Thomann 12H Ocarina C1 orange

13

12-Hole Piccolo Ocarina

  • Wonderfully clear sound
  • The ocarina is played in a similar way to the recorder
  • Tuning: C major
  • Tonal range: a'' - f''''
  • Material: Plastic
  • Weight: 51 g
  • Length: 12.5 cm
  • The ocarina is suitable for beginners as well as professionals thanks to its wide tonal range
  • With the fingering chart developed specifically for the ocarina, the fingering is shown graphically, meaning the instrument is suitable for learning on one's own
  • Colour: Orange
  • In beautiful gift box
  • Includes strap for carrying and fingering chart with 4 easy pieces of music
Fås siden December 2014
Artikelnummer 354106
salgsenhed 1 stk
Material Plastic
Numner Of Holes 12
Song Book Yes
143 kr
Inkl. moms. Obs! Yderligere fragtomkostninger 60 kr
på lager
på lager

Produktet er på lager og klar til afsendelse.

Information om forsendelse
Afsendelse forventet lørdag, 20.04.
1

13 Kundebedømmelser

4.5 / 5

Du skal være logget på, for at kunne vurdere et produkt.

BemærkVi tillader kun vores kunder, at afgive en vurdering af det udstyr de har købt hos os. Vi modtager ikke anmeldelser eller vurderinger af produkter fra tredje kilde.

Efter login finder du også i kundencenter under "vurderinger af produkt" alle artikler, som du kan afgive en vurdering af.

respons

features

lyd

forarbejdning

9 Anmeldelser

google translate gb
Der opstod en fejl. Prøv igen senere.
A
Great sound from a small package
Anonym 03.02.2016
Compared to the C3 this thing is tiny. Im a man with average sized hands and i can just about hit the holes on this. If you have larger hands I'd go for the larger C3 because it will be easier to play.
Despite its size it has a beautiful sound (after a little practice). It can get a little screechy compared to its big brother but dont let that put you off. I sent for this and the C3 at the same time (saved on postage) and im glad i did as they both offer something different.
respons
lyd
forarbejdning
features
0
0
Anmeld bedømmelse

Anmeld bedømmelse