BASSET HORN


Meaning of BASSET HORN in English

clarinet pitched a fourth lower than the ordinary B clarinet, probably invented in about 1770 by A. and M. Mayrhofer of Passau, Bavaria. The name derives from its basset ("small bass") pitch and its original curved-horn shape (later supplanted by an angular form). Its bore is narrower than that of the E alto clarinet, and it has a downward extension of compass to the low F of the bass voice (written as C). The boxwood instrument is usually built to order, in straight form with upturned bell. Though primarily a German instrument, it was known in Paris by 1774 as a contre-clarinette and in London by 1789 as a clara voce. It was employed notably by W.A. Mozart but had practically vanished by 1850. It was revived by Richard Strauss (Elektra, 1st performed 1909).

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.