musician
A musician is a person who composes, conducts, or performs music. According to the United States Employment Service, "musician" is a general term used to designate one who follows music as a profession. Musicians include songwriters who wr ...
who plays the
oboe
The oboe ( ) is a type of double reed woodwind instrument. Oboes are usually made of wood, but may also be made of synthetic materials, such as plastic, resin, or hybrid composites. The most common oboe plays in the treble or soprano range.
...
or any oboe family instrument, including the
oboe d'amore
The oboe d'amore (; Italian for "oboe of love"), less commonly , is a double reed woodwind musical instrument in the oboe family. Slightly larger than the oboe, it has a less assertive and a more tranquil and serene tone, and is considered the m ...
,
cor anglais
The cor anglais (, or original ; plural: ''cors anglais''), or English horn in North America, is a double-reed woodwind instrument in the oboe family. It is approximately one and a half times the length of an oboe, making it essentially an al ...
or
English horn
The cor anglais (, or original ; plural: ''cors anglais''), or English horn in North America, is a double-reed woodwind instrument in the oboe family. It is approximately one and a half times the length of an oboe, making it essentially an alt ...
,
bass oboe
The bass oboe or baritone oboe is a double reed instrument in the woodwind family. It is essentially twice the size of a regular (soprano) oboe so it sounds an octave lower; it has a deep, full tone somewhat akin to that of its higher-pitched c ...
and
piccolo oboe The piccolo oboe, also known as the piccoloboe and historically called an oboe musette (or just musette), is the smallest and highest pitched member of the oboe family. Pitched in E or F above the regular oboe (i.e. notated a minor third or perfect ...
or
oboe musette The piccolo oboe, also known as the piccoloboe and historically called an oboe musette (or just musette), is the smallest and highest pitched member of the oboe family. Pitched in E or F above the regular oboe (i.e. notated a minor third or perfect ...
.
The following is a list of notable past and present professional oboists, with indications when they were/are known better for other professions in their own time. Oboists with an asterisk (*) have biographies in the online version of the ''
Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
''The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'' is an encyclopedic dictionary of music and musicians. Along with the German-language '' Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart'', it is one of the largest reference works on the history and th ...
Alessandro Besozzi
Alessandro Besozzi (born 22 July 1702 in Parma – died 26 July 1793 in Turin) was an Italian composer and virtuoso oboist.From a letter dated 30 July 1777 written by Quirino Gasparini, maestro di cappella of the cathedral of Turin, sent to Fathe ...
Anne Danican Philidor Anne Danican Philidor (11 April 1681 – 8 October 1728) was a French woodwind player and composer of the Philidor family. Born in Paris on 11 April 1681, his grandfather and father were also professional woodwind players in the king's service. An ...
(1681–1728), French
* Jean Danican Philidor (–1679), French
* (1580–1651), French
* (1681–1731), French
*
John Ernest Galliard
Johann Ernst Galliard (?1666/?1687–1749 ) was a German composer.
Galliard was born in Celle, Germany to a French wig-maker. His first composition instruction began at age 15. Galliard studied composition under Jean-Baptiste Farinel, the dire ...
Jean Christian Kytch Jean Christian Kytch (died 1738) was a Dutch Baroque-era oboist. Based on works he is known to have performed, it is thought that he possessed considerable technical ability on the oboe.
He was known as "Handel's oboist" and Handel's use of a solo ...
(died ), Dutch ("Handel's oboist")
* François La Riche (1662 – after 1733), Flemish *"The Trio Sonatas of Jan Dismas Zelenka" . ''www.idrs.org''.
* Jacques Loeillet (1685–1748), Flemish *
* Jean-Baptiste Loeillet (1680–1730), Flemish *
*
Jacques Paisible Jacques Paisible (ca. 16561721), also known as James Peasable or James Paisible, was a French baroque composer and recorder virtuoso who lived and worked in London for about forty years.
