Woodwind doubling is more than a skill—it is a career strategy that opens doors to higher-paying gigs, more diverse musical collaborations, and a deeper understanding of the whole woodwind family. In today’s competitive music industry, musicians who can fluidly switch between flute, clarinet, saxophone, oboe, or bassoon are in high demand for pit orchestras, studio sessions, cruise ship bands, theater productions, and contemporary chamber ensembles. Developing a robust doubling repertoire not only increases your hireability but also sharpens your musicianship across every instrument you touch.

Understanding the Foundations of Woodwind Doubling

Before you begin stacking instruments onto your belt, it is critical to achieve a high level of proficiency on your primary woodwind. Your main instrument is the reference point for all others: it trains your ear, your breath control, your finger technique, and your stylistic instincts. A strong foundation ensures that when you pick up a secondary instrument, you are not starting from zero—you are transferring existing musical intelligence to a new physical setup.

The Core Differences Among Woodwind Families

Woodwind doubling commonly involves switching between instruments that share similar fingerings but require vastly different embouchures, voicing, and breath support. For example:

  • Single-reed instruments (clarinet, saxophone, bass clarinet): The embouchure is firm but flexible; voicing and throat position change dramatically between clarinet and saxophone.
  • Flute and piccolo: No reed at all—embouchure relies on lip position and air speed; piccolo requires tighter, more focused embouchure and greater breath support.
  • Double-reed instruments (oboe, bassoon, English horn): The embouchure must control the resistance of a reed; voicing and air pressure are critical for stable pitch and tone.

Understanding these core differences is the first step to avoiding frustration and developing efficient practice habits. Many doublers begin with instruments in the same family—for instance, a clarinetist moving to saxophone—but the most versatile players eventually branch across families.

Steps to Expand Your Woodwind Doubling Repertoire

Expanding your doubling repertoire is a structured process that requires patience, strategic planning, and consistent effort. The following steps outline a proven approach used by professional doublers.

1. Choose Your Doubling Instruments Wisely

Start with instruments that share technical similarities with your primary. Common pairings include:

  • Clarinet → soprano or alto saxophone (similar fingerings, single reed)
  • Flute → piccolo (same embouchure concept, different air speed)
  • Saxophone → flute (widening your range, but both are C instruments)
  • Oboe → English horn (same fingering system, slightly different reed)
  • Bassoon → contrabassoon (similar technique, larger instrument)

As confidence builds, consider adding instruments from different subfamilies. For example, a clarinetist who also plays flute opens up pit orchestra book that require both.

2. Master the Basics of Each Instrument Systematically

For each new instrument, dedicate a period of focused, foundational work. This means:

  • Learning the unique fingerings and octave key mechanics
  • Developing a consistent, reliable embouchure
  • Practicing long tones and simple scales before attempting repertoire
  • Building muscle memory through slow, deliberate repetition

Do not rush this phase. A shaky foundation will haunt you when you try to switch instruments mid-gig.

3. Build a Diverse Repertoire Across Styles

Repertoire selection is where your doubling specialty becomes marketable. A well-rounded doubling rep includes:

  • Classical etudes and excerpts (e.g., Rose etudes for clarinet, Ferling for saxophone, Andersen for flute)
  • Jazz standards and solo transcriptions (e.g., Charlie Parker heads for sax, Hubert Laws for flute, Benny Goodman for clarinet)
  • Musical theater scores (e.g., Chicago, Les Misérables, The Lion King)
  • Pop and rock arrangements (e.g., horn parts in contemporary pop songs)

Each style demands different articulations, tone colors, and rhythmic feel. The more styles you can play convincingly, the more calls you will get.

4. Practice Switching Efficiently

In pit orchestras, you may have only eight bars of rest to put down a clarinet and pick up a flute. Practicing quick instrument changes is a skill in itself:

  • Set up a "doubling station" with instruments on stands in the order you need them
  • Practice the physical motion of switching without playing—time yourself
  • Play a short excerpt on Instrument A, then immediately switch to Instrument B for the next excerpt
  • Simulate performance conditions: keep your music stand, turn pages, and move around

5. Use Method Books and Instructional Materials

Specialized method books accelerate progress by providing systematic exercises tailored to each instrument. Recommended resources include:

  • The Art of Woodwind Doubling by various authors (available through Woodwind Doubling Institute)
  • Doubling: A Complete Guide for Flute, Clarinet, and Saxophone by Larry Clark
  • Standard etude books for each instrument (e.g., 48 Studies for clarinet by Rose, 24 Caprices for flute by Andersen)
  • Online courses and video lessons from professional doublers on platforms like Your Woodwind (site not real—placeholder)

6. Seek Feedback and Coaching Regularly

Work with a teacher who is a professional doubler themselves. They can diagnose embouchure issues, suggest better fingerings, and recommend repertoire. Even a few lessons every few months can keep you on the right track. Additionally, join online communities like the Doublers Forum (example) to exchange tips and find gig opportunities.

Effective practice on multiple instruments requires a organized routine that balances technical maintenance with repertoire expansion. Below are proven techniques used by studio musicians and theater players.

