I tried BAROQUE FLUTE for the first time - and why I'm converted!

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  • Опубліковано 2 лип 2024
  • This video is in partnership with Apple Music Classical - download the app here! apple.co/TeamRecorder
    I learned the baroque flute - or traverso - with historical flute extraordinaire Aysha Wills! Ready for a deep dive? We get into technique - a full lesson! Duets! Instruments! Performances! History! Repertoire! What can I say, it was FUN
    Filmed at Splendor, Amsterdam
    This video is sponsored by Apple Music Classical. I'm SO happy to partner with this app designed specially for and by classical music lovers - streaming in high quality, with a huge catalogue of excellent music, all organised in a way that makes it super easy to browse, or find what you're looking for! What's not to love?? And don't forget to listen to Aysha's album 'Bach Flute Solos'!
    Dowland Apple Music Classical here! apple.co/TeamRecorder
    /// CHAPTERS
    00:00 Intro
    00:18 Aysha playing
    01:37 What inspired you to play the traverso?
    02:42 Solo Bach album and Apple Music Classical
    05:23 Traverso lesson!
    05:57 How to hold it
    07:50 Blowing!
    09:45 Notes and fingerings
    12:49 Range and top notes
    17:14 Articulation
    20:17 Duets!
    21:38 Embouchure
    23:59 Meet the flutes! And their evolution
    28:17 More duets - with recorder too!
    /// AYSHA WILLS - HISTORICAL FLUTIST
    Website: www.ayshawills.com
    Postscript ensemble: www.postscriptensemble.com
    Aysha's album of Bach Flute Solos: / aysha-wills
    /// INSTRUMENTS
    In this video we play on:
    - a 415Hz traverso after Eigentopf in boxwood by Fridtjof Aurin
    - a 415Hz traverso after Quantz in grenadilla by Fridtjof Aurin
    - a 392Hz traverso after Pierre Naust in boxwood by Fridtjof Aurin
    - a 415Hz alto recorder in rosewood by Joachim Rohmer
    /// BOOKS
    New Method for the Traverso - Doretthe Janssens www.boekenbestellen.nl/boek/n...
    //////
    Website: www.sarahjeffery.com
    Tiktok / instagram / twitter: @team_recorder
    //// ONLINE COURSE!
    Check out my online courses for recorder players: sarahjeffery.com/Online-Course
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    //// MY DEBUT ALBUM
    'Constellations' is out!! It can be ordered on (signed) CD or digital download here: team-recorder.myshopify.com/
    LISTEN NOW ON SPOTIFY! open.spotify.com/artist/3wL36...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 158

  • @Team_Recorder
    @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +4

    This video is in partnership with Apple Music Classical - download the app here! apple.co/TeamRecorder

  • @idraote
    @idraote 20 днів тому +28

    Many thanks to Aysha for taking part in this video!
    I'm impressed by how well the traverso blends with the recorder.
    They are distinctly different but, at the same time, they sound absolutely spectacular together.

  • @xerenas1593
    @xerenas1593 20 днів тому +50

    Aysha is my amazing baroque flute teacher!!! I laughed so much during this video as I heard her tell Sarah everything she’s been telling me for the past year haha

  • @nigelhaywood9753
    @nigelhaywood9753 20 днів тому +24

    The recorder and the traverso together are heavenly!

  • @pardalote
    @pardalote 19 днів тому +13

    I am one of the few people who learnt a simple medieval, transverse, keyless flute before learning modern flute. My local primary school in Sydney, Australia ran after school "extracurricular" classes. One was run by an enthusiastic local amateur musician who loved and collected medieval instruments. I loved music and already was learning piano, loved Bach and had learnt a little recorder so I signed up. I loved the flute right from the start, but we also played psalteries, harp, 3 holed flute, shawm, medieval flageolet and other instruments. At first, I played flute mirror image from copying my teacher. She corrected me and said, if I wanted to play modern flute one day - I would need to swap sides! I thought it was perfectly normal to learn flute this way until I met other flutists in high school. 😄

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому

      That is so cool, thanks for sharing! I think playing a keyless flute isn't such a bad idea, to be honest - I did the Suzuki method and was given a little stick with painted on holes just to learn the position before I was entrusted with a (curved headjoint) modern flute! Amazing that you were able to play and try out so many instruments. That must have been a great and enriching experience! Thanks for sharing your story. How great that that was available in Sydney - I already found it to be a wonderful city to visit!

    • @tennissir1986
      @tennissir1986 18 днів тому

      It’s learned not learnt.

