Woodwind instruments produce sound by directing a stream of air through a hollow tube – but how are these instruments played and what are the different types?

By Charlotte Smith

Published: Monday, 25 September 2023 at 18:04 PM


What are woodwind instruments?

Woodwind instruments form one of two categories within the wider wind instrument family – the other being brass. Despite their name, woodwind instruments are not always made from wood, and other common materials include plastic, brass, silver, gold and platinum.

The most common types of woodwind instruments today are those found in the woodwind section of a Western symphony orchestraflutes, clarinets, oboes and bassoons. The clarinet’s cousin, the saxophone, is more often used in jazz and pop music.

Woodwinds are one of the five main families of instruments, the others being strings, percussionbrass and keyboard.

How are woodwind instruments played?

All wind instruments use a resonating chamber, most commonly an open tube, through which air is blown by the player. The pitch of the vibrating column of air is determined by its length and can be controlled by valves and slides in the case of most brass instruments, or in the case of most woodwind instruments by holes and stops along the tube, controlled by the player’s fingers and metal caps called keys.

The shape and tension in the player’s mouth and lips, known as the embouchure, is an important component for producing sounds and pitch in brass instruments, but in woodwind instruments sound is produced by directing air from the player’s mouth against a sharp edge, such as a reed or duct.