@JANDAR69: thanks for your comment. There is information about my flute if you read the notes on the video! It is a mid C19th English Concert Flute of the kind now most commonly used for traditional Irish music. In orchestral terminology it would be described as being "in C" because it is not a transposing instrument, but like all pre-Bohm design concert flutes, its "home", plain major diatonic fingers-off-in-order scale is D.
Thanks for the view and the comment, pashaone. One plays what one has: my R&R is my "best" flute. I don't own a Pratten. (I recently sold a Seery keyless Pratten derived - honked great, but not my kind of flute - I like and need keys.) If I get a chance to acquire a Pratten (original or good modern fully keyed copy) I surely will, and would enjoy it and maybe shift some of my playing to it, but it isn't a priority for me or something I'm waiting for in dissatisfaction with what I have.
cont. FWIW, I'd rather improve my technique and get a better sound out of my R&R, which I do manage occasionally (spend too much time doing other stuff and not working at my fluting!): you should hear it when Chris Wilkes or someone with a really good ITM embouchure plays it! Any deficiencies of tone production are mine, not the flute's! Anyway, playing a Macedonian tune on a C19th English instrument doesn't get any points for "authenticity"! (And I don't have/play a kaval either, alas.)
MAN WHAT KIND OF FLUET IS THIS ??
IT MAY SUITE OsogovKA ON A HIGHER KEY FLUET
MY KAVAL IS IN " C "
I HOPE IT IS AS I MADE IT
JANDAR69 1 year ago
@JANDAR69: thanks for your comment. There is information about my flute if you read the notes on the video! It is a mid C19th English Concert Flute of the kind now most commonly used for traditional Irish music. In orchestral terminology it would be described as being "in C" because it is not a transposing instrument, but like all pre-Bohm design concert flutes, its "home", plain major diatonic fingers-off-in-order scale is D.
Jemtheflute 1 year ago
Great! I am from Serbia,near Macedonia.
saledallape 2 years ago 2
Nice job! I enjoy your music, you have very nice technique. Please post more videos when you get the chance!
gajda1984 2 years ago 2
in my opinion a pratten would be better for dat kind of playing ? dont u think ?
pashaone 3 years ago
Thanks for the view and the comment, pashaone. One plays what one has: my R&R is my "best" flute. I don't own a Pratten. (I recently sold a Seery keyless Pratten derived - honked great, but not my kind of flute - I like and need keys.) If I get a chance to acquire a Pratten (original or good modern fully keyed copy) I surely will, and would enjoy it and maybe shift some of my playing to it, but it isn't a priority for me or something I'm waiting for in dissatisfaction with what I have.
Jemtheflute 3 years ago
cont. FWIW, I'd rather improve my technique and get a better sound out of my R&R, which I do manage occasionally (spend too much time doing other stuff and not working at my fluting!): you should hear it when Chris Wilkes or someone with a really good ITM embouchure plays it! Any deficiencies of tone production are mine, not the flute's! Anyway, playing a Macedonian tune on a C19th English instrument doesn't get any points for "authenticity"! (And I don't have/play a kaval either, alas.)
Jemtheflute 3 years ago
Nice stuff!!
Tirn0 3 years ago
very nice!
macedonia 3 years ago