Paisible arrived in London from France in September 1673, on ...
Josep Pla
Josep Pla i Casadevall (; 8 March 1897 – 23 April 1981) was a Spanish journalist and a popular author. As a journalist he worked in France, Italy, England, Germany and Russia, from where he wrote political and cultural chronicles in Catalan ...
(1728–1762), Spanish *
* Manuel Pla (–1766), Spanish *
*
Giovanni Benedetto Platti
Giovanni Benedetto Platti (born possibly 9 July 1697 (according to other sources 1690, 1692, 1700) in Padua, belonging to Venice at the time; died 11 January 1763 in Würzburg) was an Italian Baroque composer and oboist.
Life
Platti studied musi ...
Georg Philipp Telemann
Georg Philipp Telemann (; – 25 June 1767) was a German Baroque composer and multi-instrumentalist. Almost completely self-taught in music, he became a composer against his family's wishes. After studying in Magdeburg, Zellerfeld, and Hild ...
(1681–1767), German composer (Oboe was one of over 10 instruments he played)
* Roberto Valentine (1674 – ), English * (composer)
Georg Benda
Georg Anton Benda ( cz, Jiří Antonín Benda, italic=no, link=no; 30 June 17226 November 1795) was a composer, violinist and Kapellmeister of the classical period from the Kingdom of Bohemia.
Biography
Born into a family of notable musicia ...
(1722–1795), Czech * (composer)
*
Carlo Besozzi
Carlo Besozzi (1738 – 22 March 1791) was an Italian oboist composer and member of an extensive family of oboists from the eighteenth-century Naples. Nephew of Gaetano Besozzi, he was employed in the orchestra of the Elector of Dresden and ...
Josef Fiala
Josef Fiala (''Joseph Fiala'') (3 February 1748 – 31 July 1816), was a Czech composer, oboist, viola da gamba virtuoso, cellist, and pedagogue of the Classical period.
Life
He was born in Lochovice in Bohemia and began his musical career t ...
(1748–1816), Czech * ("Mozart's oboist 1")
*
Johann Christian Fischer
Johann Christian Fischer (c. 1733 – 29 April 1800) was a German composer and oboist, one of the best-known oboe soloists in Europe during the 1770s.
Employed as a music copyist and theatre director for the Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin at Ludwig ...
Gottlieb Graupner
__NOTOC__
Johann Christian Gottlieb Graupner (6 October 1767 – 16 April 1836) was a musician, composer, conductor, educator and publisher. Born in Hanover, Germany, he played oboe in Joseph Haydn's orchestra in London. After moving to the Unite ...
(1767–1836), German-American
*
William Herschel
Frederick William Herschel (; german: Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel; 15 November 1738 – 25 August 1822) was a German-born British astronomer and composer. He frequently collaborated with his younger sister and fellow astronomer Caroline ...
(1738–1822), German (astronomer) (before 1765 primarily oboist, only later an astronomer)
* François Jadin (1731–1790), French *
* Carl Khym (1770–after 1819), Czech *
*
Ludwig August Lebrun
Ludwig August Lebrun (baptized 2 May 1752 – 16 December 1790) was a German oboist and composer.
Life
Lebrun was born in Mannheim. The well-known and celebrated oboe virtuoso (a contemporary described being "charmed by his divine oboe") ...
John Parke
John Grubb Parke (September 22, 1827 – December 16, 1900) was a United States Army engineer and a Union general in the American Civil War. Parke's Civil War service was closely associated with Ambrose E. Burnside, often serving him as chi ...
(1745–1829), English *
*
William Thomas Parke
William Thomas Parke (15 February 1761 – 26 August 1847) was an English oboist and composer. He played in notable concerts of the day; in retirement he published ''Musical Memoirs''.
Life
Parke began his musical studies in 1770 under his elder ...
