warming up

The Chiff & Fipple Irish Flute on-line community. Sideblown for your protection.
User avatar
Jennie
Posts: 761
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 7:02 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Valdez, Alaska

warming up

Post by Jennie »

I'm finding that I can't just pull out my flute and immediately play my best. Do any of you have any warmup routines or hints that help you get good tone and breath control?

Also, in terms of moving my fingers, I'm wondering if actual body temperature is a factor. In a room that's below 60 degrees F. (as my house often is), my hands don't seem to want to move very gracefully or quickly. Does anyone else find that poor circulation to their hands is a factor in playing? I'm considering fingerless gloves.

Whistle was easier.

Jennie
User avatar
Whistlin'Dixie
Posts: 2281
Joined: Sun Mar 31, 2002 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: It's too darn hot!

Re: warming up

Post by Whistlin'Dixie »

[quote="Jennie"] In a room that's below 60 degrees F. (as my house often is),

Your house stays that cold?!?!?
User avatar
Jennie
Posts: 761
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 7:02 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Valdez, Alaska

Post by Jennie »

Well, yes. Mornings especially. It warms up during the day some. But when I have the time to play I hate to have to go to the woodpile and spend all that time starting a fire. I'd rather just play.

Soon the snow will be all melted and it won't be such an issue. But I still get stiff, cold fingers outdoors, even in summer.

Don't tell me to move south. I _like_ it here.

Jennie
User avatar
Henke
Posts: 2193
Joined: Wed Feb 26, 2003 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Location: Sweden

Post by Henke »

Try to blow very long tones to get your embouchure and breath control going. Pick notes both in the first and second octave and make random jumps over quite big intervalls.
Fingers do tend to move very slowly if they are cold. I had a gig at an outdoor stage just a few days ago, it couldn't have been much more that 50F outside cause it was late in the evening. Ornamentation was really hard to do well the first couple of tunes but it got going as my fingers warmed up, the stage was pretty hot as usual luckily.
User avatar
Danner
Posts: 185
Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 9:20 am
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Boston or Chicago

Post by Danner »

It's really bad when you have to play on a metal Boehm piccolo in marching band in a cold drizzle for a few hours. I've found that it helps me, especially when my fingers are really cold, to stretch them. It sounds stupid, but I think that it works. Also, I find that if you put lots of air into the flute (not necessarily playing loud, just filling it up really well) warms it up faster.
"'Tis deeds, not blood, which determine the worth of a being." -Dennis L. McKiernan
User avatar
Jennie
Posts: 761
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 7:02 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Valdez, Alaska

Post by Jennie »

Danner wrote:It's really bad when you have to play on a metal Boehm piccolo in marching band in a cold drizzle for a few hours.
Which is why I played tuba instead of clarinet when I had to be in a marching band. With a loose, stretchy knit, you can play tuba with mittens on!

I think most of the warming up process is more necessary for me than for my instrument at this point. Though the condensation in the flute seems to build up less when it's warm.

Henke, the long tones and the octave jumps were both recommended to me by a classical flutist. And I do like etudes, so I'll try to incorporate both of those exercises into a warmup routine.

Probably more women players are troubled by cold hands than men. Am I right?

Jennie
User avatar
monkey587
Posts: 940
Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2005 11:56 am
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Location: Tulsa, OK

Post by monkey587 »

Jennie wrote: Probably more women players are troubled by cold hands than men. Am I right?

Jennie
I have terrible trouble with cold hands. It's my last residual symptom of nervousness... Even if I FEEL fine when performing, my hands will suddenly get cold and stuff minutes before the performance and there's not much I can do other than wait for it to go away.
William Bajzek
User avatar
MurphyStout
Posts: 737
Joined: Wed Apr 10, 2002 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: San Francisco

Post by MurphyStout »

No, I don't have a problem pulling out the flute and playing. In fact sometimes the flute sounds the best when I first pull it out. It's always exciting to take out the flute and see what it will sound like.
No I'm not returning...
User avatar
Whistlin'Dixie
Posts: 2281
Joined: Sun Mar 31, 2002 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: It's too darn hot!

