A Liebesfuss or Liebesfuß (German: [ˈliːbəsfuːs]; lit. 'love foot'; French: pavillon d'amour) is a pear- or bulb-shaped element that narrows to a small opening in double reed instruments such as the oboe d'amore, cor anglais and heckelphone,[1] as well as on some single reed instruments. It serves as a damper that gives these musical instruments a characteristically soft timbre.[2][3] It is the eponymous characteristic of the oboe d'amore, which was developed in the baroque alongside other particularly sweet-sounding instruments such as the viola d'amore and the clarinet d'amore, which originated around 1740, died out in the mid-19th century, and was redeveloped from 2017 to 2020 on the basis of a basset clarinet in G.[4][5]
A slightly larger and 90-degree angled love foot, which can be rotated both forwards and backwards, can be found on historical basset clarinets,[6] as well as on a modern basset clarinet that adopts this detail from a historical clarinet, as Charles Neidich did.
References
edit- ^ Verdegem, Stefaan (March 2015). "Fétis, Gevaert, Mahillon and the Oboe d'Amore". The Galpin Society Journal. 68. Galpin Society: 75–120. JSTOR 44083257. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
- ^ "Cor de basset d'amour". Collectionsdumusee.philharmoniedeparis. (in French). 2020.
- ^ Émile Leipp. "Réflexions et expériences sur la clarinette, Bulletin du GAM (Laboratoire Acoustique, Université PARIS VI)" (PDF)..
- ^ "Basset clarinet, period instrument, copy of an instrument made for Anton Stadler in the 1700s. Classical period". alamy.com. 2008-11-24.
- ^ Albert R. Rice (1986), "The Clarinette D'Amour and Basset Horn", The Galpin Society Journal (in German), vol. 39, pp. 97–111, doi:10.2307/842136, JSTOR 842136
- ^ Victor-Charles Mahillon (1874), Les Éléments d'acoustique musicale et instrumentale: comprenant l'examen de la construction théorique de tous les instruments de musique en usage dans l'orchestration moderne (in German), Brüssel: Mahillon, retrieved 2021-08-11