A Conversation for Oboes
Hautbois & shawms
Gilgamesh of Uruk Started conversation Aug 22, 2005
The "haut" of the hautbois (pronounced "ohboy") doesn't mean "high". In this context it means "loud". The "haut" music of shawms, trumpets etc. was played out of doors, the "basse" music, mostly strings and flutes, was much more suited to playing indoors. You can still see (and definitely HEAR) Catalan shawm bands in Barcelona, the tiple and tenora being the principal types, and the Breton bombarde, played with the biniou or bagpipe, is undergoing something of a revival.
Hautbois & shawms
Recumbentman Posted Mar 15, 2012
This information surely merits a footnote to sentence 3 of the Entry?
Hautbois & shawms
Recumbentman Posted Mar 15, 2012
Grove (article by Philip Bate) says 'The French word 'hautbois' (high-, strong-, loud- or principal-wood) in its various spellings was applied to the smaller members of the SHAWM family, both in France and England, long before the emergence of the special type that now bears the name; these instruments had an important place in the 'loud music' of the Middle Ages.'
Hautbois & shawms
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Mar 15, 2012
I've changed "high wood" to "loud wood". I've also replaced the link to Leon Goossens as the other was dead.
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Hautbois & shawms
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