Daily Warm-Ups on Each Instrument

You do not need to spend an hour on every instrument daily. Instead, rotate a 15-minute warm-up through each instrument over the week, ensuring each gets at least two sessions. A warm-up should include:

  • Long tones (focus on tone stability)
  • Flexibility exercises (lip slurs for brass-like approach on sax, register shifts for clarinet)
  • Scales and arpeggios (major and minor, beginning with keys common in your rep)

Scale and Arpeggio Practice

Knowing scales in all keys on each instrument is non-negotiable. Use a metronome and gradually increase tempo. For doublers, pay special attention to keys that appear frequently in theater or jazz. For example, E-flat major, B-flat major, and F major are ubiquitous; practice them on all your instruments until they feel automatic.

Long Tones and Embouchure Control

Long tones are the fastest way to improve tone quality and intonation. On each instrument, hold notes for 8–12 seconds while listening for a centered, resonant sound. Practice matching pitch to a drone (e.g., using a tuner or drone app) to train your ear. This is especially important when switching between instruments that tune differently (e.g., flute is at A=440, but some theater pits may adjust).

Transcribe and Play Along

Transcribing solos or melodies from recordings is one of the most effective ways to internalize style and phrasing. Start with simple tunes on each instrument—for instance, a Paul Desmond solo on alto sax, a James Galway piece on flute, a Benny Goodman lick on clarinet. Playing along with recordings also improves your rhythmic feel and blend.

Simulate Gig Conditions

Once a week, set up a mock gig. Put together a list of excerpts that require you to switch instruments. Time yourself on the changes, and play through the entire set without stopping. Record the session and listen back for issues with intonation, articulation, or blend. This kind of pressure simulation is invaluable for building real-world confidence.

Building a Diverse Doubling Repertoire

Your doubling repertoire should be a living collection that grows with each gig you accept. Here are specific recommendations organized by instrument pair and style.

Classical Repertoire for Doublers

  • Flute: Mozart’s Flute Concerto No. 1 (excerpts), Debussy’s Syrinx, Copland’s Duo
  • Clarinet: Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto, Weber’s Concertino, Copland’s Clarinet Concerto
  • Saxophone: Glazunov’s Alto Saxophone Concerto, Ibert’s Concertino da Camera
  • Oboe: Mozart’s Oboe Quartet, Marcello’s Oboe Concerto
  • Bassoon: Mozart’s Bassoon Concerto, Saint-Saëns’ Sonata for Bassoon

Jazz and Commercial Repertoire

  • Saxophone: Charlie Parker’s Billie’s Bounce, Sonny Rollins’ Tenor Madness, John Coltrane’s Giant Steps (for advanced)
  • Flute: Hubert Laws’ Land of Passion, Herbie Mann’s Memphis Underground
  • Clarinet: Benny Goodman’s Sing, Sing, Sing, Artie Shaw’s Begin the Beguine
  • Pop/Rock: Horn parts from Stevie Wonder, Earth Wind & Fire, Chicago, Tower of Power

Musical Theater Books Every Doubler Should Know

Theater is where doubling is most demanded. Typical books require switching between flute, clarinet, and saxophone, often within the same number. Essential shows include:

  • West Side Story (Latin rhythms, quick changes)
  • Chicago (1920s style, Dixieland clarinet, alto sax solos)
  • Les Misérables (doubling flute, piccolo, clarinet, soprano sax)
  • The Lion King (multiple ethnic instruments, flute, piccolo, clarinet, saxophone)
  • Wicked (modern orchestration with many woodwind changes)

Practice excerpts from these shows using published parts (available through Hal Leonard or performance rights agencies).

Additional Tips for Successful Woodwind Doubling

Beyond repertoire and technique, several practical factors separate professional doublers from amateurs.

Invest in Quality Instruments and Accessories

Your instruments are your tools. A poorly maintained saxophone with leaky pads or a flute with sticky keys will hold you back. Invest in reputable brands and have a repair technician service them regularly. Keep a spare instrument for your most-used doubling partner (e.g., a backup clarinet if you play many theater gigs).

Reed Management

Reeds are consumables—stock multiples of your favorite strength for each instrument. Store them in a climate-controlled case (using humidity packs). Rotate reeds to extend their life and maintain consistency. For double reeds, learn basic scraping and adjusting techniques.

Maintain a Consistent Practice Schedule

Doubling is a demanding discipline. Schedule dedicated time for each instrument, but be realistic. Many professionals use a "split session" approach:

  • 30 minutes on primary instrument (technical maintenance)
  • 30 minutes on first double (repertoire)
  • 30 minutes on second double (scales and excerpts)
  • 15 minutes on switching practice (simulated changeovers)

This adds up to under two hours but covers all instruments efficiently.

Network with Other Doublers

Join local or online groups. Attend woodwind doubling conferences (such as the Midwest Clinic or the International Woodwind Doubling Symposium). Fellow doublers can share gig leads, recommend repair techs, and offer moral support. Platforms like Facebook groups ("Woodwind Doublers") and forum sites are excellent starting points.

Record and Analyze Your Practice

Record yourself playing a passage on each instrument and listen critically. Are you adjusting your tone appropriately? Are intonation issues consistent? Recording reveals habits your ears might miss while you are playing. Use a simple audio interface and DAW, or even a phone app.

Conclusion

Expanding your woodwind doubling repertoire is a continuous journey that pays professional and artistic dividends. By building a strong foundation on your primary instrument, progressively adding new tools to your arsenal, and practicing with intention and variety, you will become the go-to doubler for every pit, studio, and stage. Stay patient, stay curious, and let your versatility speak for itself.