So I was wondering if anyone could help me. I am working on using my ear to help me figure out tunes. The tune I am working on is the intro melody in the song Whistles the Wind by Flogging Molly.
so far i have the following and I am not sure If I am close or not.
It’s in the key of C. So if you have a C whistle, use that and pretend you’re playing in the key of D. It’s also playable in the key of C on a D whistle, if you half-hole the F-natural note. Good luck!
And if you’re still stuck after trying that, check back …
Yes, that is the song. I knew it was in the Key of C. what I was trying to play is the part before he starts singing. So, I think I understood your hint. am I on the right track with dg bag?
One Note are you sure those ABC Notes are correct I think they may be backwards. meaning the notes for the D Whistle are under the Heading C Whistle and Vice Versa.
You’re probably trying to play them using the controversial Australian Position, which may cause the notes to be backwards, or even upside-down:
Try using the less controversial Pennsylvanian Position, and that should straighten things out.
Seriously … the transcription is fine, but the C whistle part is transposed. If you don’t understand the concept of transposition and transposing instruments, don’t worry. Just grab a C whistle, pretend that it’s a D whistle, and play the fingered notes as written. The resulting pitches will match the recording.
Again Thanks. Yea, I am playing it on a C Whistle Starting in the first octave on G the rest i am playing in the 2nd octave and I figured out that end part from the sheet music. so what I am actually playing is g C EDC FGAG FGAGECD. Sounds perfect. I really hope to one day have an ear like you. It amazes me right now how you do that.
i have a special scientifically calculated position brace to play northern concert pitch - it’s something like 215.98 degrees, and reversable for the infidel to play in the proper revised Australian concert median pitch like the rest of true southern-certified musicians .
Obviously the guru was confused with the Antarctic musicians’ new era penguin-players association standard pitchmal-posture calisthenic. Not recomended for non-penguins.
(Edited to say - that is the standard adopted by Southern Right Whales - and who ever heard of a southern WRONG whale? (QED) … BTW There is a Japanse conspiracy to eat all of them in the name of science - I borrow their justification for this post )
(Edited again to say - hmmm I never really learned how to spell “wale” - I live in a state called New South Whales .. or is it “wales” - i don’t know - I never saw any significance in it … I must go down to the sea again …)
I do find that if I lean at an angle of (90 - 32.6) = 57.4 degrees from the vertical in the direction of true north while playing the whistle here in San Diego, the notes come out straighter.
My goal is to someday move to Ecuador or Borneo, so I can always play the whistle flat on my back in bed, and have a good scientific excuse.
Wanted to thank you again, and show you this knowledge is not going to waste… here is the Whistles The Wind Intro. I would normally play it on a C Whistle in C, but I only had a D whistle so I played it in D.