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Horns in Bass Clef

13/3/2026

9 Comments

 
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Magnus's question yesterday about soprano recorder clefs sent me down a path I'd been meaning to write about.

His question was straightforward: can the Instrument Library default to a treble ottava alta clef for the soprano recorder? Yes, trivially – the template carries the staff spec, you change the clef, done. But the exchange reminded me of a more consequential case where the relationship between clef and transposition isn't merely cosmetic but changes the sounding pitch of the notation itself.

From roughly 1750 until well into the twentieth century, horn parts in bass clef were transposed downward from concert pitch rather than upward. For a horn in F, treble clef notation sounds a perfect fifth below the written pitch – the modern convention. But in bass clef, the same instrument's notation sounds a perfect fourth above the written pitch. The difference is an octave, and the practical consequence is that the transposition interval depends on which clef is active at any given moment in the part.
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​This is not an obscure historical footnote. It's Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner, Strauss, Mahler, Shostakovich – the central orchestral repertoire spanning two centuries.
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​The convention had a practical origin. Before valves, horn parts were limited to the notes of the harmonic series, and bass clef passages used only the lowest few harmonics. Writing them an octave lower than sounding pitch kept the notes within the staff when two parts shared a single staff. The convention outlived its original purpose by about a century.
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Ooloi's instrument definitions support clef-dependent transposition intervals. When a horn in F switches from treble to bass clef, the transposition changes accordingly – no phantom instrument changes, no hidden octave lines, no typographic compromises. The notation looks correct, the playback sounds correct, and the relationship between the two is maintained automatically.

Which is, after all, the point.
9 Comments
Magnus Johansson
13/3/2026 10:17:43

"But the exchange reminded me of a more consequential case where the relationship between clef and transposition isn't merely cosmetic but changes the sounding pitch of the notation itself."

I know that many consider the case of octave transposing clefs a cosmetic case and never use those clefs, but I am not one of them; when an instrument sounds in a different octave than the notated I want it to be obvious by looking at the clef, so therefore a bass Orff xylophone always has the treble clef ottava bassa. An exception from this is keyboard instruments with different stops or registers like e.g. the organ, but in those cases it is the keyboard range itself that determines the notated octaves.

Reply
Peter Bengtson
13/3/2026 10:34:12

Your point about the Orff xylophone is exactly right – the clef is doing semantic work and isn't just cosmetic. The ottava mark is part of the notation's meaning, not decoration.

On the historical horn convention: I suspect the reason it's treated as settled and ignorable is that most people writing notation software never need to engrave Brahms from scratch. However, those who do run into it all the time. The convention didn't disappear because anyone decided it was wrong; it became invisible to everyone except the engravers actually dealing with it.

It's not a historical curiosity – it is the whole central orchestral repertoire: Beethoven, Brahms, Mahler, Strauss, Schönberg...

Reply
Magnus Johansson
13/3/2026 10:51:19

Peter, what about the practise to mark other transpositions than octave transpositions with numbers over or under the clef so that e.g. a Bb clarinet gets a small "2" under its clef? Is it still used and if so, to what extent?

Peter Bengtson
13/3/2026 10:58:08

That practice is documented but effectively extinct. The number served as a shorthand for the transposition interval at a time when instrument labelling wasn't standardised – a small "2" below the clef communicating what we now state explicitly at the top of the part. Once "Clarinet in B♭" became the convention, the numeral had nothing left to do. I'm not aware of any repertoire where you'd encounter it today outside of facsimiles of early 19th-century sources. And today's instrumentarium would make things awkward for, say, contrabass clarinets. Would the digit be 26? ;)

Reply
Magnus Johansson
13/3/2026 11:16:35

Ha, ha! But I think I actually like it: a contrabass clarinet part with a treble clef sedicesima bassa. Can it become a plugin in Ooloi?

Reply
Peter Bengtson
13/3/2026 11:34:45

Yes. Ooloi's formatting plugins are designed for implementing new notational features. In fact, Ooloi eats its own soup and uses them for all formatting, including noteheads, accidentals, attachments, etc.

Magnus Johansson
13/3/2026 11:52:17

Great!

Reply
RMK
19/3/2026 15:08:15

Now do Bass clarinet!

French style
German style
Hybrid (see Le Sacre )

Reply
Peter Bengtson
19/3/2026 18:09:54

Already in there.

Reply



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    Peter Bengtson –
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Ooloi is an open-source desktop music notation system for musicians who need stable, precise engraving and the freedom to notate complex music without workarounds. Scores and parts are handled consistently, remain responsive at scale, and support collaborative work without semantic compromise. They are not tied to proprietary formats or licensing.
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