Paid a visit to Hans and his whistles yesterday with orders for a low E and Eb in mind, but spent some considerable time trying and discussing just about everything he had available alongside a Burke Session high D in brass and Viper low D he also owns. So here are some (mostly very favourable) impressions, and I hope none of what I’m going to say is news to Hans because there’s nothing I didn’t say while I was there…
Have to say that every whistle I tried was nicely made and all of them (from his narrowest to widest bore variants) produced the good two octave scale (NB some go much higher) first go that’s quite simply got to be there if the whistle’s going to interest me. But the ones that really caught my fancy were his ‘standard bore’ models (think Hans has chosen his standards for good reasons!), which I’d describe as medium volume with a sweetly focused tone and exceptionally smooth slurred octave transitions… by which I mean that they blow instantly and easily up or down the octave (without any intermediate ‘growls’, lurching breath pressure changes etc.) on demand and never by accident. With all this matched by generally excellent tuning and just the right level of resistance to sustain long phrases under tight breath control, I thought some of them (especially the high C and Eb, when he didn’t have a standard bore D to hand) amongst the nicest whistles I’ve tried and genuinely preferred the best to his Burke Session D.
That said, I didn’t like the two low Ds and one low C I tried quite so much, with just a hint of middle octave note I’d want cleaned out colouring the top (of the second octave) B, C# and D on the low Ds and the low C also (through no fault of its maker!) putting my digitally-challenged left hand under unnecessary strain. So here I thought the Burke Viper had the clear advantage (in fact being so stunned by it I told Hans I’d be ordering one if he made those!) and was left pondering my low Eb (which I wasn’t able to try, but Hans normally makes on his ‘low D’ bore).
Regarding (nominal) C fingerings, thumb hole options etc., my preferred OXXOOO and OXOXXX were never sharp on anything I tried but (perhaps surprisingly) tending slightly to flatness on a couple of instruments that Hans might even now be tweaking. The thumb hole Cs (where available) were always bang on, though I found myself preferring their feel on the larger instruments to the small, where I felt myself having to make more of a conscious effort to keep them covered and maybe needed a little more time to consider their effect on my natural hand position. Tuning was otherwise (as stated above) generally excellent, with the best and/or sweetest (nominal) two-octave D occasionally varying between OXXOOO, OXXXXX or partially-vented versions of the same, but absolutely no trickery required anywhere else and very manageable half-holing for all kinds of accidentals.
So what am I actually going to order after all that? Well, a low E for sure… on the 20mm tube (same as the low F) Hans now seems to be regarding as standard for that pitch, with his offset L3 (which fell completely naturally under my ‘non-standard’ hand) but inline R3 (which I preferred for RH piper’s grip) and thumb hole (which I liked in that size of instrument). It’s a lovely whistle, and I have no qualms at all about commissioning that. As for the low Eb, I’m not quite sure because I’m really not wanting to commit to the bigger bore without testing, but Hans is talking about experimenting with the same 20mm bore (getting ‘narrow’ for the Eb) and I’m interested in trying that because I don’t exactly need a low Eb ‘cannon’ now I’ve got my deliciously vibrant Copley Eb flute. As for some of those lovely standard bore high whistles, while I’d have taken them home if I could, I’m resisting ordering what I don’t really need till we’ve at least resolved the low Eb issue one way or the other (ie buying or not), but would recommend them wholeheartedly to anyone looking for nice, handmade instruments that look good, feel good, sound good and do what they’re told!