What's in your Toybox?

A place for players of other folk/world music wind instruments.
User avatar
Chiffed
Posts: 1298
Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 1:15 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Pender Island, B.C.

What's in your Toybox?

Post by Chiffed »

So, what's hanging around the house? It's brag time for those of us who dabble (or really master) wind instruments in the 'other' category.

Pics are nice, too.

I'll get the ball rolling:

Recorders: Yamaha sopranino, pearwood soprano, Yamaha tenor

Bansi: 1 nice one in F (bell note)

Chalmeau: Homemade, but with an Otto Link mouthpiece

Ocarinas: 1 decent soprano, 1 that was dug up in Columbia (still works)

Xiao, 3, 2 of which are modified fingering

Macedonian whistle, pearwood, in D, no beak. What are these called? Gottit: Duduce.

Quena, homemade, but quite playable

Shak, Ta Hei student 1.8 cast bore, D bell note. I won this in a bet: Pat said I could have it if I could play God Save the Queen inside of 5 minutes of first trying it. He shoulda known: I can play anything badly! Edit: I just looked up the price on these. Ouch!!!

Can't think of anything else right now; I had to give back the tarogato I was borrowing, and the sheng is sold. I've got a bucket of 'tourist class' tooters, but those don't really count.

Pics to follow, when I can collect the herd together.

Who's next?
Last edited by Chiffed on Sun Feb 11, 2007 10:16 am, edited 3 times in total.
Happily tooting when my dogs let me.
User avatar
CountryKitty
Posts: 240
Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2005 1:04 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Western Kentucky

Post by CountryKitty »

:oops: (Siiiiiiigh)

My WhOA took a weird twist in that I gathered mostly folk winds as functional folk art along with a couple pennywhistles--but due to budget constraints (We're living on one income with me as a full time student + with 2 teens at home...+ I'm naturally stingy--love a bargain!) I just couldn't justify the expense of high quality instruments while still in the learning stage. So almost all of mine are 'tourist crap' gathered at bargain prices, tho' I find them quite enjoyable to dabble with and—albeit quite slowly--learn on.

European:
1 carved wooden Zholomiga (twin pipes with 3 holes/4holes), C/C, {eBay, $10}
1 carved wooden Kosa Duduk (single pipe 6-hole version of the above), C, {eBay, $5}
1 Dvoyanka, C/D (drone), {eBay, $2}
1 plastic Yama-dog recorder, C, {inherited from daughter after 6th grade}
1 plastic Conn Song Flute, C, {garage sale, $0.50}
1 wooden mini recorder, E {gift from Mom}
1 ceramic Langely style Pendant ocarina, Low D, {Lark in the Morning, $15}

Polynesian:
1 bamboo hawaiian nose flute, C {eBay, for all of a penny!}
2 carved wooden sulings from Bali (one in the shape of a dragon), C {new from eBay, $25 for the pair}

South American :
1 bamboo quena, C {eBay, came with a roncadora, $2.50 for the pair}
1 bamboo roncadora (One 6-hole + a thumbhole, with a half-drone attached), C/high F
1 ceramic turtle ocarina, C {from an antique shop for $1, startled/delighted the grandmother behind the desk when I tooted it; retuned to English style with a rat-tail file}
1 unique ceramic Chilean double ocarina—a 6-hole frog in D over high D (highest note of my D Clark) on the back of a finless fish(?) with 6 fingerholes and 2 thumbholes in D {eBay, $1.26}

North American:
1 cedar 5-hole Native American Flute, G, {eBay, $5}


Next?
User avatar
O_Gaiteiro_do_Chicago
Posts: 549
Joined: Sat May 27, 2006 11:59 am
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 10
Location: Somewhere between crap and mediocre.
Contact:

Post by O_Gaiteiro_do_Chicago »

Great to see this forum, glad to know world flutes are making a presence. My arsenal is pretty sad in that all I seem to spend my money on is flutes, at the moment I have...

