@@chungusisamemer8167 Hey dumbass, Baitrix didn't say that the girl created it, he literally said that she was dancing the kids dance. Learn to read, fuckwit and go back to school while you're at it
@@peggyh.6569 It's cool what they did. But it also sounds... well... eerie I guess, because it's so dissonant but sometimes it almost fits which makes me shiver for a moment. It's hard to describe.
Regarding the clay: Processing it can be quite tricky. I made numerous beginner's mistakes as well^^ -Don't put whole chunks in the water, as they will form a slick outer layer that protects the inside from dissolving -Thoroughly dry them first (breaking them up a bit helps with that) -Then use a rubber mallet (or something similar) to grind them down, as a metal hammer will grind the stones and sand in the clay a bit, adding unwanted material -Sift the dry powder to filter out stones, twigs and other organic material. The finer the sieve, the better -Put the fine powder in a tall container (e.g. a bucket, or a glass jug to check the sediment) and add large amounts of water -Stir until everything is dissolved, then wait for a bit (a few minutes) until the sand settles down -Carefully pour the murky water through a sieve, without pouring out the fine sand and sediment from the bottom of the container -Use flat screens instead of round ones, as the clay tends to form clumps more easily -Rinse and repeat^^ -Pour the final batch into a wider container and wait -Let the clay settle down until a clear layer of water forms on top -You can try to gently pour/siphon out most of it, or you let it evaporate under sunlight or at a warm spot with some ventilation -When the clay has a batter-like consistency, you can put it on a larger surface to speed up the drying process or put it in a piece of cloth. (Not every towel or piece of cloth will work, though, as clay particles are really small.) -If you spread it out, avoid forming crests and peaks while spreading it, as those will dry faster than the rest -Use an absorbent surface material that won't contaminate the clay. (Didn't have any at hand, so I had to wait.) -After quite a while, the clay will change color a bit and won't really stick to your hands anymore -When it has a rough, Play-Doh-like quality, begin to work it a bit (research some techniques online), then form a block -Wrap the block in plastic wrap to prevent the clay from drying out and store it A block I made about 2 years ago is still malleable. If it smells musty/earthy, that's normal. I read that letting the clay "ripen" over a longer period improves its quality. Some people with sensitive skin might get skin irritations from the mold, though. If your clay isn't processed enough (if it's too gritty) the clay will tend to break while forming more delicate shapes. A simple test ist to roll out a small clay snake and wind it around a finger. If it breaks apart, further processing is needed. Adding sand to a slippery clay is much easier than removing sand from a gritty one. Further testing: -Roll the clay to an even thickness -Take a cookie cutter, glass, etc. and cut out a few circles -Measure the diameter and let them dry evenly and slowly -Measure the shrinkage in diameter and thickness after drying -Fire them (research best practices online), then measure further shrinkage in diameter and thickness -Some of them might crack. Grind them down a bit and add the so-called grog into a batch of clay to strengthen it -Take measurements of the ratio of grog and clay -repeat the tests with varying thickness and diameter with and without grog -Write everything down Further research: -Glazes -Firing process -Different ceramics and their recipes -Tools and techniques (flywheel, grafting pieces of clay together, sanding and polishing, etc.) It's quite a broad topic.
7:40 I personaly would never do this with a chop saw. I work with woodworking Machines everyday, and there is many ways to use them that they are not intended but that just looked unsafe to me. The forces of the spinning blade will easily drag your hand into the blade when the piece of Wood is so short, and even worse it was round so you get minimal Contact to the fence with the piece. A bandsaw would be better or just a normal handsaw would do that job easily, pretty much no time loss and a lot safer. Otherwise really cool video.
There's actually a way to use your hands as a flute. It's really hard to describe in words but you basically cup them together with one curved and one more flat so the only gap is between your thumbs, then put your thumbs against your mouth and use them as the reeds. You can change the pitch of the note by changing the angle of the flatter hand (I use my right hand), and with enough air you can even get high notes with the flatter hand extended enough to make another gap. My dad showed me how to do this for imitating owls and mourningdoves, I was also able to get distinct enough notes for simple songs.
The bamboo flute demonstrated at the beginning is a quenacho, not a quena. The flute that was made was the size of / tuned like a normal quena. However, a different species of bamboo is used to make quenas. It has a completely round cross-section, and grows with long enough spaces between the nodes that you don't have to break through them. Typically, the node is used as the bottom end of the flute, with a hole placed in the center that can be used to help tune the lowest note. For a round mouthpiece, like the one pictured at the beginning, a round file is used, not dremel bits. They also exist with square mouthpieces, which are cut with knives. The guy who introduced it said it's a relative of the shakuhachi, but Andean and Japanese cultures didn't interact with each other - the two flutes are just superficially similar.
