ is not present, however this variant is becoming
less common.
A modern oboe with the "full conservatory"
("conservatoire" outside the USA) or Gillet key system has 45
pieces of keywork, with the possible additions of a third octave
key and alternate (left little finger) F- or C-key. The keys are
usually made of nickel
silver, and are silver or occasionally gold-plated. Besides the full
conservatoire system, oboes are also made using the English
thumbplate system. Most have "semi-automatic" octave keys, in which
the second octave action closes the first, and some have a fully
automatic octave key system, as used on saxophones. Some full
conservatory oboes have finger holes covered with rings rather than
plates ("open-holed"), and most of the professional models have at
least the right hand third key open-holed. Professional oboes used
in the UK frequently feature conservatoire system combined with a
thumb plate. With this type of mechanism the oboist has the best of
both worlds as far as the convenience of fingerings is
concerned.
Other members of the oboe family
The oboe has several siblings. The most widely known today is the cor anglais, or English horn, the tenor (or alto) member of the family. A transposing instrument; it is pitched in F, a perfect fifth lower than the oboe. The oboe d'amore, the alto (or mezzo-soprano) member of the family, is pitched in A, a minor third lower than the oboe. J.S. Bach made extensive use of both the oboe d'amore as well as the taille and oboe da caccia, Baroque antecedents of the cor anglais. Even less common is the bass oboe (also called baritone oboe), which sounds one octave lower than the oboe. Delius and Holst both scored for the instrument. Similar to the bass oboe is the more powerful heckelphone, which has a wider bore and larger tone than the bass oboe. Only 165 heckelphones have ever been made, and competent players are hard to find . The least common of all are the musette (also called oboe musette or piccolo oboe), the sopranino member of the family (it is usually pitched in E-flat or F above the oboe), and the contrabass oboe (typically pitched in C, two octaves deeper than the standard oboe).Keyless folk versions of the oboe (most descended
from the shawm) are found throughout Europe. These include the
musette (France) and
bombarde (Brittany), the
piffaro and ciaramella (Italy), and the
xirimia or chirimia (Spain). Many of these
are played in tandem with local forms of bagpipe. Similar oboe-like
instruments, most believed to derive from Middle Eastern models,
are also found throughout Asia as well as in North
Africa.
Notable classical works featuring the oboe
- See also Oboe concerto.
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Oboe Concerto in C major, Quartet in F major
- Antonio Vivaldi, at least 15 oboe concertos
- Antonio Pasculli, oboe concertos for oboe and piano/orchestra
- Johann Sebastian Bach, Brandenburg Concertos nos. 1 and 2, Concerto for Violin and oboe, lost oboe concerti, numerous oboe obbligato lines in the sacred and secular cantatas
- Tomaso Albinoni, Oboe (and two-oboe) Concerti
- George Frideric Handel, The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba, Oboe Concerti and Sonatas
- Georg Philipp Telemann, Oboe Concerti and Sonatas, trio sonatas for oboe, recorder and basso continuo
- Richard Strauss, Oboe Concerto
- Joseph Haydn (spurious), Oboe Concerto in C major
- Vincenzo Bellini, Concerto in E\flatmajor, for oboe and string orchestra (before 1825)
- Luciano Berio, Sequenza VII (1969), also Chemins IV (on Sequenza VII), for oboe and string orchestra (1975)
- Domenico Cimarosa, Oboe Concerto in C major (arranged)
- Francis Poulenc, Oboe Sonata
- Benjamin Britten, Six Metamorphoses after Ovid, Temporal Variations
- Robert Schumann, Three Romances for oboe or violin and piano
- Edmund Rubbra, Oboe Sonata
- Carl Nielsen, Two Fantasy Pieces for Oboe and Piano
- Alessandro Marcello, Concerto in D/C minor
- Ralph Vaughan Williams, Concerto for Oboe and Strings, Ten Blake Songs for oboe and tenor
- Camille Saint-Saëns, Sonata for Oboe and Piano in D Major
- Bohuslav Martinů, Oboe Concerto
- Darius Milhaud, Les rêves de Jacob, op. 294, for oboe, violin, viola, cello, and doublebass (1949); Sonatina, op. 337, for oboe and piano (1954)
- Bernd Alois Zimmermann, Concerto for Oboe and Small Orchestra (1952)
- Carlos Chávez, Upingos, for unaccompanied oboe
- John Barnes Chance, Variations on a Korean Folk Song
- Hans Werner Henze, Doppio concerto, for oboe, harp, and string orchestra (1966)
- Bruno Maderna, three oboe concertos (1962–63) (1967) (1973); Grande aulodia, for flute, oboe, and orchestra (1970)
- Witold Lutosławski, Double Concerto for Oboe, Harp, and Chamber Orchestra
- Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Oboe Concerto
- Paul Hindemith, Sonata for Oboe and Piano
- Ennio Morricone, "Gabriel's Oboe" from The Mission. It is usually followed by The Missions main theme and the choral symphony On Earth as It Is in Heaven.
