Wind-ensemble instrument | 24 |
Wind that can be piercing | 25 |
Wind in the orchestra pit | 25 |
Wind in front of a stage | 24 |
Wind in a conservatory | 22 |
What an orchestra tunes to | 26 |
Vivaldi concerto soloist | 24 |
Tenoroon's little cousin | 28 |
Sound lower than a flute | 24 |
Slender woodwind instrument | 27 |
Slender wind instrument | 23 |
Relative of the heckelphone | 27 |
Relative of the bassoon | 23 |
Reed, or place for a reed | 25 |
Reed, or a place for one | 24 |
Plaintive wind, perhaps | 23 |
Pitch-setting instrument | 24 |
Piffero's descendant | 24 |
Penetrating wind instrument | 27 |
O, in a phonetic alphabet | 25 |
Mitch Miller's first love | 29 |
Melancholy sounding woodwind | 28 |
Long, slender instrument | 24 |
Kind of woodwind instrument | 27 |
Joseph Robinson plays it | 24 |
Its natural scale is D | 22 |
It's long and blown | 23 |
It's among the reeds | 24 |
It may be blown onstage | 23 |
It has a three-octave range | 27 |
Instrument you blow into | 24 |
Instrument with ten keys | 24 |
Instrument with a double-reed | 29 |
Instrument with a bell | 22 |
Instrument for Leon Goossens | 28 |
Higher-pitched English horn | 27 |
High-pitched aerophone | 22 |
Hecklephone's relative | 26 |
Heckelphone's relative | 26 |
Hautboy, more commonly | 22 |
Harmoniphon soundalike | 22 |
Hand-held musical instrument | 28 |
Gomberg's instrument | 24 |
Ensemble part, perhaps | 22 |
Electronic navigation system | 28 |
Double-reeded instrument | 24 |
Deliverer of a high pitch | 25 |
D'amore or da caccia | 24 |
D is its natural scale | 22 |
Cousin of a heckelphone | 23 |
Cousin of a cor anglais | 23 |
Concerto soloist, perhaps | 25 |
Concerto instrument, perhaps | 28 |
Clarinet's neighbor | 23 |
Certain wind instrument | 23 |
Certain reed instrument | 23 |
Boston Pops instrument | 22 |
A musette pipe is a small one | 29 |
___ d'amore (instrument) | 28 |
Woodwind family members | 23 |
Double-reeded woodwinds | 23 |
Some orchestra members | 22 |
English horn relatives | 22 |
Woodwind section members | 24 |
Some double reed instruments | 28 |
Philharmonic instruments | 24 |
Certain wind instruments | 24 |
Bassoons' little brothers | 29 |
Winds up on stage, maybe | 24 |
Wind quintet instruments | 24 |
They're long and blown | 26 |
They sit near the violas | 24 |
They require double reeds | 25 |
They have conical bores | 23 |
Sources of some pit squeaks | 27 |
Some are made of rosewood | 25 |
Small section of an orchestra | 29 |
Shawms' successors | 22 |
Shawm's descendants | 23 |
Relatives of the English horn | 29 |
Relatives of the crumhorn | 25 |
Relatives of English horns | 26 |
Part of the reed section | 24 |
Orchestra-tuning instruments | 28 |
Nasal-sounding instruments | 26 |
Instruments with trilling | 25 |
Instruments in wind quintets | 28 |
High-pitched woodwinds | 22 |
High-pitched double-reeds | 25 |
Easy-to-carry instruments | 25 |
Duo in a typical symphony | 25 |
Cousins of English horns | 24 |
Bassoon's smaller cousins | 29 |
Certain woodwind player | 23 |
Certain orchestra member | 24 |
Woodwind section member | 23 |
One found among the reeds | 25 |
One blowing among the reeds | 27 |
One among the woodwinds | 23 |
Member of a wind section | 24 |