    • @pardalote
      @pardalote 18 днів тому +3

      @tennissir1986 I don't know what country you are from, but please don't forget that English speakers come from many different parts of the world. A quick Google of "learnt vs learned" will reveal that "learnt" is common usage in the UK (as it is in Australia where I am from), whereas "learned" is common in the US and presumably other countries as well. Languages are fascinating and complex things.

  • @Rik77
    @Rik77 20 днів тому +17

    As a traverso player, this is a fantastic video that goes into lots of detail and interesting info that you do not see elsewhere. Brilliant intro to the instrument. And ending with the best work for recorder and flute. :)

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +7

      So happy that so many traverso players are flocking here 🥲

  • @curtvaughan2836
    @curtvaughan2836 19 днів тому +6

    Excellent! Played a Boehm flute for many years and took up traverso back in the early 80's after hearing Musica Antiqua Koeln perform "A Musical Offering" using traverso and period strings. A surge in period music playing was taking place back then, though there was next to no pedagogical / method material available then for traverso. My main source of information was in reading Quantz carefully (there was no internet) and in correspondence with other flute players interested in the one-keyed flute. I gave up flute entirely in the early 90's, as my computer career demanded most of my time (tech boom). Now retired, I wanted to play flute again, and after not playing for so long (30 years) decided to take up traverso rather than modern fllute. The instruments are now much more widely available than back in the 80s, and the instructional material and information available via the internet have helped in accelerating progress. Much enjoyed this video!

  • @marshallee
    @marshallee 20 днів тому +12

    The recorder and the traverso together sounds really nice

  • @DavidSL64
    @DavidSL64 20 днів тому +12

    Great video. Especially informative towards the end when Aysha was explaining the differences between the 3 flutes … love it “an excuse to have more flutes” ….

  • @ab-zg8pt
    @ab-zg8pt 17 днів тому +2

    OMFG I LOVE AYSHA!!!!! Her playing is just heavenly!!!!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 17 днів тому

      Thank you so much, that means a lot to me to read!! 🙏🏻

  • @andreasw5119
    @andreasw5119 20 днів тому +8

    Ooooooh, as a recorder AND traverso-player I enjoyed this video sooooo much! Big thank you to you both, you were great!
    Dear Aysha, I think you are a great teacher, so PLEASE start a youtube channel: It is time for TEAM TRAVERSO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +7

      Aysha is SUCH a good teacher! Team Traverso for the win!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +5

      That's so kind of you! I'd love to do something like that and spread the word about historical flutes... Maybe something for in the future! I'd have to get a bit of gear and tech know-how before taking on a challenge like that!!

  • @meredith18352
    @meredith18352 19 днів тому +6

    No thumb hole kind of blows my mind. This Baroque flute is lovely and definitely beyond my meagre flute skills. Thanks for bringing some of Team Recorder's spotlight onto this rare instrument.

    • @josephwisniewski3673
      @josephwisniewski3673 18 днів тому +1

      Changing octaves purely on embouchure is a flutist trick that messes with recorder players' minds. (and wait till the first time you try an ocarina. No upper register).

    • @marshallee
      @marshallee 18 днів тому

      @@josephwisniewski3673 I thought ocarinas were chromatic instruments. Or it is because I'm new to music and don't understand this?

    • @simonholmqvist8017
      @simonholmqvist8017 14 днів тому +1

      @@marshallee They are chromatic, but you can't overblow. With a tin whistle, recorder or flute, changing breath pressure or embouchure can make the notes jump an octave (or another distance) up. This can't happen on an ocarina.

  • @gayanderson2242
    @gayanderson2242 19 днів тому +2

    Since switching from flute to recorder and getting immersed in early music I’ve admired traversos from afar. I learned so much about them from this video. I wondered if the fingerings were anything like the recorder (not really), and I had no idea there’s no thumb hole! The sound is so lovely.

  • @cornekros1
    @cornekros1 19 днів тому +2

    Thank you both for a great video. The look on Sarah's face when she tries F to F sharp is priceless. Reminds me when I started with traverso 35 years ago (plastic Aulos AF1 - still my travel flute): a recorder playing friend of mine tried traverso as well at the time but stopped because he felt it was too much like juggling!

  • @azw409
    @azw409 19 днів тому +2

    Great video, thanks for taking the time to make it. It's interesting to get your perspective of the traverso but also nice to get a free lesson from an experienced teacher which are impossible to find.

  • @rhythmharmony2923
    @rhythmharmony2923 18 днів тому +2

    Our beloved resin recorder maker „Aulos“ also has got two traverse flute models, one in 415Hz after Stanesby Jr. and the other in 440Hz after Grenser. 😉🤩

  • @michaelwright2986
    @michaelwright2986 19 днів тому +4

    Not a player: I found this wonderfully informative and also delightful. Packed with stuff, easy to take in.
    Also: at the beginning: "The first thing is how to hold the traverso." Half way through: "Oh, I've got it upside down." Sometimes it's the little things.