Sam, the woman working with the clay, has a great personality that really shows through. Very natural sense of humor and delivery. Great in front of the camera.
The homage to the clapping scene from _Citizen Kane_ at the end is what tells you that you're not crazy for thinking the music sounded less-than-stellar 😅
I get this is kind of off topic but I think that if you haven't tried already you should make wine everything from the bottle to the cork maybe even a label if you feel like being fancy. It's honestly astonishing how much work goes into crafting things as simple as table wine from picking the grapes to harvesting the cork it would really be a neat video.
I see no one else seemed to mention that you don't need a bit on bamboo just a stout stick. The girl working on the horn started on the wrong end. Maybe I've just never seen a horn played from that end.
One of my absolute favorite things about this channel is seeing people create something and being impressed with themselves when it works. That is the pride of working with one's hands and it really is an amazing feeling. Great video as always, even if I am seeing this one a few years late.
My ears.....ahhhhh........The guy 1st place, the ocarina 2nd place (little more work would have been first place by miles), Bison horn........wellllll at least you can play jaws. In the end the musical guy (I am horrid with names) takes home the gold. He had lots of positive to say even while being very critical. Ocarina would have killed......still could.
I’m in my 70s, my grandfather, who was born in 1879 and had a muzzle-loading rifle when he was a kid told me how to smooth a cow (bison, what-have-you) horn. No sandpaper. He, and I as he guided me through the process, used the sharp, broken edge of glass to scrape the horn smooth. Scraping with broken glass works very well on horn.
This was all AWESOME! I never knew how they made clay! Makes me appreciate the clay I used in school much more. Meeting the bison who donated the horn was an cool touch. Now I know how to deal with the parts of bamboo I couldn't figure out how to remove when I was a kid! Oh, and the master-petting-the-cat-like-an-evil-super-villain at 17:57 was classic!
I love that this channel is from Minneapolis because I can just visit all the same sites and do similar projects. Thanks for representing the twin cities y’all
Yo... Annalise, you are a badass, just using a chop saw to slap off edges of a circle like that. I’d never do that out of fear for my fingers. I respect you friendo
Being from Minnesota myself, it’s always so fun to watch you guys go to well known places here; every time I think to myself “hey!!! I’ve been there too!!!” 😂
@@CarpetHater Yeah, we have a long standing scout tradition in my family as well. I am proud of the fact that my family was actually one of the founding members of our tribe. You should've seen the things we build in camps just with logs and some rope. A carousel was one of the easier things XD and I will never forget the tent castles we built when we had camps together with other scout groups.
I really liked everyone in this video, I hope we see more of them! Really impressed by how the instruments came out, and the ocarina dance was fun haha.
YOU are all so funny as hell! Never a dull moment. Incidentally, I saw a Japanese video article on wind instruments made from unusual things and one was made from a carrot.
I think starting with wind instruments was ambitious! It's actually very difficult to get the hole placement and size tuned correctly on a first try...I applaud the great effort! But, I think I would have tried to start with strings. I feel like a home-made violin, fiddle, zither... something would maybe be a bit easier. ...I mean, I'm not expecting a Stradivarius--the shape (and thus tone) doesn't have to be perfect. I'm talking just a hollowed body, and then some gut strings with a horse-tail bow. I bet you could make a pretty darn decent string instrument, especially because it's easier to modify the string length and tightness to get the pitches you want instead of having to start all over if it goes awry. Also, I'd love to see some hide drums. :) Maybe a rain stick? If you could make a didgeridoo, I think I'd have to support you on Patreon.
okay, i was also super happy when the ocarina worked! that was adorbs holy carp, that flute works NICE! the horn was great! i like it! we need more videos with the kids (sorry, i dunno how to call them).
From making my arrows from bamboo I know you can pop the chambers simply by inserting a heated meta rod and burn through the chamber walls before straightening ...it’s either that or pop the chambers with a needle at the nodes so the shafts don’t explode.
the song at the end... it has that school talent show feel to it, majestic!
A classic if you will.
Such a supportive boss. The intensity of that clapping shows you he loved every second of their songs.
