The bass clarinet is a musical instrument of the clarinet family. Like standard clarinets, it is usually pitched in B flat (meaning it is a transposing instrument where a written C sounds as B flat), but it plays notes an octave below the more common soprano B flat clarinet and an octave above the contrabass clarinet. Bass clarinets in other keys, notably C and A, also exist.
The bass clarinet plays an octave lower than the B-flat soprano clarinet. While the range of the latter ends at a written low E (sounding D below middle C), most bass clarinets have keywork to enable at least a low E-flat (sounding D-flat a half step above the cello's lowest C), and most professional and advanced bass clarinetists own instruments with extensions down to a C a full octave below written middle C. At concert pitch this note is the B-flat below the second ledger line below the bass staff. This gives the bass clarinet a usable range of almost four octaves, quite close to the range of the bassoon; indeed, many bass clarinetists perform works originally intended for bassoon or cello because of the plethora of literature for those two instruments and the scarcity of solo works for the bass clarinet.
The bass clarinet has been regularly used in scoring for symphony orchestra since the late 19th century, becoming more common during the middle and latter part of the 20th century. It is also used in wind bands and clarinet choirs, in film scoring, and as a solo instrument in jazz. In recent years, the bass clarinet has also seen a growing repertoire of solo literature including compositions for the instrument alone, or accompanied by piano, orchestra, or other ensemble.
The bass clarinet has an appealing, rich, earthy tone quite distinct from other instruments in its range, drawing on and enhancing the qualities of the lower range of the soprano instrument.
System a) is used in orchestral music by most composers west of Germany and in all show, concert band and clarinet choir music. System b) is used chiefly by Wagner, Mahler, Shostakovich and eastern European composers, although there are exceptions.
Music is occasionally encountered written for the bass clarinet in A, e.g. in Wagner operas and Mahler symphonies; this music also tends to be written in bass clef. Very few modern players own a bass clarinet in A; most play these parts on the B♭ instrument, transposing them down a semitone.
Because the repertoire of solo music for the bass clarinet was quite small, most bass clarinet soloists specialize in new music, while also arranging works composed for other instruments from earlier eras (such as the Bach Cello Suites). Beginning with Horák, many players have commissioned works for the instrument, and consequently there now exists a repertoire of hundreds of solo works, many by prominent international composers such as Brian Ferneyhough. In addition to Horák, other specialist performers include Dennis Smylie (United States), Harry Sparnaay (Netherlands, who has worked with important composers such as Luciano Berio, Iannis Xenakis, and Morton Feldman), Evan Ziporyn (United States), and Michael Lowenstern (United States).
In October 2005, the First World Bass Clarinet Convention was held in Rotterdam, Netherlands, at which Horák was the guest of honour and played in one of the many concerts given by the leading bass clarinetists from around the world (including all the aforementioned performers, as well as many others).
At least two professional bass clarinet quartets exist. Rocco Parisi's Bass Clarinet Quartet is an Italian group whose repertoire includes transcriptions of music by Rossini, Paganini, and Piazzola. Edmund Welles is the name of a bass clarinet quartet based in San Francisco. Their repertoire includes original "heavy chamber music" and transcriptions of madrigals, boogie-woogie tunes, and heavy metal songs.
Harry Carney occasionally played bass clarinet in some of Duke Ellington's arrangements, beginning in the late 1930s. He rarely soloed on the instrument, however.
Eric Dolphy (1928-1964) was the first major jazz soloist on the instrument, and established much of the vocabulary and technique used by later performers. Bernie Maupin emerged in the late sixtes as a primary player of the instrument, on Miles Davis' seminal record Bitches Brew as well as several records with Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi group.
While the bass clarinet has been used often since Dolphy, it is typically used by a saxophonist or clarinetist as a second or third instrument; such musicians include David Murray, John Surman, and James Carter. Very few performers have used the instrument exclusively, but one such performer is the Baltimore-based American musician and bandleader Todd Marcus. Klezmer clarinetist Giora Feidman is known for idiosyncratic use of the bass clarinet on some klezmer and jazz tunes.
Clarinets | Bass clarinetists | Woodwind instruments
Bas klarinet | Bassklarinette | Clarinete bajo | Bas klarinet | Basklarinet | バスクラリネット | Bassklarinett | Clarinete baixo | Бас кларинет | Basklarinett
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