- Carl Almenräder
Carl Almenräder (
3 October 1786 inRonsdorf (Wuppertal ) –14 September 1846 inBiebrich ) was a German performer, teacher and composer.The design of the modern
bassoon owes a great deal to Almenräder, who, assisted by the Germanacoustics researcherGottfried Weber developed the 17-key bassoon whose range spanned fouroctave s. Almenräder's improvements to the bassoon began with an 1823 treatise in which he described ways of improving intonation, response, and technical ease of playing by means of augmenting and rearranging the keywork; subsequent articles further developed his ideas. Working at the Schott factory gave him the means to construct and test instruments according to these new designs, the results of which were published in Caecilia, Schott's housejournal ; Almenräder continued publishing and building instruments until his death, andLudwig van Beethoven himself requested one of the newly made instruments after hearing of the papers. [cite web
url = http://www.idrs.org/Publications/DR/DR14.3/DR14.3.Ohlberger.html
title = Beethoven and the Bassoonist August Mittag
accessdate = 2008-01-20
last = Öhlberger
first = Karl
coauthors = John G. Cale, Monroe, Louisiana (translator)
date = Winter 1991
work = The Double Reed, Vol. 14, No. 3
publisher = International Double Reed Society
language = German/English] Almenräder left Schott to start his own factory along with partnerJohann Adam Heckel in 1831.References
See also: Baker's biographical dictionary of musicians By Theodore Baker, Alfred Remy
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