It reminded me of Shia LaBeouf applauding 'actual cannibal Shia LaBeouf' same intense clapping
@@WarrenNewman yeah i think he was trying to copy that
@@shudini985 That is absolutely what he was doing, lol
This and Shia were referencing Citizen Kane guys. I haven't even seen Citizen Kane but that scene is famous yo.
I am pretty sure he was just happy they stopped.
When you are away traveling so you let your interns do all the work
He deserve best boss of the year award.
nothing like cheap labor.
The moment the girl who made the ocarina, danced I lost it
@@Baitrix1 its another peraon who made the dance dumbass go to school
@@chungusisamemer8167 Hey dumbass, Baitrix didn't say that the girl created it, he literally said that she was dancing the kids dance. Learn to read, fuckwit and go back to school while you're at it
@@diablotry5447 i'm pretty sure he meant the orange shirt kid didn't make the dance (because he didn't).
I have made many ocarinas myself so it was entertaining to watch her go through the same problems that I did when I first started
@@ex_dimo yup right
*Makes ocarina*
"Do the holes work?"
*ACCIDENTALLY plays the Zelda treasure jingle*
Ya
The jingle is literally
C D E F
you opened the quote with a * and closed it with a "
Time stamp
Emiliano lewis 13:31
the annual general meeting of the asthmatic society sounded great at the end
Get back to work!
I can't stop laughing at this comment 😂
The end result was terrifying. Cool, but terrifying.
Why?
@@peggyh.6569 It's cool what they did. But it also sounds... well... eerie I guess, because it's so dissonant but sometimes it almost fits which makes me shiver for a moment. It's hard to describe.
it was sad xd
@@mayo2877
Oh, I thought you just found them being able to make instruments in the end frightening.
@@chebypattern Lol, that too xD
The instruments are the equivalent of letting your kid draw you and the drawings is bad, but you appreciate the effort put into the drawing.
With one of your kids actually talented at drawing but you want them all to feel special so you just tell them they all did excellent.
Regarding the clay: Processing it can be quite tricky. I made numerous beginner's mistakes as well^^
-Don't put whole chunks in the water, as they will form a slick outer layer that protects the inside from dissolving
-Thoroughly dry them first (breaking them up a bit helps with that)
-Then use a rubber mallet (or something similar) to grind them down, as a metal hammer will grind the stones and sand in the clay a bit, adding unwanted material
-Sift the dry powder to filter out stones, twigs and other organic material. The finer the sieve, the better
-Put the fine powder in a tall container (e.g. a bucket, or a glass jug to check the sediment) and add large amounts of water
-Stir until everything is dissolved, then wait for a bit (a few minutes) until the sand settles down
-Carefully pour the murky water through a sieve, without pouring out the fine sand and sediment from the bottom of the container
-Use flat screens instead of round ones, as the clay tends to form clumps more easily
-Rinse and repeat^^
-Pour the final batch into a wider container and wait
-Let the clay settle down until a clear layer of water forms on top
-You can try to gently pour/siphon out most of it, or you let it evaporate under sunlight or at a warm spot with some ventilation
-When the clay has a batter-like consistency, you can put it on a larger surface to speed up the drying process or put it in a piece of cloth.
(Not every towel or piece of cloth will work, though, as clay particles are really small.)
-If you spread it out, avoid forming crests and peaks while spreading it, as those will dry faster than the rest
-Use an absorbent surface material that won't contaminate the clay. (Didn't have any at hand, so I had to wait.)
-After quite a while, the clay will change color a bit and won't really stick to your hands anymore
-When it has a rough, Play-Doh-like quality, begin to work it a bit (research some techniques online), then form a block
-Wrap the block in plastic wrap to prevent the clay from drying out and store it
A block I made about 2 years ago is still malleable. If it smells musty/earthy, that's normal. I read that letting the clay "ripen" over a longer period improves its quality. Some people with sensitive skin might get skin irritations from the mold, though. If your clay isn't processed enough (if it's too gritty) the clay will tend to break while forming more delicate shapes. A simple test ist to roll out a small clay snake and wind it around a finger. If it breaks apart, further processing is needed. Adding sand to a slippery clay is much easier than removing sand from a gritty one.
Further testing:
-Roll the clay to an even thickness
-Take a cookie cutter, glass, etc. and cut out a few circles
-Measure the diameter and let them dry evenly and slowly
-Measure the shrinkage in diameter and thickness after drying
-Fire them (research best practices online), then measure further shrinkage in diameter and thickness
-Some of them might crack. Grind them down a bit and add the so-called grog into a batch of clay to strengthen it
-Take measurements of the ratio of grog and clay
-repeat the tests with varying thickness and diameter with and without grog
-Write everything down
Further research:
-Glazes
-Firing process
-Different ceramics and their recipes
-Tools and techniques (flywheel, grafting pieces of clay together, sanding and polishing, etc.)