75 or so various bansuri
1 Jeonak Daegum
1 Sanjo Daegum
1 Sogum
1 Tanso
2 1.8 Shaks, both from the 30's
20 Ney
14 NAF, most made by yours truly
60+ Quena, most made by me
50ish Zampona, most made by me again
1 1830's boxwood Irish flute(Awaiting a casey burns, and caride)
1 Bulgarian Kaval

At the moment, I am debating getting a 2.8 or larger shak, and another sanjo daegum, the later would probably see more use. If anyone is interested I have a profile up at http://www.myspace.com/naadbrahma Recently my ICM focus has been on rudra veena more than bansuri, so my main flute at the moment is daegum, but my most gigged flute is quena as I play in a few Latin American folk music groups. I think the most frusterating thing with having these flutes is taking care of them in the winter. I found the best method is sticking all the flute in a sealed closest with a humidifier....works quite well, never had a flute crack yet since I have tried this method.
User avatar
cadancer
Posts: 218
Joined: Sat Apr 07, 2007 9:31 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Pasadena, California

Post by cadancer »

I play Bulgarian kaval primarily. It is an "end-blown" flute. I have kavals in Re, Do, and La (D, C, A). The A is quite a challenge to play, especially the "kaba" sound (low and middle registers combined -- nice). The "D" is the "standard".

I also have a couple of tin whistles and a Ralph Sweet "D" simple-system flute. I am just beginning to play some Irish music.

...john
User avatar
ceadach
Posts: 207
Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 5:03 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Tell us something.: I am not spammer, I am a human being!! More power to those that foil them!!! The brown fox jumped over the red fence, for what reason, we can not tell you...
Location: St. Paul, MN USA
Contact:

Post by ceadach »

Man, and get crap for having six harps!!!
Although flutes are usually easier to conceal! Setting the chordphones aside, and looking in various bins and cases for a moment I see:

6 bansuri ( my good Whitter died after many galant adventures...)
Many whistles of all sizes and keys including one in the glove box of my car.
A cool "pungi" like reed pipe made by a local Hmong musician.
A set of uilleann pipes (cobbled together, but they sound nice)
Two Irish flutes, an 1830(?) four key that needs yet more work and a Delrin M&E 6 key that is a really delight.
A shenai, probably the "Benares tourist" model
A GHB practice chanter, circa 1900.
An old abused Klarino (Greek Clarinet) in C (?), formerly my grandpa's.
A bad Arabic folk ney that really annoys my dog.
A PVC ney
A SSAT set of Yamaha Recorders

Yep...my wife is right. I have a problem.
"Kindness is a mark of faith, and whoever has not kindness has not faith."
Muhammad

"Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different."
T.S. Eliot
User avatar
Whistling Archer
Posts: 374
Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2007 3:27 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Houston Tx

Post by Whistling Archer »

My list is sad next to some of you guys.
Quite a few NAF flutes I have made wood , bamboo & rivercane
A copy of a Eric flute with a tuning that sounds like middle eastern scale{my wife actually made this one, he first and last build}
Shak from rivercane
Bamboo whistles & recorders made by myself
A old china made kids flute from about 1968- only 3 holes but plays good{ I recently found it in my Moms attic.
A Slovak dual flute from e-bay that hardly makes sound
clay ocarinas I make in pentatonic tuning,couple of major swetpotatoes I made
minor scale G from Eric
Susato low d
freman tweaked Shaw d
3or 4 self tweaked orig. clarkes
B flat susato whistle
Gill alto Recordr{ first thing my wife bought me}
Feadod D ,, I stickytacked
Mid east cane G-- surprisingly good
Self mad bamboo transverse flutes , many keys, most recently Low d for de Irish
Only thing I cant find is the little 2.00 cane whistle that got me into this stuff 10 yrs. ago
I need more!!
I like making as much as playing almost.
User avatar
Innocent Bystander
Posts: 6816
Joined: Wed Aug 03, 2005 12:51 pm
antispam: No
Location: Directly above the centre of the Earth (UK)

Post by Innocent Bystander »

I must have another crack at making a quena. I made one with a bad sort of pipe. It plays, but not nicely. It must be possible to do better.
One proper Chinese bamboo flute in D.
One non-Chinese Bamboo Flute in D.
Several Ocarinas. I used to have a really nice one, but I fear it got smashed. It disappeared. I have kids. What can I say.
I am promised one from Mr Gray in Florence, S.C.
A four-foot low D whistle in red plastic. (Smoke Detector Pipe). It has a rubber foot so it can be used as a walking stick.
At least three sets of pan-pipes.
Various odd whistle-like instruments that people have got for me. Nothing non-touristy, and probably nothing worth more than £5($10).
A Black plastic Willow-flute.
And of course the old Didgeridoo.
Wizard needs whiskey, badly!
User avatar
Elmore
Posts: 39
Joined: Sun Jun 26, 2005 2:28 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: North Alabama USA