- Samuel Barber, Canzonetta, op. 48, for oboe and string orchestra (1977–78, orch. completed by Charles Turner)
- Igor Stravinsky, Pastorale (transcribed in 1933 for Violin and Wind Quartet)
- Elliott Carter, Oboe Concerto (1986-87); Trilogy, for oboe and harp (1992); Quartet for oboe, violin, viola, and cello (2001)
- Heinz Holliger, Sonata, for unaccompanied oboe (1956–57/99); Mobile, for oboe and harp (1962); Trio, for oboe (doubling English horn), viola, and harp (1966); Studie über Mehrklänge, for unaccompanied oboe (1971); Sechs Stücke, for oboe (doubling oboe d’amore) and harp (1998–99)
- Jan Dismas Zelenka (1723) Concertanti, Oboe Trios and other works http://www.jdzelenka.net/
Use outside of classical music
While the oboe is rarely used in musical genres other than Western classical, there have been a few notable exceptions.Traditional and folk music
Although keyless folk oboes are still used in many European folk music traditions, the modern oboe has been little used in folk music. One exception was Derek Bell, harpist for the Irish group The Chieftains, who used the instrument in some performances and recordings. The U.S. contra dance band Wild Asparagus, based in western Massachusetts, also uses the oboe, played by David Cantieni. The folk musician Paul Sartin plays the oboe in several English folk bands including Faustus and Bellowhead. The bagpipe player and bagpipe maker Jonathan Shorland plays the oboe with the bands Primeaval and Juice, and formerly played with Fernhill, which play traditional British Isles music.Jazz
Although the oboe has never been featured prominently in jazz music, some early bands, most notably that of Paul Whiteman, included it for coloristic purposes. The multi-instrumentalist Garvin Bushell (1902-1991) played the oboe in jazz bands as early as 1924 and used the instrument throughout his career, eventually recording with John Coltrane in 1961.http://home.att.net/~dawild/jcdisc61.htm Gil Evans scored for the instrument in his famous Miles Davis collaboration Sketches of Spain. Though primarily a tenor saxophone and flute player, Yusef Lateef was among the first (in 1963) to use the oboe as a solo instrument in modern jazz performances and recordings. Composer and double bassist Charles Mingus gave the oboe a brief but prominent role (played by Dick Hafer) in his composition "I.X. Love" on the 1963 album Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus.With the birth of Jazz fusion
in the late 1960s,
and its continuous development through the following
decade, the oboe started to fulfil a more important role in
composition,
replacing on some occasions the saxophone as the focal point.
The oboe was used with great success by the Welsh
multi-instrumentalist
Karl
Jenkins in his work with the groups Nucleus
and Soft
Machine, and by the American
woodwind
player Paul
McCandless, co-founder of the Paul
Winter Consort and later Oregon.
Romeo
Penque also played the oboe on Roland Kirk's
1975 album Return of the 5000 Lb. Man, in the song "Theme for the
Eulipions."
The 1980s saw an increasing number of oboists try
their hand at non-classical work, and many players of note have
recorded and performed alternative music on oboe. Some present-day
jazz groups influenced by classical music, such as the Maria
Schneider Orchestra, feature the oboe.
Rock and pop
The oboe has been used sporadically in rock recordings, generally by studio musicians on recordings of specific songs.In the late 1960s and 1970s, several bands
emerged that featured oboists as members, including The Moody
Blues (Ray Thomas),
Henry
Cow (Lindsay
Cooper),
New York Rock & Roll Ensemble (Martin
Fulterman and Michael
Kamen), Roxy Music
(Andy
Mackay), Electric
Light Orchestra (Roy Wood),
Wizzard
(Roy
Wood), and Japan
(Mick
Karn). The oboists in these bands generally used the oboe as a
secondary instrument, not playing it on every song. Japan and Roxy
Music, however, did use the oboe quite frequently.
