The oboe The oboe requires the least amount of air of all wind instruments.
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Learn More »The embouchure for the tuba requires low pressure air but in large quantities. For soft playing, the flow rate can be as low as seven liters per minute. In a work involving low, loud playing, for example the Wagner Ring operas, the flow rate can be as high as 140 liters a minute. At the other end of the scale, an oboe may require seven liters at a loud dynamic. Because of the high flow rate required by the tuba, its players commonly suffer from hyperventilation. Going up an octave almost doubles the amount of intra thoracic pressure. Jacobs states, “On the trumpet, if you use ten ounces of pressure while you are playing, for the next octave you may go to approximately twenty ounces of pressure. That again is simply tied into the mass of air so that you blow with greater volumes of air—thick air. It will be that thick volume of air based on the resistance of your embouchure in that particular register. You cannot use this as a blanket rule for the entire spectrum of notes on your instrument. It will be different in the bottom as well as the top register.” The trumpet, conversely, is a low flow rate instrument compared to trombone and tuba, and therefore uses less air but under higher pressure. The oboe requires the least amount of air of all wind instruments. In pianissimo playing, the flow rate is about two and one-half liters per minute and in fortissimo, would go up to about five liters per minute. Jacobs elaborates on this. “The oboe is almost like a static breath pressure. Ray Still [former CSO principal oboe] has the lung capacity of slightly more than five liters. He has a flow rate of about five liters per minute (in loud playing). So, if he were to take a full breath at that particular flow rate, he could obviously hold a note for a full minute. Now, if he is playing softly, he will have a flow rate of maybe three liters per minute. So he can go considerably more than a minute.” The musculature of the body is capable of extremes with the use of air pressure. For example, to equate pressure to speed, a cough can generate a release of air up to one hundred miles an hour. *Arnold Jacobs: Song and Wind, Copyright 1996 Windsong Press, Ltd., All rights reserved.
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