  • @trumpet_guy_111
    @trumpet_guy_111 20 днів тому +7

    I already see the Traverso in between all the recorders of your collection… Beautiful instrument and the fact that you played with little effort stunned me right away!

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +5

      Thank you! I think I edited out all the effort.. 😂

    • @trumpet_guy_111
      @trumpet_guy_111 20 днів тому

      @@Team_Recorder 😂 Well i must say you did a good job! 😉 Still hope you stay with the recorder gang though… 🎶

  • @mauchan87
    @mauchan87 19 днів тому +3

    Beautiful beautiful beautiful! The two instruments go so great together! I am so happy to see more and more content on baroque instruments!

  • @TenorCantusFirmus
    @TenorCantusFirmus 20 днів тому +6

    I've noticed how much distinct sounds the "open" and "forked" notes of the Baroque flute - That's fascinating, and shows you why during the 18th Century often tonalities were considered so much different in sound than they do today: nowadays' instruments are more uniform throughout their range, but they thus have lost some different "flavours" their earlier counterparts had.
    I also started on the flute, but never have been able to master the embochoure. I've found that of brass instruments (i.e.: the dreaded cornett, which actually I find not that terrible) to be easier 😀😀. Maybe, it also changes from person to person.

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +1

      Yes, that’s why I love the recorder too!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому +4

      Yes, in my humble opinion the modern flute is the pinnacle of progress in some ways, and in other ways the opposite. In our hunger for "easy" fingerings and the ability to play effortlessly in every key, we also lost the beautiful and unique colours that every key intrinsically had. This also means that the composer's use of key signature started to have less meaning once the flute was fully chromatic. I understand that it was necessary due to the larger halls and harder repertoire, but I'm so happy that nowadays I can play any flute I like from renaissance to Boehm! The things that people find to be a handicap are actually what makes the instrument beautiful and unique, once you get to grips with it!

  • @sanaebon8610
    @sanaebon8610 20 днів тому +8

    Amazing video!! It was really interesting to hear that your native language may affect the articulation. (I used be a linguistics student and phonology was my all-time-favorite. Yes, Japanese D as inだ/da is less plosive compared to English D, which makes sense that it’ll make softer sound.) The only problem of your video is that it makes me want to try a new instrument, and now it’s a traverso!!😂 Probably I should get one of those plastic traverso made by Aulos. The recorder and traverso duo at the end was heavenly. Thank you Sarah and Aysha! Love from Japan🇯🇵

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +3

      Ohh, that’s so interesting to hear about the articulation/language topic from a linguistics point of view! less plosive would indeed give a different articulation. Thanks for your input!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +2

      I would love to learn more about linguistics and articulation! Indeed, I found it fascinating also because I love language and linguistics in general and I noticed quite a lot of variety amongst my peers from different countries. Maybe one day I can stop observing passively and perhaps do some real research!
      Love back, thank you for watching!

  • @jcortese3300
    @jcortese3300 20 днів тому +8

    I truly love historical flutes -- especially the 8-key ones, but the traverso is another one I adore. However, I find wind instruments to be so brutally difficult that my concentration is entirely taken up with playing, and I have none left over for intonation! When I was messing around on viola, my intonation locked in about a month because that's all it took for me to play and have enough brain left over to hear minor differences. On flute ... it never locked in, and on historical flutes, it has to. I cannot overstate the respect I have for historical wind players.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +1

      The 8 key is a particular favourite of mine as well, not my "home" instrument, but I'm currently spending most of my time practising that one!
      Funny you mention viola - I dabbled as a youngster and I love it very much, but I had more of a knack for winds than strings it seems. Once I saw double stops, I had to tap out! We fluties can handle one note at a time, I'm afraid...

    • @josephwisniewski3673
      @josephwisniewski3673 18 днів тому

      @@ayshawills I remember an old comic about 8-key flutes that's in the Dayton Miller collection: "Breathes there a man with a soul so low who in preference to a Boehm a Meyer would blow?"

  • @franktadley1810
    @franktadley1810 20 днів тому +5

    That was a wonderful show. Both teachers were excellent!! Aysha was a fantastic find. Thanks!

  • @luxetoile
    @luxetoile 17 днів тому +1

    The modern flute typically has 16-18 keys if you're counting the holes with padded keys that close over them. If you're counting places on the mechanism that you press to close or open a key, it's 15-17. (The variance depends on which kind of foot joint your flute has, and whether or not your flute has a C# trill key)

  • @gblan
    @gblan 19 днів тому +2

    Shopping for a resin/plastic traverso! This was fantastic. That last piece was so fun. Sarah reading music like the rest of us read words on a page.

