wooden flute tuning
- gian-marco
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wooden flute tuning
many flute makers, for mysterious reasons, seem to reject the idea to make a flute that is perfectly in tune (sorry for my poor English, I hope it's understandable). So we often find those flat bottom D, or/and flat F sharp, or/and sharp A and B.
Does somebody knows a flute maker that is capable (or disposed ) to make e flute that is well in tune?
Does somebody knows a flute maker that is capable (or disposed ) to make e flute that is well in tune?
Re: wooden flute tuning
I'm currently trying out various prototypes of flute by a maker who hasn't started to produce them commercially yet, and apart from the ever so problematic C-nat, it seems very well in tune for me, and I'm a newbie to the flute. I guess I'll have to check it with the Flutini, but it seems quite all right with me, better than some of the very expensive flutes by top makers, tuning-wise.
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- Feadoggie
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Re: wooden flute tuning
I would respectfully disagree. Have a go at making one yourself and see what you come up with.gian-marco wrote:many flute makers, for mysterious reasons, seem to reject the idea to make a flute that is perfectly in tune
Feadoggie
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- gian-marco
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Flute making is not my profession.Feadoggie wrote:I would respectfully disagree. Have a go at making one yourself and see what you come up with.gian-marco wrote:many flute makers, for mysterious reasons, seem to reject the idea to make a flute that is perfectly in tune
Feadoggie
Last edited by gian-marco on Sun Jan 08, 2012 2:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Feadoggie
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Good for you. I've played many flutes over my lifetime and most were well in tune. I do not think that makers, modern or not, reject the idea of making a well tuned flute.gian-marco wrote:Anyway the flutes I made with a pair of scissors and a plastic pipe are fairly well in tune
Inexperienced players sometimes find that flutes which they suspect are poorly tuned become suddenly better tuned after they have learned to play.
Feadoggie
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- Jon C.
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Yes, I think Terry McGee does this... But the term "perfectly in tune", is kind of a misnomer, a lot depends on the player. Some makers like myself, like to have the foot kind of flat, so it can be blown into tune.gian-marco wrote:many flute makers, for mysterious reasons, seem to reject the idea to make a flute that is perfectly in tune (sorry for my poor English, I hope it's understandable). So we often find those flat bottom D, or/and flat F sharp, or/and sharp A and B.
Does somebody knows a flute maker that is capable (or disposed ) to make e flute that is well in tune?
"I love the flute because it's the one instrument in the world where you can feel your own breath. I can feel my breath with my fingers. It's as if I'm speaking from my soul..."
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Jon
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- gian-marco
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Inexperienced players sometimes find that flutes which they suspect are poorly tuned become suddenly better tuned after they have learned to play.
Feadoggie[/quote]
Actually, I have played the flute for 35 years only.
Feadoggie[/quote]
Actually, I have played the flute for 35 years only.
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Re: wooden flute tuning
They all do. But what you have to understand is that the tuning depends on how they are blown. Let's consider a couple of well known good flute makers both of whom frequent this board. When Hammy plays one of his own flutes the tuning is excellent. And the same for Terry; when he plays one of his own flutes the tuning is excellent. But if Terry plays one of Hammy's flutes the tuning is not good. Terry and I have verified this with RTTA.gian-marco wrote: Does somebody knows a flute maker that is capable (or disposed ) to make e flute that is well in tune?
Find a flute by a maker who blows the same way you do and the tuning will be good. But don't go assuming that there's something wrong with a flute just because you can't play it in tune.
Cheers
Graeme
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Re: wooden flute tuning
gian-marco: Feadoggie is trying to tell you that your premise may be fundamentally incorrect. The number of years you have personally played the flute has nothing to do with it.gian-marco wrote:Actually, I have played the flute for 35 years only.Feadoggie wrote:Inexperienced players sometimes find that flutes which they suspect are poorly tuned become suddenly better tuned after they have learned to play.
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- gian-marco
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Yes i know. ( Indeed i can't understand in wich way is determined the pitch of the old original baroque flutes, i think that the pitch of such a flute without tuning slide depends by the player..)groxburgh wrote:They all do. But what you have to understand is that the tuning depends on how they are blown. Let's consider a couple of well known good flute makers both of whom frequent this board. When Hammy plays one of his own flutes the tuning is excellent. And the same for Terry; when he plays one of his own flutes the tuning is excellent. But if Terry plays one of Hammy's flutes the tuning is not good. Terry and I have verified this with RTTA.gian-marco wrote: Does somebody knows a flute maker that is capable (or disposed ) to make e flute that is well in tune?
Find a flute by a maker who blows the same way you do and the tuning will be good. But don't go assuming that there's something wrong with a flute just because you can't play it in tune.
