FS Copley D keyless NOT

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Bloomfield
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Post by Bloomfield »

toughknot wrote:The Copley is my first wooden and also first conical ( conoidal ? ) Flute. Was it anyone elses first? It is ,I believe, from the year 2000 and has a brass tuning slide and has spent its life in the hands of various C&Fers. Some of you know this flute.I reviewed every post I could find going all the way back to the oldest pages on the flute forum and the Copleys were always well spoken of and there were occaisional posts by Mr. Copley himself. From the posts I was encouraged the flute would be a good first choice for me and I am glad I have it and I like it very much.
The Copley is said to have a wide range of tonality and volume. I know this depends alot on the player and as a beginner I have alot of room for improvement. I'm interested to hear from more experinced players about their Copleys particularly for whom it was a first or one their first.Also has anyone played the older Copleys as well as the newer and are there any differences between the older and newer? Thanks for any tips , insights, observations. My flute is keyless so it is the keyless I am interested in hearing about, Thanks
Disclaimer: Beginner here. I picked up a keyless Copley here on the chiffboard last Fall, and have been at the flute thing since. My second-hand Copley is five years old or so and has the silver tuning slide. (I had first ordered a delrin Seery: that was an absolute dog and that I sent back right away.) I've tried several flutes since: Olwells, a couple of Murrays, an Ormiston, a Glen Schultz [nice]... The Murrays were both absolutely to die for and the Ormiston spoke when you just started thinking about blowing... great flutes. The Copley has a heavier, more pedestrian feel to compared to them and it took me couple of weeks to get used to it. But it is a wonderful flute. Very rich and smooth with a great character and a real bark or a sweet song when you want it. Solid, versatile feel and it is fairly easy to blow into tune. I absolutely love it. I've handed it to better players whenever I find them and one of them said when I told her that I am on Olwell's waiting list for a keyless blackwood Pratten, "you may want to keep the Copley when Olwell comes."
/Bloomfield
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tin tin
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Post by tin tin »

Welcome to the dark side, Bloomfield. :wink:
I've been playing flute for 17 years (simple system for 2), and I've had my Copley for a bit over a year now. (There's a review I wrote when I got it somewhere on the board.) It doesn't have as broad a range of tone colors Rudall-based flutes do, but it's also not as demanding to play as a true Pratten-style flute--good compromise. It is, however, capable of both sweetness and bark, which is great. Its tone is right on for traditional music, and it's capable of good volume for a session. Like Bloomfield said, good intonation comes pretty naturally. The low D is solid. It has good response to finger ornamentation, and the finger holes are comfortably spaced and are a nice size. The keys are well made and functional, but they're sprung more stiffly that some other keyed flutes I've played and aren't as elegant as Rudall-style saltspoon keywork. Overall, I really like mine (and like it progressively more as time goes on and I really get to know the intrument). I think Copley flutes are a fantastic value and enjoyable to play.
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Post by lixnaw »

i'm another beginner, started out on a delrin Seery two months back and play a keyless Copley since last month. i had no problem at all with playing 2 octaves right away out of both flutes. i found a Hamilton and Cotter harder to fill. but i love the sound of the Copley above all, and it's also louder than the Seery, and the holespacing is spot on for me. i might sell the Seery, i'm not sure yet. but i don't think i'll need another flute. if i ever get the chance to try an Olwell, then i might, but i'll have to be further down the line with practising first.
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toughknot
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Post by toughknot »

Thanks for the posts Bloomfield ,TinTin and Lixnaw. It's nice to read others impressions.I thought with so many good comments in the old posts there would be many more persons on C&F with Copleys. I know that there more than likely is and there are any number of reasons they havent posted ( not everyone spends hours lurking here as I do).
Have any "pros" recorded with the Copley? I'd love to hear one played by an accomplished player to hear what this flute is capable of. I did listen to the clips at the Copley site and they are very good yet I would love to hear more.
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