Wilhelm Braun
Wilhelm Braun (13 July 1897 – 15 November 1969) was a German cross-country skier. He competed in the men's 18 kilometre event at the 1928 Winter Olympics
The 1928 Winter Olympics, officially known as the II Olympic Winter Games (french ...
Johann Peter Heuschkel Johann Peter Heuschkel (4 January 1773 – 5 December 1853) was a German oboist, organist, music teacher and composer.
Heuschkel was born in Harras near Eisfeld. From 1792 he was oboist and later also organist in Hildburghausen. He is best remembe ...
Antonio Pasculli
Antonio Pasculli (13 October 1842 – 23 February 1924) was an Italian oboist and composer, known as "the Paganini of the oboe".
Biography
Pasculli was born in Palermo, Sicily on 13 October 1842. He lived there his whole life but trav ...
Adolf Rzepko
Adolf Rzepko (1825 – 1892) was a Polish composer, oboist, choral and orchestral conductor, and pianist.
He was a disciple of Václav Tomášek. He was mainly active as a performer (he served for many years as the Wielki Theatre orchestra's pri ...
Carlo Yvon
Carlo Yvon (29 April 1798 in Milan – 23 December 1854 in Milan) was an Italian composer, virtuoso oboist and English horn player, and music educator. He studied at the Milan Conservatory in his native city and later was a teacher at that s ...
(1798–1854), Italian
20th-century oboists
A-L
* Albert J. Andraud (1884–1975), French-American
* Rhadames Angelucci (1915–1991), American
* Alfred Barthel (1871–1957), French
* Evelyn Barbirolli (born Evelyn Rothwell), (1911–2008), English *
* Louis Bas (1863–1944), French
* Etienne Baudo (1903–2001), French
* (1871–1941), French
*
Robert Bloom
Robert Bloom (May 3, 1908February 13, 1994) was an oboist with an orchestral and solo career, a composer and arranger contributing to the oboe repertory, and a teacher of several successful oboists. Bloom is considered seminal in the development ...
(1908–1994), American *
*
Joy Boughton
Christina Joyance Boughton (known as Joy) (14 June 1913 – 1963) was an English oboist and the daughter of composer Rutland Boughton and artist Christina Walshe. She died in 1963 in tragic circumstances..
She was taught oboe by Léon Goossens ...
Natalie Caine
Natalie Caine (6 June 1909 – 28 December 2008) was one of the first female woodwind players to establish themselves in leading British orchestras. She is frequently referred to by her married name Natalie James.
She was born Evelyn Natalie Cai ...
Antonio Estévez
Antonio José Estévez Aponte (January 3, 1916 in Calabozo (Guárico) – November 26, 1988 in Caracas
Caracas (, ), officially Santiago de León de Caracas, abbreviated as CCS, is the capital and largest city of Venezuela, and the center o ...
Fritz Flemming
Fritz originated as a German nickname for Friedrich, or Frederick (''Der Alte Fritz'', and ''Stary Fryc'' were common nicknames for King Frederick II of Prussia and Frederick III, German Emperor) as well as for similar names including Fridolin ...
(born 1872 or 1873; died 1947), German
* (1905–1984), Canadian
* Bert Gassman (1911–2004), American
*
Fernand Gillet Fernand Gillet (15 October 1882 Paris, France – 8 March 1980 Boston) was a French and naturalized American oboist who is chiefly remembered for serving as the principal oboist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1925 to 1946. He is also known f ...
(1882–1980), French
*
Ruth Gipps
Ruth Dorothy Louisa ("Wid") Gipps (20 February 1921 – 23 February 1999) was an English composer, oboist, pianist, conductor, and educator. She composed music in a wide range of genres, including five symphonies, seven concertos, and n ...
Percy Grainger
Percy Aldridge Grainger (born George Percy Grainger; 8 July 188220 February 1961) was an Australian-born composer, arranger and pianist who lived in the United States from 1914 and became an American citizen in 1918. In the course of a long an ...
