![poke :poke:](./images/smilies/icon_stick_buis.gif)
Keep 'em coming!
Piper Joe
Wow! Outstanding...I think I'm in love!csoroz wrote:Lucie Périer : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ndUoRscGBw
Yep, outstanding. The closest to sounding simple system I've heard. Similar to Seamus Egan's style.csoroz wrote:Lucie Périer : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ndUoRscGBw
Hmmm... her website, maybe. Seems to have a number of albums (7 ?) with different band configurations (nothing solo). I don't know if they are downloadable only or physical CDs: https://www.lucieperier.com/ecouterpiperjoe wrote:I can't seem to find Luci Perier's music anywhere to purchase/download. I checked her web site but no luck. Anyone know if she's "published"?![]()
Got it thanks...kkrell wrote:Also her Bandcamp page:
https://lucieperier.bandcamp.com/
which was linked from the "Boutique" button on her website. That may be the clearest way to purchase the albums. Ones I checked were digital downloads.
OK...if you say so!Mr.Gumby wrote:The Wet FishAnyone know its other name(s)?
Whooossh.OK...if you say so!
Found it under An Phis Fhliuch on The Session. Never new what that meant! Such an education I'm getting.Mr.Gumby wrote:Whooossh.OK...if you say so!
That was the macaronic version of the title.Probably more correctly 'the wet phis' when written .
An phis fliuch in Irish.
Or O'Farrell's welcome to Limerick, The choice wife, the virgin Mary. The boy in the bush would be in the same vein, I suppose.
Jem,jemtheflute wrote:Just for the craic: new Böhm alto flute video on my Facebook.
I'm still gradually familiarising myself with/getting the feel for this new-to-me beast, but I'm rather enjoying doing so. It's a challenge as it blows very differently to any other flute I have and it does require more air (and air supply discipline), so the air management is an issue in tunes where you have established habitual breathing patterns with phrases longer than you can sustain on the instrument in hand! On the other hand, the mechanism is surprisingly supportive of ITM style finger articulation.