Cheers
Graeme
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Gian Marco "Pantera" Pietrasanta, a musical friend of mine, is the fluteplayer in the celtic group Myrddin in Genova, Italy. He is the composer of the well-know tune, "The Cat in the Fiddle Case".
http://www.myrddin.it/
http://www.myrddin.it/
- gian-marco
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Hello Doug, nice to hear from you! A few days ago I was just thinking to order one of your D flutes.Doug_Tipple wrote:Gian Marco "Pantera" Pietrasanta, a musical friend of mine, is the fluteplayer in the celtic group Myrddin in Genova, Italy. He is the composer of the well-know tune, "The Cat in the Fiddle Case".
http://www.myrddin.it/
- Unseen122
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Re: wooden flute tuning
FWIW it also depends on a particular player's perception of what is in tune. Standardized pitch is a relatively recent development; not everybody is going to perceive that as being in tune or out of tune. In the case of flutes from what I have heard and read making a flute that is perfectly in tune with equal temperament is very difficult or impossible to do, this isn't my area of expertise so I could be wrong. From what I understand even on the best flutes there will be compromises that have to be made, in the case of C-natural using the OXXOOO fingering on most flutes is slightly sharp but if a maker were to try to flatten that note it would throw the C# off as well as the OXXXXX high d fingering. That is why flutes have some compromise in this aspect a slightly flat C# and slightly sharp OXXOOO C-natural fingering. The old flutes were meant to have the C key vented when playing the C#; I find on my J. Gallagher flute that the high C# benefits from this but the mid C# (it is an 8 key so I have low C# too) doesn't really need it.
Personally I think it is up to the player to play in tune as a flute in tune for one person may not be in tune for another which is what I think groxburgh is getting at; 'perfect' tuning is up to the player. A maker can only get a flute so close to whatever 'perfect' tuning may be in their opinion.
Also worth noting is that in the natural scale/just temperament the fifth is sharper than in equal temperament and the major third is slightly flatter than equal temperament. This could explain the sharp As and flat F#s on the older flutes.
Personally I think it is up to the player to play in tune as a flute in tune for one person may not be in tune for another which is what I think groxburgh is getting at; 'perfect' tuning is up to the player. A maker can only get a flute so close to whatever 'perfect' tuning may be in their opinion.
Also worth noting is that in the natural scale/just temperament the fifth is sharper than in equal temperament and the major third is slightly flatter than equal temperament. This could explain the sharp As and flat F#s on the older flutes.
- Casey Burns
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Re: wooden flute tuning
It would be interesting to know what is meant by "perfectly in tune". Are you referring to the overall pitch level of the flute vs. the relative tuning between notes? Are you referring to how the flute sounds to your ear, or how it looks to a tuner? To which kind of tuner (as not all are created equally)?
One thing that many players don't realize is that minor tuning issues are adjustable on any simple system flute.The safest (and reversible) approach is to flatten notes - thus if one note plays flat relative to everything else, flatten everything else. This is simply done by filling in the holes some with a little bit of beeswax or resin. Uilleann pipers do this all the time, though usually the preferred substance for them is black electrical tape. If the bottom D is flat relative to the rest of the scale, you can fill in all the holes to some extent. If any note plays sharp, however, you can flatten it to your preference by filling it in.
I wonder how many of the old flutes with the flat bottom D problem were at some point "adjusted" for more volume by making the fingerholes larger (or adjusted for a higher pitch as things went from A435 to A440). I've actually had one client attempt to get more volume out of his low flute by making the fingerholes larger. He ruined a number of pieces of wood!
As to modern makers such as myself - I have a standard that is based more on how the flute plays to my ear, to my embouchure, with using a Korg tuner as guidance only. For most players this works but occasionally minor tuning issues arise and then I am usually happy to adjust these.
Casey
One thing that many players don't realize is that minor tuning issues are adjustable on any simple system flute.The safest (and reversible) approach is to flatten notes - thus if one note plays flat relative to everything else, flatten everything else. This is simply done by filling in the holes some with a little bit of beeswax or resin. Uilleann pipers do this all the time, though usually the preferred substance for them is black electrical tape. If the bottom D is flat relative to the rest of the scale, you can fill in all the holes to some extent. If any note plays sharp, however, you can flatten it to your preference by filling it in.
I wonder how many of the old flutes with the flat bottom D problem were at some point "adjusted" for more volume by making the fingerholes larger (or adjusted for a higher pitch as things went from A435 to A440). I've actually had one client attempt to get more volume out of his low flute by making the fingerholes larger. He ruined a number of pieces of wood!
As to modern makers such as myself - I have a standard that is based more on how the flute plays to my ear, to my embouchure, with using a Korg tuner as guidance only. For most players this works but occasionally minor tuning issues arise and then I am usually happy to adjust these.
Casey
- chas
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Re: wooden flute tuning
Chris Norman once said to me something to the effect, Don't blame the flutemaker for your inability to play it in tune. That was an Olwell, and I was going to respond to the OP that Olwell's flutes are perfectly in tune. What a difference a few years, a lot of work, and sticking with one flute make.Unseen122 wrote:
Personally I think it is up to the player to play in tune as a flute in tune for one person may not be in tune for another which is what I think groxburgh is getting at; 'perfect' tuning is up to the player.
Charlie
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