Georges Longy Georges Longy (1868 – 1930) was a French-born oboist, conductor and composer. He is the founder of Longy School of Music.
Personal life
Longy was born in Abbeville, France on August 29, 1868.Jeskalian, Barbar"Georges Longy" retrieved on 24 Octo ...
(1868–1930), French *
M-Z
*
Terence MacDonagh
John Alfred Terence MacDonagh (3 February 1908 – 12 September 1986) was an English Oboe, oboist and cor anglais player, particularly known as one of the four members of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra's so-called "Royal Family" of woodwind pla ...
(1908–1986), British
*
Arno Mariotti
The Arno is a river in the Tuscany region of Italy. It is the most important river of central Italy after the Tiber.
Source and route
The river originates on Monte Falterona in the Casentino area of the Apennines, and initially takes a ...
(1911–1993), German-born American
* Josef Marx (1913–1978), German-American *
* Robert Mayer (1910–1994), American
* Karl Mayrhofer (1927–1976), Austrian
* Mitch Miller (1911–2010), American (choir conductor, recording director)
* Myrtile Morel (1889–1979), French
* (1904–1983), American
* Pierre Pierlot (1921–2007), French
* Giuseppe Prestini (1877–1930), Italian
* David Reichenberg (1950–1987), American * (also listed under period instrumentalists below)
*
A. Clyde Roller
Archibald Clyde Roller (October 13, 1914 – October 16, 2005) was an American music professor, conductor, and oboist.
Roller, a native of Rogersville, Missouri, received his musical education at the Eastman School of Music, graduating in 1941.
...
Sidney Sutcliffe
Sidney Clement Sutcliffe (6 October 1918 – 1 July 2001) was a British oboist. He played in the London Philharmonic, Philharmonia and BBC Symphony orchestras, and was professor of oboe at the Royal College of Music in London.
Life and career
S ...
(1918–2001), Scottish
* (1922–2008), Japanese
*
Marcel Tabuteau
Marcel Tabuteau (2 July 18874 January 1966) was a French-American oboist who is considered the founder of the American school of oboe playing.
Life
Tabuteau was born in Compiègne, Oise, France, and given a post in the city's municipal wind band ...
(1887–1966), French/American *
*
Jiří Tancibudek
Jiří Tancibudek AM (5 March 19211 May 2004) was a Czech-born Australian oboist, conductor and teacher of great renown in his adopted country and elsewhere. His obituary in the ''Adelaide Review'', titled "Prince of the oboe", said of his play ...
Alexander Wunderer
Alexander Wunderer (11 April 1877 – 29 December 1955) was an Austrian oboist, orchestra leader and composer. He served as a professor at the State Music Academy in Vienna, where he taught students including Frida Kern, Ľudovít Rajter and ...
Theodore Baskin
Theodore Baskin (born June 14, 1950) has been Principal Oboe of the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal since 1980. Born in Detroit, MI, he studied oboe with Arno Mariotti while at Cass Technical High School and John de Lancie while at the Curtis ...
(born 1950), American
* Perry Bauman (1918–2004), American-Canadian
* William Bennett (1956–2013), American
* Melvin Berman (1929–2008), American-Canadian
* (1929–2020), Uruguayan *
* Neil Black (1932–2016), English
*
Maurice Bourgue
Maurice Bourgue (born 6 November 1939) is a French oboist, composer, and conductor.
Biography
Maurice Bourgue studied at the Conservatoire de Paris in the oboe class of Étienne Baudo and chamber music of Fernand Oubradous. He won a First P ...
German Cáceres
German(s) may refer to:
* Germany (of or related to)
**Germania (historical use)
* Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language
** For citizens of Germany, see also German nationality law
**Ge ...
Majid Entezami
Majid Entezami ( fa, مجید انتظامی) (born 9 March 1948) is an List of Iranian composers, Iranian composer, conductor, musician and oboist. He composed music for 9 television series, 10 suite symphonies and over 80 movies. His works inc ...