Woodwinds & Brass

Post by Elmore »

WOODWINDS & BRASS

BASSOON

Schreiber & Sohne Bassoon – Serial # 56XX

Schreiber & Sohne Bassoon – Serial # 86XX

CLARINET

Bundy Soprano Clarinet (Resonite) – Serial # 11674XX

Leblanc Alto Clarinet – Serial # 58XX

Leblanc Bass Clarinet – Serial # 40XX

Leblanc Paperclip Contrabass Clarinet – Serial # 8XX

Leblanc Soprano L7 Clarinet – Serial # 302XX

Noblet Alto Clarinet – Serial # 21XX US Patent – RE. 23.725

Noblet Alto Clarinet – Serial # 37XX

Noblet Bass Clarinet – Serial # 65XX (bottom) # 80XX (top)

Normandy 4 Soprano Clarinet – Serial # 950XX

Paul Dupre Conservatoire Soprano Clarinet - Serial # 973XX

OBOE

King Marigaux Oboe – Serial # 47XX

SAXOPHONE

Bundy Special Tenor Saxophone (Germany- Keilwerth) – Serial # 525XX

King Cleveland 615 Tenor Saxophone – Serial # 6795XX

King Zephyr Baritone Saxophone – Serial # 4847XX

Martin Magna Tenor Saxophone – Serial # 2140XX

Vito Tenor Saxophone (Japan-Yamaha) – Serial # 0113XX

TROMBONE

Blessing Super Artist Trombone– Serial # 736XX

Conn Connstellation 48H Trombone – Serial # 9648XX

King 3-B Concert Trombone – Serial # 3427XX

King 606 Trombone – Serial # 6046XX

King Super Tempo 1506 Trombone – Serial # 9980XX

Olds Ambassador Trombone – Serial # 4219XX
"Imagination without education is like a bird without feet"
"Feet entangle birds, words...men"
User avatar
WyoBadger
Posts: 2708
Joined: Wed Jun 27, 2001 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Tell us something.: "Tell us something" hits me a bit like someone asking me to tell a joke. I can always think of a hundred of them until someone asks me for one. You know how it is. Right now, I can't think of "something" to tell you. But I have to use at least 100 characters to inform you of that.
Location: Wyoming

Post by WyoBadger »

I haven't checked into this forum for a while, and I have to say: Wow. Get all of us together we could have quite an odd session. :)

I just got a Yamaha 642S euphonium. I've posted pics of it in at least two other forums, so I will exercise restraint. But it's mighty purdy! Besides lots (and lots and lots) of whistles, I also play an early 80's Ibanez dreadnought and Martin Backpacker geetars, a Spirit Song G bamboo flute, a Fred Halpin bodhran, and a field snare.

Have fun!

Tom
Fall down six times. Stand up seven.
User avatar
neoclown
Posts: 31
Joined: Wed Aug 15, 2007 2:21 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Richmond, VA

Wow...

Post by neoclown »

In comparison, my collection is little and fairly simple but here we go...

Whistles:

- Clarke Original D
- Generation Bb Nickel (on its way)
- Walton Lil Black D

Harmonicas:

- Hohner Special 20 diatonic - Key of C
- Hohner Special 20 diatonic - Key of A

Recorders:

- Yamaha Soprano

Melodicas:

- Hohner HM Piano 32 Melodica

Ocarinas:

- 5-hole cherry and rosewood Susato Ocarina (on its way)
- Susato Mountain Ocarina poly-carbonate (on its way)
fraxinus
Posts: 3
Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2007 12:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Telford UK

Post by fraxinus »

Hi Guys - I'm new hereabouts and Oh wow - I don't really compete -
I have the usual:

Set of Generation and a couple of Clarks.

Two or three Honner proharps.

The interesting ones [for me] are recent.

I went to a "Walking Thunder" [Google him] na flute course where Grisly gave me a flute made of conduit.
Since then I've developed my own 25mm version which isn't quite N/A but is pentatonic in a wide range of scales. I play them pentatonic and diatonic and have made one with a split bottom hole to aid this.
I find making almost as relaxing as playing and as it takes 20 mins max and 6 mins, record to make one I've made a shedload.
They have a beautifully clear tone. Its wonderful what you can get from 60p [Just over a dollar] of material.
I must have made about 40 of them as my design developed.