  • @victorhugo1819
    @victorhugo1819 17 днів тому +1

    I would watch you two play together for HOURS, that was such a joy!

  • @allihaywood8561
    @allihaywood8561 11 днів тому +1

    Obvious to me how immediately proficient you are Sarah! Would have been interesting to have Aysha try the recorder. In any case, lots of similarities between the 2. As someone who has "different" and older flutes this was an interesting discussion and session. Thank you both!!

  • @lissyw1529
    @lissyw1529 13 днів тому +1

    Wow this video has perfect timing! I am a recorder player and just purchased a second hand french traverso! Your tips will be helpful

  • @svenlamberti
    @svenlamberti 18 днів тому +2

    Small correction on the 'Eigentopf': The Bach contempory maker is called Johann Heinrich Eichentopf, the modern maker Aurin calls his flute 'Eigentopf' to resemble both the modern approach to create a playable flute and the original ivory flute located in Berlin. The german 'eigen' means something like 'my (own)' or even 'peculiar'.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому

      Indeed, thanks for the clarification in a main comment! I posted this in a reply somewhere, but it will be buried of course.

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  18 днів тому +1

      Ah thanks, that was my misunderstanding! Of course in Dutch ‘Eigentopf’ and ‘Eichentopf’ are pronounced the same 😅

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому

      @@Team_Recorder omg I hadn't even thought of that!!!

  • @josephwisniewski3673
    @josephwisniewski3673 18 днів тому +2

    The tricky part is learning to play left hand. But a pair of Baroque flute players, side by side, one left hand and one right hand is gorgeous.
    That weird 2-key foot on Aysha's flute may be a bit difficult to play left hand.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому

      Looks good, doesn't it- something like the brothers Doppler who famously performed shoulder to shoulder, one leftie and one rightie. Maybe that's the next step!

    • @gerardvila4685
      @gerardvila4685 8 днів тому

      Depends if you're left handed or right handed I should think. There are two keys because Quanz wanted one for the sharps and one for the flats, for playing unequal temperaments.

  • @TemmeSikkema
    @TemmeSikkema 20 днів тому +7

    Sarah, your videos are always so well made and interesting. I’ve learned a lot from watching you present all sorts of musical things, so many thanks

  • @kharmaviv
    @kharmaviv 16 днів тому +1

    I love the way you sound together ❤️ 🎶

  • @adriennewiggins2977
    @adriennewiggins2977 19 днів тому +1

    That was so interesting and fun to see/hear! I would love to hear you play more traverso/recorder duets. That was so beautiful!

  • @JohanPeterBach
    @JohanPeterBach 18 днів тому +1

    This video is awesome, the duet is perfect!

  • @marsnut1
    @marsnut1 18 днів тому +1

    Do baroque oboe next!!! I'm really curious at how a recorder player approaches the instrument.

  • @pagorami5253
    @pagorami5253 19 днів тому +1

    i admire Root so much!!! i listen to a lot of his recordings with the netherlands bach society and he was my introduction to the traverso! love it

  • @InkByt3
    @InkByt3 18 днів тому +3

    Yay! Hello to any traverso players. So fun to see you meet one. I love the two distinct timbres of the instruments but how they fit each other perfectly. And thanks to Aysha for partcipating - I listened to her album and her playing is absolutely brilliant. Does anyone know what the name of the last duet they played was? I might have a shot at it, really pretty.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому +1

      Hello! Thanks for watching and listening :-) so happy to hear you enjoyed my album!
      Are you asking about the last duet we played on two traversi, or the one for flute and recorder?

    • @InkByt3
      @InkByt3 18 днів тому

      @@ayshawills You're really welcome! I was wondering about the flute and recorder, since I'm a recorder player :) Thank you for responding.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому +1

      @@InkByt3 That duet is the final movement of the Quantz trio sonata in C major. It's great music! I love the first movement a lot as well :)

    • @InkByt3
      @InkByt3 4 дні тому

      @@ayshawills Thank you! Sorry to bother you again, but what was the second last duet that you played on recorder and traverso?

  • @Nekog1rl
    @Nekog1rl 20 днів тому +3

    So well done in every aspect! I myself play recorders and traverso as well, though my heart (and my embrochure LOL) is with the recorder :) Thank you Sarah and Aysha!

  • @doctorfashion2734
    @doctorfashion2734 17 днів тому +1

    Excellent musicians thanks for sharing!!