Post by Whistlin'Dixie »

Jennie wrote:Well, yes. Mornings especially. It warms up during the day some. But when I have the time to play I hate to have to go to the woodpile and spend all that time starting a fire. I'd rather just play.

Soon the snow will be all melted and it won't be such an issue. But I still get stiff, cold fingers outdoors, even in summer.

Don't tell me to move south. I _like_ it here.

Jennie
No, I won't tell you to move! :party:
Most folks don't like our heat & humidity, but I am odd, b/c I do!

I am sure this is a no-brainer, so I hesitate to even bring it up, but just run your hands under hot water right before you play. Let them get all nice and limber. I think that would really help.

Mary
jim stone
Posts: 17193
Joined: Sat Jun 30, 2001 6:00 pm

Post by jim stone »

Scales are helpful, simple things, fundamentals,
and probably should be part of every practice
session, anyway. Arpeggios. Also methodically practicing rolls and crans,
up and down the octaves. Practicing slides too.

I play a lot in cold weather--the problem isn't you
but cold. I've used fingerless gloves with whistle,
but it's harder with flute because the flute slides
on the wool. Maybe leather would work better.
But I think scales, rolls, crans, slides, a few minutes
at the beginning would help.
User avatar
Jennie
Posts: 761
Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 7:02 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Valdez, Alaska

Post by Jennie »

Thanks Jim, thanks Mary. Now that school's out, I'm finding some practice time, which is also helping a lot! And I have started by warming my hands some on a hot water bottle or a hot mug of tea. Maybe I should just go for a run first and get the blood pumping! Or go chop a huge supply of kindling just for those rainy day or early morning practice times.

I hadn't thought about the slippage issue with fingerless gloves. Hmmm, maybe it's time to knit a set of those Goth-looking wrist warmers, the ones with a thong at the thumb. I'll let you know if I develop a pattern that works.

Just took out a book of classical flute etudes, and I think I'll use some of those for warmup too. But I think you're right, Jim, though the exercises will help it's a physical thing with the cold. And when I'm cold I tense up, which helps nothing.

Jennie
User avatar
fyffer
Posts: 1032
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 11:27 am
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Rhode Island, USA
Contact:

Post by fyffer »

On the topic of fingerless gloves ...
I have a pair that I doctored in order to play my fife in those chilly late fall/early spring parades. The slippage-on-wool issue only rears its ugly head at the first joint of the left index finger (if you hold your flute/fife that way, as I do). I got around it by cutting another hole in the glove.

I doctored a photo I googled to show you (The black is where I cut a hole):

Image

Works for me.
___\|/______________________________
|___O____|_O_O_o_|_o_O__O__|_O__O__|
User avatar
Lambchop
Posts: 5768
Joined: Wed Jul 07, 2004 10:10 pm
antispam: No
Location: Florida

Post by Lambchop »

8)
Last edited by Lambchop on Sat Jun 11, 2005 9:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
bradhurley
Posts: 2330
Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Montreal
Contact:

Post by bradhurley »

The handeze gloves are good; often recommended for people with repetitive strain injuries.

Speaking of which, playing with cold hands might set you up for injury...you're trying to make your fingers do a lot of work in a situation in which they're somewhat starved of blood. Doing exercises to warm yourself up is a good idea, even just swinging your arms around for a while to get the blood flowing into your hands, or taking a hot shower, is a good idea.

Also, as others have mentioned above, you'll find that the flute itself will change in subtle (or not so subtle) ways after it's warmed up...my flute sounds quite different after 20 minutes of playing than it does when I first pull it out of the case.
User avatar
BillChin
Posts: 1700
Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2003 11:24 am
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Light on the ocean
Contact:

Post by BillChin »

I use bicycling gloves. They are designed to grip so slippage isn't a problem, though they are not the warmest. A harp player I know found a pair of wool blend gloves with the fingers cut off plus a mitten like cap for traveling to the venue.

Warming up the whistle with body heat before playing also makes for a different experience. At a minimum some kind of light stretching is a good idea before playing in cold (cold being relative). Rolling and squeezing a tennis ball is an inexpensive option, though these days are any number of hand exercisers.
Post Reply