Ingo Goritzki
Ingo Goritzki (born 22 February 1939 in Berlin, Germany) is a German oboist, pianist, and flautist.Charles Hamann (born 1971), American-Canadian
* (born 1965), German
* Jared Hauser (born 1971), American
* (born 1940), Dutch
* Brynjar Hoff (born 1940), Norwegian
* Heinz Holliger (born 1939), Swiss *
* Bernd Holz (born 1955), German
* Christian Hommel (born 1963), German
* Gordon Hunt (born 1950), English
Arthur Jensen
Arthur Robert Jensen (August 24, 1923 – October 22, 2012) was an American psychologist and writer. He was a professor of educational psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. Jensen was known for his work in psychometrics an ...
(1925–2018), American
* Giorgi Kalandarishvili (born 1983) Georgian-German. Muenster Symphony, University of Music in Muenster "Musikhochschule Münster"
*
Michael Kamen
Michael Arnold Kamen (April 15, 1948 – November 18, 2003) was an American composer (especially of film scores), orchestral arranger, orchestral conductor, songwriter, and session musician.
Biography Early life
Michael Arnold Kamen was bor ...
Alex Klein
Alex Klein (born 1964, Porto Alegre) is an oboist who began his musical studies in his native Brazil at the age of nine, and made his solo orchestral debut the following year. At the age of eleven he was invited to join the Camerata Antigua, one ...
(born 1964), Brazilian
* Elizabeth Koch (born 1986), American
*
Lothar Koch Lothar Koch (1 July 1935 – 16 March 2003) was an oboist. He was one of the two principal oboists in the Berlin Philharmonic during the Herbert von Karajan era. He was also an active soloist and was regarded as one of the greatest oboe players ...
(1935–2003), German *
* (born ), Estonian
* Yeon-Hee Kwak (born ), Korean
* François Leleux (born 1971), French
* (born 1943), Hungarian
* Jay Light (born 1940s), American
* Michael Lisicky (born 1964), American
Charles Mackerras
Mackerras in 2005
Sir Alan Charles MacLaurin Mackerras (; 1925 2010) was an Australian conductor. He was an authority on the operas of Janáček and Mozart, and the comic operas of Gilbert and Sullivan. He was long associated with the Engli ...
(1925–2010), Australian (conductor) *
*
Jean-Claude Malgoire
Jean-Claude Malgoire (25 November 1940 – 14 April 2018) was a French oboist and later conductor.
Early life
Malgoire was born on 25 November 1940 in Avignon, France. His mother was born in Italy.
Malgoire graduated from the Paris Conservatory. ...
Albrecht Mayer
Albrecht Mayer (born 3 June 1965) is a German classical oboist and conductor. The principal oboist of the Berlin Philharmonic, he is internationally known as a soloist and chamber musician and has made many recordings.
Biography
Born in Erlange ...
(born 1965), German
*
Malcolm Messiter
Malcolm Messiter (born 1949) is a British oboist, particularly known for his recording of the virtuosic "La Favorita" concerto by Antonio Pasculli. He is the son of Ian Messiter, the creator of the BBC panel show '' Just a Minute'', and his wife ...
Elizabeth Raum
Elizabeth Raum (born 13 January 1945) is a Canadian oboist and composer.
Biography
Elizabeth Raum was born in Berlin, New Hampshire in 1945, but became a Canadian citizen in 1985. She studied oboe performance with Robert Sprenkle at the Eastman ...
(born 1945), Canadian *
* Sally Sarah Johnston Reid (born 1948), American *
* Juozas Rimas (born 1942), Lithuanian
* Roger Roe (born 1968), American, assistant principal oboist/English horn player of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra
*
Carlo Romano
Carlo Romano (8 May 1908 – 16 October 1975) was an Italian actor, voice actor and screenwriter.
