Don't forget:
KENA, Tin and Low whistles are very important in orchestral writing!!!
PLEASE, Herb!!!!!!!!!!!!!
KENA, Tin and Low whistles are very important in orchestral writing!!!
PLEASE, Herb!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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By the way, it's hard to get good on any instrument. I say that as both a snob and as a recorder player with a stupendous ego. [:)]
You can pick up the basics of recorder playing easily, but you're going to be out of tune and your breath control is going to suck. I've been playing all my life, and my breath control goes when I don't practice all the time.
@Nick Batzdorf said:
Never mind, I found it (one of those things my fingers knew but my brain didn't). You're absolutely right.
On my recorder it's pinched thumb, no little finger, and both middle fingers lifted.
But it's very shrill, so you wouldn't normally use it.
@William said:
This flat-out statement that "the real instrument is always so much more expressive than even the best samples" is not true. Of either recorders or other instruments.
@William said:
BTW I am president of the World Accordion Defense League (WADL) and we will see you in court. Also the Pennywhistle Enthusiasts of Earth (PEE) have contacted me already and they are not happy.
@William said:
David Munrow...
@William said:
I agree with that completely. Other examples of that same principle - the ocarina which has such a mesmerizingly soft tone, or the Crummhorn which is crude and coarse but extremely lively and colorful, or the clarinetto which had some of the power of the trumpet but with a darker, mellower and wilder tone. It is interesting how wild and colorful in general the medieval ensembles could be, especially compared with the relatively colorless and restricted quality of the more refined and "proper" classical era.