Since the 1990s, the oboe has been used in rock
most notably by Sigur Rós
(played by Kjartan
Sveinsson), as well as by indie rock musician Sufjan
Stevens (who also plays cor anglais
and often overdubs both instruments on his albums). Jarlaath, the
vocalist of the French gothic metal
band Penumbra,
plays the oboe in a number of the band's songs, as does Robbie J.
de Klerk, the vocalist of the Dutch melodic doom/death
metal
band Another
Messiah.
A historical sampling of uses of oboe in
rock:
- 1964
- Peter and Gordon's "I don't want to see you again" has an oboe solo.
- 1965
- Sonny and Cher's "I Got You Babe" features oboe hook (ob. Harold Battiste). http://www.musicweb-international.com/encyclopaedia/s/S155.HTM
- 1967
- Turtles Happy Together
- 1969
- Ray Thomas of The Moody Blues on the albums In Search of the Lost Chord (1968) and On the Threshold of a Dream.
- 1970, 1971
- The Move's album's "Looking On" and "Message from the Country" (e.g. "It Wasn't My Idea to Dance") -- (ob. Roy Wood)
- 1974
- "Hergest Ridge" by Mike Oldfield (ob. Lindsay Cooper)
- 1983
- China Crisis album Working with fire and steel, Possible pop songs volume two (guest artist, ob. Steve Levy)
- 1985
- Madonna's "Crazy for You" (ob. George Marge)
- 1987
- The Go-Betweens "Bye Bye Pride" (ob. Amanda Brown ) from Tallulah
- 1988
- The Go-Betweens "Clouds" (ob. Amanda Brown ) from 16 Lovers Lane
- 1988
- Twist in My Sobriety by Tanita Tikaram (ob. Malcolm Messiter)
- 1991
- REM's "Endgame" from Out of Time,
- 1992
- REM Automatic for the People (ob. Deborah Workman).
- 1992-1994
- Portastatic's recordings feature oboe.
- 1995
- Queen's song "It's A Beautiful Day," from the album Made in Heaven, contains an oboe part conceived by bassist John Deacon.
- 2001
- Stereophonics' cover of "Handbags and Gladrags" by Rod Stewart features oboe.
Film music
The oboe is frequently featured in film music, often to underscore a particularly poignant or sad scene. One of the most prominent uses of the oboe in a film score is Ennio Morricone's "Gabriel's Oboe" theme from the 1986 film The Mission.It is also featured as a solo instrument in the
theme "Across the Stars" from the John
Williams score to
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones.
Famous oboists
Oboe manufacturers
- Buffet
- Dupin
- Bulgheroni
- Covey
- Fossati
- Fox
- Frank
- Hiniker
- Howarth
- A. Laubin
- Linton
- F. Lorée
- Cabart ( A Division of F. Lorée )
- Louis
- Marigaux
- Miraphone
- Musik Josef
- Mönnig
- Patricola
- Püchner
- Rigoutat
- Selmer
- Tom Sparkes
- Yamaha
- Tony Ward (South Australia)
Sources
- Baines, Anthony. 1967. Woodwind Instruments and Their History. Third edition, with a foreword by Sir Adrian Boult. London: Faber and Faber.
- Burgess, Geoffrey, and Bruce Haynes. 2004. The Oboe. The Yale Musical Instrument Series. New Haven, Conn. and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300093179
- Carse, Adam. 1965. Musical Wind Instruments: A History of the Wind Instruments Used in European Orchestras and Wind-Bands from the Later Middle Ages up to the Present Time. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80005-5.
- Harris-Warrick, Rebecca. 1990. "A Few Thoughts on Lully's hautbois." Early Music 18, no. 1 (February, "The Baroque Stage II"): 97-98+101-102+105-106.
- Haynes, Bruce. 1985. Music for Oboe, 1650-1800: A Bibliography. Fallen Leaf Reference Books in Music, 8755-268X; no. 4. Berkeley, Calif.: Fallen Leaf Press. ISBN 0914913034
- Haynes, Bruce. 1988. "Lully and the Rise of the Oboe as Seen in Works of Art." Early Music 16, no. 3 (August): 324–38.
- Haynes, Bruce. 2001. The Eloquent Oboe: A History of the Hautboy 1640–1760. Oxford Early Music Series. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 019816646X
- Howe, Robert. 2003. "The Boehm System Oboe and its Role in the Development of the Modern Oboe". Galpin Society Journal 56:27–60 +plates on 190–92.
