baritone saxophone

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Title: The Complete Gerry Mulligan Meets Ben Webster Sessions—Fajista; Gerry Mulligan, baritone saxophone. Label: Verve. Format: CD. Catalogue#: MG V-6104-B. Track: II-4.

Contextual Associations

The baritone saxophone is an end-blown single-reed aerophone invented in Belgium around 1840 that is now distributed throughout the world wherever Western cosmopolitanism has taken root. It is heard today primarily in the following contexts: military/marching bands, concert bands and wind ensembles, as a solo instrument in recital settings, in mixed saxophone ensembles, and as a section (and occasionally a solo) instrument in jazz big bands. The baritone saxophone is performed both by amateurs and professionals, males and females. School-age children can learn the baritone saxophone as part of school music programs and choose to continue their study in the university setting with lessons and/or ensemble participation, or even earn degrees in saxophone performance at the undergraduate or graduate levels. Amateurs can also find musical outlets in community concert and jazz bands. Professionals operate in one or both of two general spheres: the classical/educational domain, centered in academic institutions where performers teach, present formal recitals, solo with school ensembles, and direct school ensembles; and the jazz/commercial domain, where they perform at concert and club venues as members of established bands/combos or as back-up musicians for other performers, produce commercial recordings, do studio session work (recordings for movies, television, and commercials), and free-lance as teachers and clinicians. A modest body of solo literature that is performed primarily in the classical domain for soloist competitions and student and faculty recitals has accrued since the latter half of the 19th century. This repertoire continued to grow in the course of the 20th century.

Description

The baritone saxophone is basically a conical tube that is constructed in two sections, the neck and the body, with a single-reed mouthpiece attached to its narrow end. Made from drawn brass, the tube is given a distinctive U-bend and a slightly flaring bell; the neck, which itself is made in two sections, is designed with two folds and a bend in order to keep the size of the instrument as compact as possible. Twenty of its twenty-one tone holes are located along the length of the body, the twenty-first on the neck. These holes vary greatly in their size, but in general start out wider at the bell end and become narrower near the mouthpiece end. All have raised rims (called collars) and are covered and uncovered with leather- or felt-padded keys controlled with a complex system of buttons, rod-axels, and springs. The single beating-reed (of cane) that is used to generate sound on this instrument is affixed over a flat rectangular opening (called the table) on a plastic mouthpiece (can also be made from wood or metal) with the aid of a screw-tightened metal ligature. The base of the mouthpiece is slid over the end of the neck, which is lapped with a thin layer of cork to make the joint airtight and to allow for the fine-tuning of the instrument.

Player - Instrument Interface and Sound Production

The player, either standing or seated, holds the instrument roughly vertically in front of him- or herself but tilted slightly to the right side. A neck strap attached to the back of the instrument supports most of the instrument’s weight, assisted by a thumb rest for the right hand thumb. The thumb and all the fingers of the left hand and all the fingers of the right hand are used to operate the keywork. The tip of the mouthpiece is inserted into the player’s mouth and pressed upon from the top with the upper teeth and from beneath (the reed side) with the lower lip; a tight seal around the mouthpiece is produced with the player’s lips using the embouchure muscles. The instrument functions acoustically as an open conical tube, meaning that it overblows at every harmonic partial overtone (starting at the octave above the fundamental). With all the finger holes covered the lowest sounding pitch on the baritone saxophone in E-flat is D-flat2; the upper limit of its range depends on the performer, but A-flat4 is usually given as its nominal highest note. Its compass is therefore about two-and-one-half octaves, and over this range it is fully chromatic. It has a rich, full tone over much of its compass, and a wide dynamic range. Jazz saxophonists and avant-garde musicians in particular often challenge the conventional limits of sound production by: extending the instrument's upper register; through the bending of pitches; and by producing expressive timbral effects achieved through overblowing, multiphonics and other forms of intentional distortion. As with all B-flat and E-flat saxophones, notation for the baritone saxophone is written in the treble clef between B-flat3 and F6; it sounds a major 13th (an octave and a major sixth) lower than notated.

Origins/History/Evolution

The baritone saxophone is a member of a family of like instruments invented around 1840 by the Belgium instrument maker Adolphe Sax. A patent for the saxophone family was awarded to Sax by the French government on 22 June 1846, but the actual invention of the instrument may have been as early as 1838. He designed two lines of saxophones each in seven registers, one set for orchestral use (all but one model in this line are now obsolete) and the other for military band use (of which four registers, including the baritone saxophone in E-flat, remain in common use today). Sax’s original concept and design of the baritone saxophone has held up fairly well over time, although numerous changes to his key-work system and the addition of more tone holes have been made by subsequent makers over the years, some of which have been retained, others not.
 

Bibliographic Citations

Baines, Anthony. 1962. Woodwind Instruments and their History. New York: W.W. Norton.

Bate, Philip, and J. Bradford Robinson. 1984. “Saxophone.” NGDMI v.3: 313-319.

Campbell, Murray, Clive Greated, and Arnold Meyers. 2004. Musical Instruments: History, Technology, and Performance of Instruments of Western Music. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Carse, Adam. 1975 (1965). Musical Wind Instruments. New York: Da Capo Press.

Ingham, Richard, ed. 1998. The Cambridge Companion to the Saxophone. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

 

Instrument Information

Origins

Continent: Europe

Region: Western Europe

Nation: Belgium

Formation: European

Classification (Sachs-Von Hornbostel revised by MIMO)

422.212.2 aerophone--single conical-bore reedpipe with single reed: the pipe has a [single] reed consisting of a lamella which periodically opens and closes an aperture, controlling the flow of air; with fingerholes stopped with keys

Design and Playing Features

Category: aerophone

Air cavity design: tubular - conical with flaring open distal end

Source and direction of airstream: player exhalation through mouth into air cavity; unidirectional

Energy transducer that activates sound: exposed percussion (single) reed

Means of modifying shape and dimensions of standing wave in air cavity: opening fingerholes to reduce space or shorten length of standing wave in air cavity

Overblowing utilization: overblowing at consecutive partials

Pitch production: multiple pitches - changing length of standing wave within cavity with fingerholes and by selecting partials through overblowing

Dimensions

39.4 in. length

Primary Materials

metal - sheet
reed - cane
spring - flat and/or needle
keypads

Maker

Yamaha

Model

YBS-62

Entry Author

Roger Vetter