  • @NomeDeArte
    @NomeDeArte 19 днів тому +1

    Love the collaboration. Great video!
    Best regards from Argentina!

  • @DrLogical987
    @DrLogical987 19 днів тому +1

    Fantastic conversation - and I'm not even a recorder or transverse flute player; but any wind person can learn something.
    Except bone players, of course.

  • @argonwheatbelly637
    @argonwheatbelly637 19 днів тому +1

    Lovely, this. Cheers, thanks for the video!

  • @chp763
    @chp763 20 днів тому +3

    I'm always so happy when a new video is released! This might be one of my favourites! 😍❤

  • @theresa_s
    @theresa_s 20 днів тому +2

    love the woodsy tone of these flutes 😊 the duets were so good!!!

  • @carolanncortese7176
    @carolanncortese7176 4 дні тому

    Hello Sarah, I just want to say that I am so impressed with the way you jump into different situations with such confidence and openness to learn. Your videos are inspiring and I always learn from them.

  • @ThisCanBePronounced
    @ThisCanBePronounced 20 днів тому +7

    Starting to watch, curious if it's practically the same as the Irish flute - since I understand it to basically just be the simpler predecessor of the modern concert flute.
    EDIT: Feels confirmed by the 2 minute mark, haha. 01:45

  • @PlanetImo
    @PlanetImo 20 днів тому +1

    I enjoyed all your playingy bits :)

  • @gst0362
    @gst0362 19 днів тому +1

    Please let me know the duets you guys played!

  • @chrisperyagh
    @chrisperyagh 17 днів тому

    24:55 - Imagine having two makers in the same place at the same time called Eigentopf and Eichentopf - that must've caused some confusion if you misheard the name! Then again more recently, there were different Mollenhauers, Uebels, Wurlitzers, Keilwerths and others in Germany all producing woodwinds.
    Also Selmer, Selmer, Selmer and Selmer - Paris, USA, London and Dusseldorf.

  • @flexprog3374
    @flexprog3374 20 днів тому +1

    There is a wonderful double concerto by Telemann for traverso and recorder, look it up if you like the sound of those two together !

  • @brini2439
    @brini2439 20 днів тому +3

    ❤ Baroque is the best of the best (at least that's what my dear teacher told me 30 years ago ❤ never forget you, Frau Schmelzer)

  • @rubenacevedoacevedo3124
    @rubenacevedoacevedo3124 20 днів тому +2

    Omg, I was expecting this video so much, I really enjoyed it.

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +2

      Thank you to all my followers who kept asking for a traverso video 😄

  • @abyuan9136
    @abyuan9136 20 днів тому +1

    So nice video!! thank Sarah...

  • @johankotze42
    @johankotze42 20 днів тому +1

    A very delightful and interesting video!

  • @nicknightingale8232
    @nicknightingale8232 20 днів тому +1

    Thank you. Inspired to get my lockdown Traverso out again. I feel it really helps me to play the metal flute in a better and more rekaxed way.

  • @thomassmith6735
    @thomassmith6735 20 днів тому +1

    Amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @ofiterpunte
    @ofiterpunte 20 днів тому +6

    What are the odds?! I was just practicing Telemann's 8th fantasia on my Aulos AF1 plastic baroque flute. I've been eye'ing a Grenadilla Palanca flute for years, those to me make the best baroque sound. Anyway, for all recorder players out there, flutes are your horizontal brothers. Telemann's Concerto in E minor for recorder and flute looks like such a joy to play: ua-cam.com/video/vODV7JePMds/v-deo.html

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +1

      Oh the Telemann double concerto is the best!!

  • @Drewster58
    @Drewster58 20 днів тому +1

    Sarah, you are inspired!

  • @ayshawills
    @ayshawills 20 днів тому +3

    Thanks for having me! Really enjoyed even though I was nervous at the start....
    Caught a brain fart moment: for all the (transverse) flute nerds, I apologise... The first iteration of the Boehm flute was from 1832, not 1831.... Though I guess it depends on what calendar you deign to use!

    • @7ennifer
      @7ennifer 20 днів тому +2

      Amazing video and really eye opening for us recorder players. Thank you so much for introducing us to the truly lovely Traverso. You tone is gorgeous and I'm looking forward to hearing your album!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому

      @@7ennifer the pleasure was all mine! I'm glad you enjoyed the video, I hope you enjoy listening to the album as well!

  • @rebeccaabraham8652
    @rebeccaabraham8652 19 днів тому +1

    Welcome to the dark side - we have glorious instruments and sounds! I started 4 decades ago with a tenor bamboo flute that I bought in Guildford... and then I had to go further. Nowdays I love my Hall crystal flutes - and I have a nice, old unkeyed Pratten-style rosewood flute; that's the one I'll be taking to Valhalla!

