I have just gotten around to buying the flute I was "told" a few months ago (by randomly getting a certain catalog in the mail not too long after having had that particular business mentioned to me by name by someone who could not have known my mailing address) I was supposed to actually really get around to getting, rather than just sitting about thinking "someday I would like to have a flute". I knew I wanted a lower-voiced instrument, but that I couldn't purchase one of the very lowest few keys (Bb below middle C - C#) because they were likely to be too large for my hands. I messed about with some Java pianos for a while trying to get a sense of what the various keys would sound like (for while I can read and play music, generally, I can't conjure up the tones in my head by hertz). Somewhere between D and F ("concert voice"), then. Unable to decide further I thought that pulling a rune might work well, since they can also be read just as letters, so I did that and got dagaz, or D, the meaning of which rune has other relevant positive meanings. Key of D it was, then. Filling out the order form, I see that with the postage, the total comes to $42.00. Hail Douglas! Also: name of flute seller = Woodsong Instruments, so more good stuff there.
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Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 06:20 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 06:59 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 09:54 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 06:19 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 09:10 pm (UTC)From:Songs in any other key can be transposed to D, with a bit of math & musical know-how: if you need me to show you how to do that I can. Do you read music?
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Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 09:18 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 09:28 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 04:42 pm (UTC)From:As for lower-voiced reeds or winds, I very recently stumbled across a guy selling armenian dudugs at a fleamarket in the vicinity. These are kind of like bagpipes or shelms (? skalmeja in swedish...) in tone generation, but with an insanely thick double reed - mine (a soprano) measures some 2mm each half-reed at the mouth, and goes out to some 1½-2cm thickness where it joins to the actual pipe. The pipe - with 8 finger holes, and about 20cm long - plays in tone like the lower registers of a Bb clarinet!
Just thought you might want to know... :)
no subject
Date: Feb. 23rd, 2006 06:14 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Feb. 24th, 2006 08:03 am (UTC)From:That said, the reeds are extremely sturdy and should last more or less forever; and the instrument plays very differently to more .. modern/mainstream reeded instruments. (I've gotten a tone out of a bassoon once, and played clarinet and saxophone quite a bit...)
The most impressive about it is the deepness of the tone though. From a short piece of wood the size of normal soprano pipes you get a full and deep clarinet tone. I probably shouldn't go into the larger dudugs he demonstrated *prrrrrrrrr*