Oh and dozens of home made bamboo pipes and flutes.

I'm wondering whether to admit that I got an Empire Brass flute for Xmas - No I didn't come here for sympathy and no - I didn't read the bloody posting on the flute forum soon enough! Ho Hum Just as well I'm self satisfied about my conduit pipes.
User avatar
Brigitte
Posts: 788
Joined: Mon Oct 14, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Location: Germany

only my personal instruments

Post by Brigitte »

Listing only my personal instruments is easy as I do not have so many as my hubby, here we go

Drums and noisy stuff
big headed Djembe from Burkina Faso
Eckermann double skin bodhran, 42cm
refurbished and painted blue old bodhran, originally from Roundstone workshops Ireland
some egg shakers and one rainmaker as well as some weird calimba like thingies
2 marrokan drums, clay look a little like darbukas but do not sound like them
2 singing bowls

Whistles
Alto G sb in gold anodised made by Colin

Mouthharps
1 scandinavian but not a lot different in look than the jewish ones
2 jewish in D and G
5 or so indonesian (vietnamese?) ones, find them much easier to play and they do not knock against the crowns all the time :-)

Flute
plum wood D, Pratten style made with some assistence by meself
crystal flute in G made by James Hall

Didges
1 blood wood in A
1 tunable one from plastic E to D
3 glass didges made by James Hall, different patterns incl. dot painting
1 cherry wood, tunable made by Walter Strasser
at least 6 bamboo ones usually around the key of D, self made as well as some cardbox ones selfmade

Brigitte
Wenn die Klügeren nachgeben,
regieren die Dummköpfe die Welt.
(Jean Claude Riber)
Jon le Champignon !!!
Posts: 4
Joined: Mon Sep 29, 2008 3:35 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Wimbledon UK
Contact:

Post by Jon le Champignon !!! »

Wow !! What a forum.. great find !!

Me ? Here ? The Thirteenth Earl of Wimbledon ? Here on 'Chiff & Fipple' !! ??

Well here goes..

Ney : about 30 Turkish, Egyptian, one Persian

Kaval : 6 Bulgarian, 2 Turkish

Duduk : 7 Armenian

Blul : 3 Armenian

Arghul : 1 Egyptian

Bansuri : 20 Indian

Mizmar / Zurna : 8 Moroccan , 2 Armenian

Sipsi : 3 Turkish

Other flutes/Whistles about 50 quenas / bansuri / Chinese / Irish / World

I've played Ney for 23 years, love kavals and most 'fipples'. Used to front an Instrumental 'space-rock' band called 'Ozric Tentacles' for 18 years, now play with 'Dream Machine', a dance-music outfit called Zubzub and have my own 'Champignon' band playing comedy/folk musings.

Learning Bulgarian Tamboura by transposing all my irish-whistle repertoire at the moment and also the Persian Nay, a remarkable instrument with a very different blowing technique to its Turkish/Egyptian counterparts. Am also learning oud and cumbus.. keeping busy !!
...mmm... !!!
User avatar
West
Posts: 165
Joined: Tue Aug 12, 2008 1:35 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Sweden

Post by West »

Jon le Champignon !!! wrote:Used to front an Instrumental 'space-rock' band called 'Ozric Tentacles' for 18 years
Ozric Tentacles!! How cool is that -- I used to listen a lot to a couple of your albums years ago (Pungent mostly, but also Arborescence), but then I kind of lost track as my tastes went in other directions.

Welcome to the forum, good to have you here!
Trying is the first step towards failure -- Homer Simpson
User avatar
cadancer
Posts: 218
Joined: Sat Apr 07, 2007 9:31 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Pasadena, California

Re:

Post by cadancer »

Jon le Champignon !!! wrote:Kaval : 6 Bulgarian, 2 Turkish

Learning Bulgarian Tamboura by transposing all my irish-whistle repertoire at the moment...
I have Bulgarian kavals in Re, Do, and La (D, C, A). What keys are yours in?

The list-serve on eefc.org would be able to help if you wanted to learn Bulgarian tambura by playing Bulgarian music. It is an active mailing-list type of forum which specializes in East European folk music, dance, and culture.

Best wishes,

John
Post Reply