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому

      Sounds like you have quite the collection! I very much enjoyed visiting and speaking with Robert Bigio in London in February - his collection humbles me. I am a huge lover of English flutes. Pratten flutes are gorgeous and rosewood is a very underused material for Traversi these days!

    • @rebeccaabraham8652
      @rebeccaabraham8652 19 днів тому

      ​@@ayshawillsmy pratten-style flute isn't a Traversi - although it could possibly be converted, if I was feeling crazy enough. Given that I've just gone down the rabbit-hole with an Akai EWI5000... I'll leave it as it is and keep it as my 'go-to' instrument for working out melodies for my pop/folk/blues and jazz.... Maybe one day I'll buy an Aulos Traversi - for the sake of completeness...?

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому

      @@rebeccaabraham8652 yes, I think I know what style of Pratten you're speaking of! I love the EWI. I tried it out and I'm pretty terrible at it, but wow what a thing!

  • @Rakkitt
    @Rakkitt День тому

    this is awesome

  • @PlanetImo
    @PlanetImo 20 днів тому +1

    Ah I play flute. The right hand little finger on my flute has three keys, but they do vary according to how low the instrument goes. Mine goes to a C.

  • @peterholmes3011
    @peterholmes3011 20 днів тому +1

    I love a bit of Boismortier.

  • @carudatta
    @carudatta 19 днів тому +1

    To do:
    Practice more traverso.
    Listen to more Aysha.
    Wait for Aysha and Sarah to do the Telemann double concerto 😏

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому +1

      That would be a dream!!! I LOOOOVE that piece 🤭

    • @carudatta
      @carudatta 19 днів тому +1

      @@ayshawills Don't we all. And the combined sound of the two of you is definitely dream material 😊🩷🎶🪈

  • @jessicavaliente9342
    @jessicavaliente9342 18 днів тому +1

    I have only one thing to say: I TOLD YOU SO!!!!

  • @mantistoboggan2676
    @mantistoboggan2676 20 днів тому +2

    Love traverso

  • @LemonadeLiberal
    @LemonadeLiberal 20 днів тому +3

    As to your question in the video, the concert flute has 16 keys for a C footjoint and 17 keys for a B footjoint. Yes, this includes all the keys, not just the obvious circular ones. On professional models, it gets more convoluted but more than 95% of flute players worldwide don't own professional models. With them costing more than your average sedan car in US dollars.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +4

      Thanks for the numbers! Indeed, some professional model flutes have lots of extras, some rarer than others! My personal favourite is the Brozza f sharp, a mini key which facilitates a lovely pianissimo high F sharp!
      Thankfully I've bought all of my professional instruments second hand - lovely things, but new instruments cost an arm and a leg!

    • @InkByt3
      @InkByt3 19 днів тому +1

      Hi again! Pretty sure I've seen you on rainymoonz's channel. Just like Aysha said thanks for the numbers! Very nice to learn something new every day :)

  • @jeffreyrivers2406
    @jeffreyrivers2406 20 днів тому +1

    I absolutely love the baroque flute. I have several in my collection none of which I can play, but it’s fun collecting baroque flutes. My Quantz is by far my favorite. This was a wonderful surprise to see you on UA-cam today. Please what is the Method book you played from? I have Method for the one keyed flute. ❤❤❤❤

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому

      It’s the New Method for Traverso by Doretthe Janssens- info and link is in the video description!

  • @TonyBittner-Collins
    @TonyBittner-Collins 20 днів тому +2

    2:40 Barthold Kuijken, Stephen Preston, Wilbert Hazelzet, Felipe Egaña (my Chilean friend), Rachel Brown, Kate Clark, Amanda Markwick, Mara Winter, Johanna Bartz, Marco Brolli.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +1

      Felipe is a dear colleague! So many players I admire who I didn't name in the video - enough to fill their own video! I was biking home after filming thinking to myself about all of the people I didn't name... 😅

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +3

      Thank you for sharing! I should have mentioned Jed Wentz of course, who was my masters thesis supervisor! (he was really excellent at that too - I remember him gently bollocking me for using the word 'thusly' too much)

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому

      @@Team_Recorder I vowed not to listen to Bach sonatas before making my recording, but I did secretly listen to a track or two of Jed's recordings.... And I felt massively inferior! A great musician and a great person!