Biography
Born in Livorno, Romano was the son of actress Dina Romano and the younger brother of actor Felice Romano. Romano started his acting ...
Edwin Roxburgh
Edwin Roxburgh (born 1937) is an English composer, conductor and oboist.
Roxburgh was born in Liverpool. After playing oboe in the National Youth Orchestra, he won a double scholarship to study composition with Herbert Howells and oboe with T ...
Ray Still
Ray Still (March 12, 1920 – March 12, 2014) was an American classical oboist. He was the principal oboe of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for 40 years, from 1953–1993.
Early life
He was born March 12, 1920 in Elwood, Indiana, and moved to ...
Laila Storch
Laila Storch (February 28, 1921 – December 2, 2022) was an American oboist.
Biography
She was the first woman oboist to graduate from the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where she studied with Marcel Tabuteau.
Career
Storch was the principal ...
(1921–2022), American
* Linda Strommen (born 1957), American
T-Z
*
Blair Tindall
Blair Tindall (born February 2, 1960) is an American oboe, oboist, performer, producer, speaker, and journalist.
Early life and education
Tindall was born in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, to historian George Tindall, George Brown Tindall and Bloss ...
(born 1960), American (author)
* Jacques Tys, French
* Alexei Utkin (born 1957), Russian
* (born 1963), Belgian
*
Allan Vogel
Allan Vogel is an American oboist and educator. He was the former Principal Oboe of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.
Education
Vogel studied piano and voice at the New York High School for Music and Art, but eventually changed his focus to ob ...
(born 1944), American
*
Han de Vries
Han Samuel de Vries (born 31 August 1941, The Hague), is a Dutch oboist and is considered the doyen of the Dutch school of oboe playing.
He studied oboe with Jaap Stotijn at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague and with his son Haakon Stotijn at ...
(born 1941), Dutch *
* Edo de Waart (born 1941), Dutch * (conductor)
* (born 1958), French
* Liang Wang (born 1980) 王亮, Chinese
* Mark Weiger (1959–2008), American
* Judith Weir (born 1954), Scottish (composer) *
*
Helmut Winschermann
Helmut Winschermann (; 22 March 1920 – 4 March 2021) was a German classical oboist, conductor and academic teacher. He founded the Deutsche Bachsolisten ensemble for historically informed performances, and was their conductor from 1960 until ...
Omar Zoboli Omar Zoboli (born 1953, Modena) is an Italian oboist and professor at the Musikhochschule Basel - Switzerland
Studies and competitions
He studied Oboe under Sergio Possidoni, Heinz Holliger and Paul Dombrecht. Experience and inspiration was g ...
(born 1953), Italian
Contemporary oboists best known for playing English horn (cor anglais) or oboe d'amore
oboe d'amore
The oboe d'amore (; Italian for "oboe of love"), less commonly , is a double reed woodwind musical instrument in the oboe family. Slightly larger than the oboe, it has a less assertive and a more tranquil and serene tone, and is considered the m ...
Paul Dombrecht
Paul Dombrecht (born 1948, Ostend) is a Belgian oboist performing on period instruments as well as the modern oboe. He appears frequently with other prominent musicians and baroque orchestras.
He is the son of Stefaan Dombrecht, who was organist ...
(born 1948), Belgian
* Ku Ebbinge (born 1948), Dutch *
*
Paul Goodwin
Paul may refer to:
*Paul (given name), a given name (includes a list of people with that name)
* Paul (surname), a list of people
People
Christianity
*Paul the Apostle (AD c.5–c.64/65), also known as Saul of Tarsus or Saint Paul, early Chri ...
(born 1956), English *
* Bruce Haynes (1942–2011), American-Canadian *
* (born 1943), Japanese (conductor)
* Christopher Palameta (born 1979), Canadian
*
Michel Piguet
Michel may refer to:
* Michel (name), a given name or surname of French origin (and list of people with the name)
* Míchel (nickname), a nickname (a list of people with the nickname, mainly Spanish footballers)
* Míchel (footballer, born 1963), ...
