benhall.1 wrote:
There are quite a few tunes that go above high B - Sean sa Cheo in A, for instance - but I don't know any that go below low G, because that's the lowest note on fiddles. If I were you, I'd be inclined to play a tune, a time or two, down an octave.
Was coming here to say just this. I recommend finding a nice range-y flute tune in D with lowest note bottom D, play it through a time or two like normal, and then blow everyone's mind by playing the entire thing down an octave.
Vincent Broderick's The Tinker's Daughter or Midsummer's Night seem like they might be fine choices. (But I don't play banjo or five-string anything, so take those with a grain of salt.)