| OBOESDAMORE | Double reed woodwind instruments, the mezzo-soprano members of their family |
| DOYENS | My son and daughter, who both live in the centre of Spreyton, have become very respected members of their community (6) |
| TORODE | John, Australian-British celebrity chef whose cookbooks include The Mezzo Cookbook and My Kind Of Food (6) |
| DISTINCT | They have a ___ sound that only their family makes. They will ignore all other sounds made by other jackals not part of their family. |
| CORANGLAIS | Woodwind instrument, the alto of the oboe family (3,7) |
| BASSOON | Woodwind instrument, the tenor of the oboe family (7) |
| OBOISTS | They play double-reed woodwind instruments (7) |
| OBOES | Double-reed woodwind instruments |
| OBOE | Any one of the 24 double-reed woodwind instruments used to perform the suite described in 53 Across (4) |
| SHAWM | Double-reed woodwind instrument of the medieval and Renaissance period; a forerunner of the oboe (5) |
| DULCIAN | Double-reed woodwind instrument of the Renaissance period from which the modern bassoon evolved (7) |
| ENGLISHHORN | A double-reed woodwind instrument in the oboe family (7,4) |
| OBOEDAMORE | Double reed woodwind instrument used during the baroque era (4,6) |
| VIOLIN | Also called a fiddle, this is bowed instrument that evolved during the Renaissance from earlier bowed instruments: the medieval fiddle, the lira da braccio, and the rebec. (6) |
| OBOED | Played a double-reed woodwind instrument say |
| BELLS | Quasimodo was made deaf by the volume of these Notre Dame instruments, the ... |
| CLARIONETS | Archaic name for single-reed woodwind instruments |
| FIR | Any one of the conifers in the genus Abies that share their family with cedars, larches and pines (3) |
| TROMBONES | Brass instruments, the tubes of which are varied in length by means of a U-shaped slide (9) |
| ADOPTED | Dad and the poet have taken the child into their family (7) |