- Howe, Robert, and Peter Hurd. 2004. "The Heckelphone at 100". Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society 30:98–165.
- Marcuse, Sybil. 1975. Musical Instruments: A Comprehensive Dictionary. Revised edition. The Norton Library. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-00758-8.
References
External links
- Bruce Haynes / Peter Wuttke: Music for oboe, online bibliography of literature for oboe written between 1650 and 1800.
- Oboe and Reed Making Information
- href="http://www.uky.edu/~moses/bdrp.ref/jazz.htm">http://www.uky.edu/~moses/bdrp.ref/jazz.htm Experiments in Jazz Oboe by Alison Wilson (archive link, was dead)
- OboeSpace: Oboe information
- ASU Oboe Homepage
- Russian Oboe Page
- Oboe fingering guide
- Fingering chart for Baroque oboe by Stephen Hammer
- Reed making information and new music featuring oboe
- Oboist Liang Wang: His Reeds Come First NPR story by Debbie Elliott
- Oboe Fingering Trainer Interactive Oboe Fingering Trainer
- High Wood Fanlisting for the Oboe
- oboeinsight
Listening
- Oboe sound gallery of clips of dozens of prominent oboists in the United States, Europe, and Australia
oboe in Afrikaans: Hobo
oboe in Bosnian: Oboa
oboe in Catalan: Oboè
oboe in Czech: Hoboj
oboe in Danish: Obo
oboe in German: Oboe
oboe in Estonian: Oboe
oboe in Modern Greek (1453-): Όμποε
oboe in Spanish: Oboe
oboe in Esperanto: Hobojo
oboe in Basque: Oboe
oboe in Persian: ابوا
oboe in French: Hautbois
oboe in Western Frisian: Hobo
oboe in Galician: Óboe
oboe in Korean: 오보에
oboe in Croatian: Oboa
oboe in Ido: Hoboyo
oboe in Indonesian: Obo
oboe in Icelandic: Óbó
oboe in Italian: Oboe
oboe in Hebrew: אבוב
oboe in Latvian: Oboja
oboe in Luxembourgish: Hautbois
oboe in Lithuanian: Obojus
oboe in Ligurian: Obòe
oboe in Hungarian: Oboa
oboe in Dutch: Hobo (muziekinstrument)
oboe in Japanese: オーボエ
oboe in Norwegian: Obo
oboe in Norwegian Nynorsk: Obo
oboe in Polish: Obój
oboe in Portuguese: Oboé
oboe in Quechua: Uwuy pinkuyllu
oboe in Russian: Гобой
oboe in Simple English: Oboe
oboe in Slovenian: Oboa
oboe in Serbian: Обоа
oboe in Serbo-Croatian: Oboa
oboe in Finnish: Oboe
oboe in Swedish: Oboe
oboe in Vietnamese: Kèn Ô-boa
oboe in Turkish: Obua
oboe in Ukrainian: Гобой
oboe in Chinese: 雙簧管
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
English horn, Pandean pipe, aulos, basset horn, basset oboe,
bassoon, block flute,
bombard, bourdon, cello, claribel, clarinet, clarion, concert flute, contrabassoon, contrafagotto, cornet, cornopean, cromorna, cromorne, cymbel, diapason, double bassoon,
double reed, dulciana,
fife, fipple flute,
flageolet, flute, flute stop, foundation
stop, fourniture,
gamba, gedeckt, gemshorn, harmonic flute,
hautboy, heckelphone, hornpipe, hybrid stop, koppel
flute, larigot, licorice
stick, melodia, mixture, musette, mutation stop, nazard, oaten reed, oboe da
caccia, ocarina,
octave, organ stop,
panpipe, penny-whistle,
piccolo, pipe, plein jeu, pommer, posaune, principal, quint, quintaten, rank, ranket, recorder, reed, reed instrument, reed stop,
register, rohr flute,
sax, saxophone, sesquialtera, shawm, single reed, single-reed
instrument, sonorophone, spitz flute,
stop, stopped diapason,
stopped flute, string diapason, string stop, sweet potato, syrinx, tabor pipe, tenoroon, tierce, tin-whistle, tremolo, trombone, trumpet, twelfth, unda maris, vibrato, viola, voix celeste, vox angelica,
vox humana, whistle,
woods, woodwind, woodwind choir,
woodwind instrument