  • @angelapianomusicstudio3816
    @angelapianomusicstudio3816 14 днів тому +2

    How are you going to have time for traverso when you have Bassoon level 2 to pass? 🙂

  • @TJtheBee
    @TJtheBee 20 днів тому +1

    The traverso is beautiful! Though I don't think I need the temptation to buy yet another instrument! XD

  • @toddmurphy523
    @toddmurphy523 6 днів тому

    A "beginners" guide to available transverso flute instruments would be delightful....👍 Wood and plastic/resin.

  • @allanjmcpherson
    @allanjmcpherson 20 днів тому +1

    I'd be interested to hear if Aysha has any suggestions for a traverso for someone interested in exploring the instrument. What's a good entry level instrument?

  • @hvadhvem6138
    @hvadhvem6138 20 днів тому +1

    Who is launching the Team Traverso channel??

  • @edgaraortiz
    @edgaraortiz 20 днів тому +3

    I’m the first comment, yaaaay! Do you recommend the Mollenhaurer Dream Alto Recorder? I’m looking for an alto with really big low notes.

  • @osmarferreira6821
    @osmarferreira6821 17 днів тому

    It is a beautiful flute, but it is so expensive in Brazil.

  • @rrssna
    @rrssna 18 днів тому +1

    Wow Sarah! That was great! What a model student! You should go for it! I have a question for Aysha, though I don’t know if she’ll read the comments. I’ve had a couple traverso students, and I’ve surprisingly found that modern flute players struggle more with getting the rudiments of the traverso than recorder players. Moderns flute players seem to get frustrated with the transition to tone holes from keys, and with the comparatively tiny embouchure. Aysha, have you found this to be true? Or is this just unique to my particular experience with the few students I’ve had. I’m less experience teacher, so if you read this comment, I would like you insights.

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому +1

      I have definitely found this to be true, depending on the level of the modern flutist though. If it's a professional or semi professional, they often take it in their stride. However, amateurs tend to struggle more - the majority of my amateur Traverso students have either come from recorder or voice, or are just starting fresh with Traverso!
      I have noticed that modern players tend to favour the Palanca, with it's larger embouchure and more hefty weight....

    • @rrssna
      @rrssna 15 днів тому +1

      @@ayshawills Thank you! That makes sense. I myself had a background in recorder and voice, so that tracks. Though I had stopped playing and singing many years before, I picked up the traverso as its own world, rather than as a transition from one instrument to another. To be fair, and did dabble in some tradition flutes, like the lupaca flute, the quena, and even the bansuri flute, a little, so approaching the traverso didn’t seem quite foreign to me.
      Yes, they do like their Palancas, and it seems everyone and their relatives has a Palanca by Martin Wenner nowadays. Frankly, I’m not a fan the Palanca (I do have a Wenner flute, not a Palanca of course, so nothing against the Wenner workshop).

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 15 днів тому +1

      @@rrssna I feel the same way about the Palanca - I understand the appeal, but it's just not for me. I like a slightly more mild and nuanced sound, and like you say it is absolutely nothing to do with the build of the instrument, it's just personal preference!
      I just received a recorder and a Ney flute for my birthday, so I guess those will be my next projects!!

    • @rrssna
      @rrssna 14 днів тому +1

      @@ayshawills Oh, I'm curious about the recorder, but I'm even more curious about the Ney flute. I find the Ney flute to be,... and I don't know how not to sound lascivious... very sensual (consider the 4th or 5th entries of the dictionary entries). Let me know how your Ney flute project goes.

  • @MrBass4art
    @MrBass4art 15 днів тому

    I'm just curious, I know some woodwind teachers start students out on the recorder before they move the students to the other woodwinds family. What is your opinion about that approach to woodwind instruction? Also, do you play the baroque clarinet?

  • @katrineroberts4084
    @katrineroberts4084 20 днів тому +3

    Same with singing. A high note is placed inaginalary low,

  • @mantistoboggan2676
    @mantistoboggan2676 20 днів тому

    Cool quantz flute

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 20 днів тому +1

      Thanks Dr Toboggan, big fan of your work!

    • @mantistoboggan2676
      @mantistoboggan2676 20 днів тому +1

      @@ayshawillsthanks so much for the lesson! Sarah sounds good I hope she keeps playing.

  • @BURGRKNG
    @BURGRKNG 20 днів тому +1

    Sounds like a low whistle imo

  • @OlivierDALET
    @OlivierDALET 19 днів тому +1

    I bet there are some oriental modes that make good use of this F of yours! And, isn't the low D a bit low actually?

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 18 днів тому +1

      The lowest notes on any transverse flute definitely tend to be on the low side!

