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In 1964 he moved to Holland to study early music performance and began playing the early oboe, or hautboy.
He is said to have produced 'a tone as sweet as that of a hautboy'.
However in a footnote to another usage of the word, Chatterton defines it as "not unlike a hautboy".
Haynes' interest in the hautboy and in historical performance practice has led to much research and writing.
The hautboy player has similarly defied identification.
The piston is a contemporary development of the hautboy or baroque oboe, influenced by the bombard.
He also started a class in hautboy there, the first in Holland, which he taught until the early 1980s.
Also known as "musky flavored strawberry" or "Hautboy," in England.
Its French name hautbois strawberry is anglicised as hautboy strawberry.
It appears that the "protomorphic" hautboy was developed between 1640-1664 and was first used by Lully.
Haynes was one of the first 20th-century performers to master the hautboy and was a key figure in setting professional performance standards for it.
The Medieval English word hautboy is the origin of the modern word oboe and has never referred to any instrument comparable to a trumpet.
"The Hautboy in London's Musical Life, 1730-1770."
In English it becomes hautboy, a wooden musical instrument of two-foot tone, I believe, played with a double reed, an oboe, in fact.
To the ears of a European newly arrived, this music sounds very strangely, for there are ten to twelve hautboy, and as many cymbals, which [all]play together.
Buchinger's musical skills included the ability to play a half-dozen musical instruments including the dulcimer, hautboy, trumpet, and flute, some of which he invented himself.
Haynes, Bruce: 2001, The Eloquent Oboe: A History of the Hautboy 1640-1760.
The Eloquent Oboe: A History of the Hautboy from 1640 to 1760 (Oxford University Press, 2001)
Charles Wilkes, during the Wilkes Expedition of 1838-1842, found wild strawberries on the island and gave it the name Hautboy, after the variety of strawberry.
Bred by Sir Matthew Pierson, he was a son of Grey Hautboy and a Makeless mare.
In the mid-1970s he reintroduced the hautboy to 20th-century France, and was among the first to perform the instrument in Britain, Italy, and Israel.
Ockham has cricket and football clubs that play at weekends at Hautboy Meadows on Ockham Lane.
You remember in 'Henry IV'-- "'The case of a treble hautboy Was a mansion for him, a court.'
John & William Neal, A collection of the most celebrated Irish tunes: proper for the violin, German flute or hautboy, Dublin [1724], 2nd facsimile ed.
The hautbois quickly spread throughout Europe, including England, where it was called "hautboy", "hoboy", "hautboit", "howboye", and similar variants of the French name.