(1932–2004), Swiss *
*
Marcel Ponseele
Marcel Ponseele (Kortrijk, 1957) is a Belgian oboist.
Ponseele studied at Bruges and other conservatories in Belgium. He has specialised in the baroque oboe and is involved in making his own instruments in 18th-century style. He is known for his ...
* Kyle Bruckmann (born 1971), American – free improvisation
*
Lindsay Cooper
Lindsay Cooper (3 March 1951 – 18 September 2013) was an English bassoon and oboe player and composer. Best known for her work with the band Henry Cow, she was also a member of Comus, National Health, News from Babel and David Thomas and t ...
(1951–2013), English – art rock
* Jean-Luc Fillon (born 1960s), French – jazz
* Karl Jenkins (born 1944), Welsh * – jazz
* Colin Maier (born 1976), Canadian – new classical, celtic
* Paul McCandless (born 1947), American * – jazz
* Nancy Rumbel (born 1951), American – new age
* Sonny Simmons (1933–2021), American – jazz
* Frank Socolow (1923–1981), American – jazz
* Kate St John (born 1957), English – art rock, pop
* Libby Van Cleve (born 1958), American – avant garde
* Russel Walder (born 1959), American – new age
As secondary instrument
* Ahmad Alaadeen (1934–2010), American – jazz (saxophonist)
* Marshall Allen (born 1924), American – jazz (saxophonist)
* Derek Bell (musician), Derek Bell (1935–2002), Irish – folk (harpist)
* Amanda Brown (musician), Amanda Brown (born 1965), Australian – indie rock (violinist, guitarist)
* Garvin Bushell (1902–1991), American – jazz (all reeds)
* Bob Cooper (musician), Bob Cooper (1925–1993), American – jazz (saxophone)
* Julie Fowlis (born 1979), Scottish – Celtic (vocalist)
* Vinny Golia (born 1946), American – jazz (all woodwinds)
* Joseph Jarman (1937–2019), American – jazz (clarinetist, saxophonist)
* Mick Karn (1958–2011), British – rock (multi-instrumentalist)
* Rahsaan Roland Kirk (1936–1977), American – jazz (multi-instrumentalist)
* Yusef Lateef (1920–2013), American – jazz (saxophonist, flutist)
* Giuseppi Logan (1935–2020), American – jazz (multi-instrumentalist)
* Andy Mackay (born 1946), English – art rock (saxophonist)
* Charlie Mariano (1923–2009), American – jazz (saxophonist)
* Makanda Ken McIntyre (1931–2001), American – jazz (saxophonist)
* Roscoe Mitchell (born 1940), American – jazz (saxophonist)
* Dewey Redman (1931–2006), American – jazz (saxophonist, suona)
* Don Redman (1900–1964), American – jazz (clarinetist, saxophonist)
* Sufjan Stevens (born 1975), American – indie rock (multi-instrumentalist)
* Kjartan Sveinsson (born 1978), Icelandic – post-rock (keyboardist)
Shehnai players
* Ali Ahmed Hussain Khan (1939–2016), Indian
* Bismillah Khan (1916–2006), Indian
* S. Ballesh (born 1958), Indian
References
Further reading
* David Lasocki "The French Hautboy in England, 1673–1730" Early Music 16(3) 339–357
* Alfredo Bernardini "The Oboe in the Venetian Republic, 1692–1797" Early Music 16(3) 372–387
* Janet K. Page "The Hautboy in London's Musical Life, 1730–1770" Early Music 16(3) 358–371
* Bruce Haynes "Mozart and the Oboe" Early Music 20(1) 43–63
*
* Ryoichi Narusawa (ed. Marc Fink) "A History of Oboe Playing in Japan" (The Double Reed, Vol.27 No.4, International Double Reed Society) 2004