  • @gerardvila4685
    @gerardvila4685 8 днів тому

    What a brilliant video.
    It's probably too late to get an answer, but I'd love to know more about unequal temperaments on historical flutes. When did they stop playing sharps differently from flats? Was it when Bohm flutes appeared, or earlier or later?
    (Keyboard organologists don't agree eg what kind of temperament JS Bach used on his harpsichords and clavichords: some say it was ET, others that it was some kind of "Well" temperament. - not ET but not too far from it either. But if Bach's flute music is unequal temperament, doesn°t it make it more likely that his keyboards were too?)

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 7 днів тому

      I'm by no means an expert on temperament, but I know that there are many modern flute players who still intonate sharps lower than flats - and we regularly talk about low thirds and high fifths in modern ensembles, for example! From the introduction of keys, notes started to share fingerings. For example, the horrible g sharp cross fingering became a simple g plus pinky key, so why have to play and learn two cross fingerings rather than just one simple keyed fingering? At that moment players would have had to use their ears and minds to intonate that single fingering as two notes, rather than have two distinct fingerings which kind of do the work for you.
      There are several works for keyboard and otherwise which encompass all keys, many predating the WTC. This includes a work by Schickhardt which includes flute (or violin) sonatas in all keys, certainly predating our ability to be easily in tune with all of them! Composers were certainly exploring the limitations of the instruments and paving the way for future developments. I know too little about keyboard history to say, but I think the general consensus is that Bach tried many temperaments during his lifetime, as any curious mind would, and that the WTC is written for a keyboard in a kind of... Unequal well temperament, if that makes sense! That is how I experience the flute sonatas as well. Each key is certainly distinct and each tonality has its own personality, sound and challenges. It is hard to recreate on a Boehm flute, for sure, since historical instruments do part of the work for you!

    • @gerardvila4685
      @gerardvila4685 7 днів тому +1

      @@ayshawills Thank you very much for your answer. I find the whole subject a little mind-blowing - it's a bit like the differences in sounds between different languages. My first instruments were recorders with "low" pure thirds, and a lifetime later I still remember how disconcerted I was by my first guitar with its "high" equal temperament thirds. Western classical music largely ignores these shadings of pitch - it seems a bit like a secret sauce only known to string players and wind players - while other musical traditions, like Indian ragas, build endlessly complex structures out of them.

  • @user-eh8jv2em2o
    @user-eh8jv2em2o 20 днів тому

    Thanks for the new video. That stuff is cool of course but not accessible at all compared to the recorders. So recorders are still the best.

  • @joycer6250
    @joycer6250 20 днів тому

    You can play in all 12 keys on the flute. I'll "settle" for a good abs alto or tenor recorder :) lol :D

  • @TurboBinch
    @TurboBinch 19 днів тому +1

    Is Eigentopf the same Eichentopf that made bassoons?

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 19 днів тому +1

      Yes, this is a copy of Eichentopf, but since my Traverso builder (Fridtjof Aurin) had to make some adjustments to the instrument in order to make it function, he called it his "eigentopf" ("eigen" is the German word for "my own")- so it's just a German language pun...
      Same maker, indeed!

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  19 днів тому +1

      Oh that is so cool to know!

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 17 днів тому +1

    Do I detect a slight hint of a Dutch accent with this Canadian lass?

    • @ayshawills
      @ayshawills 17 днів тому +1

      It's very likely! I've been here for a total of 14 years this year and I've just turned 30, so I would presume that time and immersion have taken their toll! I'd say I speak Dutch about 25% of the time in my home life and 90% of the time in my work life!

  • @rentregagnant
    @rentregagnant 20 днів тому +1

    Careful, Sarah! Stay true to the recorder! Baroque flute could be the gateway drug...

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  20 днів тому +2

      I already managed to resist the bassoon! 😄

  • @L14B
    @L14B 19 днів тому +1

    rare to hear some vibrato on transverse baroque flute !

  • @arilande2805
    @arilande2805 20 днів тому

    "Traversa" is for Renaissance and Medieval transverse flutes, "Traversiere" is for Baroque transverse flutes 😉

    • @gerardvila4685
      @gerardvila4685 8 днів тому

      In French, une flute traversière usually means a modern concert flute. (It reminds me of the difference between piano, pianoforte and fortepiano, which doesn't work the same way in English as in German.)

  • @organist1982
    @organist1982 19 днів тому

    Converted from...?

  • @robertcornelius3514
    @robertcornelius3514 20 днів тому +5

    You interior introverts soo need to get some sunlight. Actually, seeing you playing outside may end up being a good thing.

    • @joejoejoe532
      @joejoejoe532 20 днів тому

      Playing outside would be nice. The downside is that taking wooden flutes outdoors can be risky as exposure to rapidly changing humidity, temperature,, and sunlight can make them more susceptible to cracks.