
About Howarth
Howarth of London is a specialist woodwind instrument maker and retailer. Known all over the world as makers of the finest oboes, oboes d’amore and cors anglais, our instruments are made in our dedicated manufacturing workshops in Worthing, West Sussex.
We use high-tech CNC machinery to make precision components for our instruments which are then hand-assembled by highly experienced technicians into our beautiful instruments.
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We want to make it as easy as possible for you to hire an instrument. Our rental options allow you to have an instrument in a range of situations.

Long Term Rental
Hire an instrument while you discover about learning, without the up front cost of buying an instrument.

Short Term Rental
Hire an instrument just for a week or two in case of an emergency or for a special concert.
Upcoming Events

Bach, Handel, Vivaldi and Zelenka
April 22nd 2025 at 19:30 – 21:30
Baroque oboe, with its plaintive sound and expressive warmth, inspired countless composers. Olivier Stankiewicz and Lucy Crowe form the ideal partnership in sacred and secular arias by Bach and Handel, interlaced with irresistible concertos and Zelenka’s delightful Sonata No. 5.
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Orquesta Sinfónica de Madrid – Weber Bassoon Concerto
23/04/2025 7:30 pm
Auditorio Nacional de Música, Calle del Príncipe de Vergara, 146, Chamartín, 28002 Madrid, Spain
Orquesta Sinfónica de Madrid – Weber Bassoon Concerto
April 23rd 2025 at 19:30 – 21:30
A grand concert conducted by maestro Eun Sun Kim, featuring works by Prokofiev and Stravinsky, as well as Carl Maria von Weber’s concerto for bassoon and orchestra.
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Carl Nielsen Clarinet Concerto – Andrzej Ciepliński
25/04/2025 7:30 pm
National Philharmonic, Jasna 5, 00-950 Warszawa, Poland
Programme
Vaughan Williams – Toward the Unknown Region for mixed choir and orchestra
Nielsen – Clarinet Concerto, Op. 57
Mendelssohn-Bartholdy – Symphony No. 3 in A Minor ‘Scottish’, Op. 56
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra
Warsaw Philharmonic Choir
Anna Sułkowska-Migoń – conductor
Andrzej Ciepliński – clarinet
Bartosz Michałowski – choir director
The contemplative nature of much of Ralph Vaughan Williams’s work is said to stem from his love of poetry. After his teacher introduced him to the visionary work of Walt Whitman, the collection Leaves of Grass became the composer’s ‘constant companion’ and the inspiration for Toward the Unknown Region, a song for choir and orchestra first performed in Leeds in 1907. One critic at the time hailed Williams as the leading British composer of the new generation.
Futurist poetry, meanwhile, would suit the character of Carl Nielsen’s Clarinet Concerto. This work reveals the complex nature of the instrument, which, according to the composer, ‘can be at the same time warm-hearted and completely hysterical, as mild as balsam, and screaming like a tram-car on poorly-greased rails’. Having befriended the members of the Copenhagen Brass Quintet, he wished to compose a musical portrait for each of them, in the form of a solo concerto.
Perhaps it was the broad phrases of Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy’s symphonic writing that led observers to associate many of his works with the landscapes of the countries he visited. His Symphony No. 3 in A minor, for example, supposedly evokes the dense fog-shrouded mountain landscapes of Scotland, which the composer visited in 1829. Yet the composer himself did not refer to such inspirations after completing the long journey of several years to completing this work, which received its Scottish nickname from well-meaning listeners.
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