Graïle
Musical instrument
The graïle, (or Occitan graile) is a woodwind instrument of Languedoc, France, resembling a primitive oboe.[1] It is played in Monts de Lacaune (in the department of Tarn) and surrounding areas including Bezime.
Details
The instrument consists of three turned wooden parts reinforced at the joints with horn.
Playing
The graïle uses a double reed, the caramèla.
References
- ^ Burgess, Geoffrey, and Haynes, Bruce. The Oboe. Germany, Yale University Press, 2004. 123.
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Double reed instruments
(also includes those with quadruple and sextuple reeds; does not include bagpipes)
(modern)
- Piccolo oboe
- Piccolo heckelphone
- Oboe
- Oboe d'amore
- Cor anglais (English horn)
- Bass oboe
- Heckelphone
- Lupophon
- Contrabass oboe
- Tenoroon
- Bassoon
- Semi-contrabassoon
- Contrabassoon
- Contraforte
- Contrabassophone
- Reed contrabass
- Sarrusophone
- Rothphone
- Tromboon
(historical)
- Balaban
- Duduk
- Guan
- Gyaling
- Hichiriki
- Hne
- Kèn
- Kèn bầu
- Kèn đám ma
- Kuzhal
- Mizmar
- Nadaswaram
- Ottu
- Pi
- Piri
- Shehnai
- Sundari
- Sorna
- Sralai
- Suona
- Taepyeongso
- Tangmuri
- Zurna/Surnai