English Horn before 1807 H. Grenser This boxwood instrument stems from the heyday of theGrenser company, when it maintained a work force of six. The angled version ofthe horn (hence the name cor anglé) is characteristic of German instruments ofthe second half of the eighteenth century. The pitch of the longer uppersection is a’ = 430 Hz, the shorter about 440 Hz. Listen to experts illuminate this artwork's story Listen Play or pause #9319. English Horn Supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies We're sorry, the transcript for this audio track is not available at this time. We are working to make it


English Horn before 1807 H. Grenser This boxwood instrument stems from the heyday of theGrenser company, when it maintained a work force of six. The angled version ofthe horn (hence the name cor anglé) is characteristic of German instruments ofthe second half of the eighteenth century. The pitch of the longer uppersection is a’ = 430 Hz, the shorter about 440 Hz. Listen to experts illuminate this artwork's story Listen Play or pause #9319. English Horn Supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies We're sorry, the transcript for this audio track is not available at this time. We are working to make it available as soon as English Horn. German. before 1807. Wood, ivory, brass. Dresden, Germany. Aerophone-Reed Vibrated-double reed


Size: 2366px × 4000px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: