Twirling Whistles
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Twirling Whistles
Ok, I am a newbie but I have done the prerequisite search on the topic and found no matches so...
Does anyone have any directions/instructions on the proper method for whistle twirling?
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks,
Bill B.
Does anyone have any directions/instructions on the proper method for whistle twirling?
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks,
Bill B.
- chattiekathy
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Welllllllll...
You have to be able to count to 8 and smiling is very important and you must have eye contact with the judge and keep in step. You can do figure 8's and reverse figure 8's and... Oh..... you didn't say baton...
Sorry, I guess I am not help at all. :roll:
Can you be a little more specific? Are you talking whistle making or just having fun with us?
Cheers,
Kathy (Majorette in a past life)
Oh yeah, WELCOME
Edited for punctuation mixup
You have to be able to count to 8 and smiling is very important and you must have eye contact with the judge and keep in step. You can do figure 8's and reverse figure 8's and... Oh..... you didn't say baton...
Sorry, I guess I am not help at all. :roll:
Can you be a little more specific? Are you talking whistle making or just having fun with us?
Cheers,
Kathy (Majorette in a past life)
Oh yeah, WELCOME
Edited for punctuation mixup
~*~Creativity is God's gift to you. What you do with it is your gift to God~*~
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Thanks Kathy,
My post was only partially tongue-in-cheek.
I have noticed that when I am holding a whistle and not playing it (like when I am watching TV with the family) I have this urge to twirl it.
Is this normal? Do others get the urge? Can anyone really twirl a whistle between their fingers?
I have noticed that I can come closer to twirling my brass red-top Clare than say a Sweetone or Walton LBW. I am still trying to find "that perfect whistle".
BillBo
My post was only partially tongue-in-cheek.
I have noticed that when I am holding a whistle and not playing it (like when I am watching TV with the family) I have this urge to twirl it.
Is this normal? Do others get the urge? Can anyone really twirl a whistle between their fingers?
I have noticed that I can come closer to twirling my brass red-top Clare than say a Sweetone or Walton LBW. I am still trying to find "that perfect whistle".
BillBo
- chattiekathy
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- Location: South Central PA
Ha Ha Bill,
I would say if you had as much experience in twirling things as I have, you could do it. I sometimes twirl only my cheaper whistles because I don't want to damage the mouth piece on my more expensive whistles. If your really good you can twirl them between your fingers and then just toss them in the air and turn around and catch them. One warning though is... don't try to juggle 3 of them at once, it can knock out your teeth especially if you remember the always smile rule. I am talking from experience
Have fun twirling or playing your whistles!
Cheers,
Kathy
I would say if you had as much experience in twirling things as I have, you could do it. I sometimes twirl only my cheaper whistles because I don't want to damage the mouth piece on my more expensive whistles. If your really good you can twirl them between your fingers and then just toss them in the air and turn around and catch them. One warning though is... don't try to juggle 3 of them at once, it can knock out your teeth especially if you remember the always smile rule. I am talking from experience
Have fun twirling or playing your whistles!
Cheers,
Kathy
~*~Creativity is God's gift to you. What you do with it is your gift to God~*~
- herbivore12
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Well, hey. I happen to be an accomplished jugglers, so I do all sorts of strange things withwhistles (not *too* strange. . .). I juggle them, spin them, balance them on my nose or chin or forehead. . .and yes, twirl them.BillBo wrote:
I have noticed that when I am holding a whistle and not playing it (like when I am watching TV with the family) I have this urge to twirl it.
Is this normal? Do others get the urge? Can anyone really twirl a whistle between their fingers?
I twirl small-to-medium whistles in a sort of whistle equivalent of the "drummer's flourish", and large low whistles I toss about and twirl with a "club fourish", as in juggling. A Google search on those subjects would bring up descriptions on how to do them. Seriously.
But careful you don't get as enamored with juggling as I have. I toss the knives around, juggle my baby cousins, do tricks withthe dinner plates. . . It's driving my wife to the edge, watching inhorror as her pricey china spins through the air and lands safely back in my hands.
Twirl with care, Baggins.
--Aaron
- ErikT
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My low D Overton is particularly suited for twirling (sorry Colin ). Makes me feel like a ninja. Then I pretend that I'm shooting darts from it in the jungles of South America. Then there's the Babe Ruth (only skinnier) fantasy. And...
Named after Indiana Jones, I have WIPS - Whistle Imaginative Performance Syndrome.
Erik
Named after Indiana Jones, I have WIPS - Whistle Imaginative Performance Syndrome.
Erik
Last edited by ErikT on Wed Mar 12, 2003 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
- bdatki
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I play badminton, so naturally I have concocted many ways of spinning and twirling the raquet. I find that some of these techniques carry over to whistle, such as the twirling between the fingers (it is hard to describe the exact motion). Just don't try spinning the whistle with your palm. Trust me.
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- brewerpaul
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Hey Herbivore-- you need a Tabor pipe! You can play tunes with one hand and juggle 2 ( or 3 if you're able) with the other!
I'm a fair amateur juggler too-- I can do quite a few 3 ball tricks, little Devil Stick, little Cigar Box, etc. Never did much with clubs past a basic cascade. Terrific hobby-- highly recommended for anyone.
I'm a fair amateur juggler too-- I can do quite a few 3 ball tricks, little Devil Stick, little Cigar Box, etc. Never did much with clubs past a basic cascade. Terrific hobby-- highly recommended for anyone.
- herbivore12
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Good idea! I do have an overtone flute I can try this with. . . hmmmm....brewerpaul wrote:Hey Herbivore-- you need a Tabor pipe! You can play tunes with one hand and juggle 2 ( or 3 if you're able) with the other!
I get some mileage ouy of balancing a didgeridoo vertically on my lips while playing it. Several of my friends are professional jugglers, so parties at our house can be . . . interesting.
Whistling juglers unite! I'm sort of obsessive with my few hobbies (music, juggling, bonsai, kites, literature), so I like to find ways to incorporate them with each other, when possible.I'm a fair amateur juggler too-- I can do quite a few 3 ball tricks, little Devil Stick, little Cigar Box, etc. Never did much with clubs past a basic cascade. Terrific hobby-- highly recommended for anyone.
(I have a shaky 7-ball cascade, decent six fountain, strong enough five cascade to do some tricks and keep them in the air until I get tired, and even have one three-ball trick named after me, though it's not as popular as the Mills Mess or anything. And like you, I mess with other stuff, like devil stick, diabolo, boxes, rings, shaker cups, spinning plates, etc. Love passing clubs, though, so if you have other jugglers around, it's great fun.)
Links for the juggling-inclined:
www.juggle.org - The International Jugglers' Association
www.jugglingdb.com - The Internet Juggling Database
www.seriousjuggling.com - The finest web-based juggling store
It's fun; ike Paul, I think everyone should try it.
--Aaron
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Thanks Everyone!
At least now I know I am not alone.
I did do a search on "Drummers Flourish" and "Drumstick Visuals" and other than some fried chicken recipes, I found nothing on the internet.
Herbi, could you please describe what your fingers are doing in relation to the whistle when you are doing a flourish?
Thanks,
Bill Bowen
At least now I know I am not alone.
I did do a search on "Drummers Flourish" and "Drumstick Visuals" and other than some fried chicken recipes, I found nothing on the internet.
Herbi, could you please describe what your fingers are doing in relation to the whistle when you are doing a flourish?
Thanks,
Bill Bowen
- HDSarah
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another juggler here
I juggle too, though I haven't practiced it for years and was never very good. I rode a unicycle as a kid, and decided that I really ought to learn how to juggle, just because they seemed to go together. I discovered that I have good balance but poor coordination -- juggling was much harder for me to learn than unicycling. Of course, I started trying to learn while riding my unicycle up and down the hallway of my dorm freshman year at college, using oranges I smuggled up from the dining hall. Our hallway had a lovely scent of oranges for weeks. Then my dorm-neighbors got tired of the wanton waste of oranges and gave me some raquetballs. I finally learned to juggle when I got off the unicycle and used bean bags -- they don't run away when you drop them like round objects do.
Sarah
Sarah
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You're asking this group to comment on what's normal?BillBo wrote:Thanks Kathy,
I have this urge to twirl it. Is this normal?
BillBo
Personally, I gave up on normality years ago.
About drumsticks: I was a drummer in a former life and was known to twirl a drum stick now and again. The grip traditionally used for the left drumstick lends itself to twirling, it seems to me. I wouldn't know how to twirl a whistle, and wouldn't have the nerve if it was a whistle I cared about.