It's quite a broad topic.
I think you should use the song they played in your outro from now on.
Dekkia yes I support that idea wholeheartedly
Andy doing the Shia Labeouf at the end was a nice throwback
IKR! I'm glad someone else caught it
Well now we know what he was doing while he left his interns
Its from Citizen Kane lol
7:40
I personaly would never do this with a chop saw. I work with woodworking Machines everyday, and there is many ways to use them that they are not intended but that just looked unsafe to me. The forces of the spinning blade will easily drag your hand into the blade when the piece of Wood is so short, and even worse it was round so you get minimal Contact to the fence with the piece.
A bandsaw would be better or just a normal handsaw would do that job easily, pretty much no time loss and a lot safer.
Otherwise really cool video.
Who needs fingers anyways?
@@garethbaus5471 you need them for when your hungary
There's actually a way to use your hands as a flute. It's really hard to describe in words but you basically cup them together with one curved and one more flat so the only gap is between your thumbs, then put your thumbs against your mouth and use them as the reeds. You can change the pitch of the note by changing the angle of the flatter hand (I use my right hand), and with enough air you can even get high notes with the flatter hand extended enough to make another gap. My dad showed me how to do this for imitating owls and mourningdoves, I was also able to get distinct enough notes for simple songs.
The bamboo flute demonstrated at the beginning is a quenacho, not a quena. The flute that was made was the size of / tuned like a normal quena. However, a different species of bamboo is used to make quenas. It has a completely round cross-section, and grows with long enough spaces between the nodes that you don't have to break through them. Typically, the node is used as the bottom end of the flute, with a hole placed in the center that can be used to help tune the lowest note. For a round mouthpiece, like the one pictured at the beginning, a round file is used, not dremel bits. They also exist with square mouthpieces, which are cut with knives. The guy who introduced it said it's a relative of the shakuhachi, but Andean and Japanese cultures didn't interact with each other - the two flutes are just superficially similar.
Good thing my ears were already bleeding from the breathy sounds of what I could describe as homemade flutes from hell
The last few moments of this video have made me laugh so much, more than I have in a really long time. Thank you. Great video.
They should have played "My Heart Will Go On" at the end, but oh well.
Also nice Citizen Kane/Shia Labeouf reference.
I lost it at the end when you were petting your cat to them playing the instruments they made.
Sam, the woman working with the clay, has a great personality that really shows through. Very natural sense of humor and delivery. Great in front of the camera.
The homage to the clapping scene from _Citizen Kane_ at the end is what tells you that you're not crazy for thinking the music sounded less-than-stellar 😅
I get this is kind of off topic but I think that if you haven't tried already you should make wine everything from the bottle to the cork maybe even a label if you feel like being fancy. It's honestly astonishing how much work goes into crafting things as simple as table wine from picking the grapes to harvesting the cork it would really be a neat video.
Am i the only one who thought Andy was petting the football in his arms near the end? took me a few more takes to realize it was a cat HAHA
Your comment made me imagine this scene, and I burst out laughing.
To be fair his football is furry.
you just validated all the haters who say woodwind instruments sound horrible lol
But can you make handflute from scratch
I mean kinda...? It comes with a child attached though.
@@GyroCannon You need to remove the hands first, save them for later, when you get hungry.
I see no one else seemed to mention that you don't need a bit on bamboo just a stout stick. The girl working on the horn started on the wrong end. Maybe I've just never seen a horn played from that end.
6:24
When you push a little too hard
god damn it
One of my absolute favorite things about this channel is seeing people create something and being impressed with themselves when it works. That is the pride of working with one's hands and it really is an amazing feeling. Great video as always, even if I am seeing this one a few years late.
17:20 When you have a Doctorate in music yet confuse Mary Had A Little Lamb and Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.
right?
tho--glad to know im not the only one that defaults to Mary had a little lamb when trying out an instrument....
Angry Manatee It was cut, so he probably played both, or couldn’t make twinkle twinkle little star work.
1:22 The duduk is what the sound of the tsungi horn in Avatar: the last airbender is based on.
Love that hunky flute expert!! What a Dreamboat **sighs**😍🥰
i thought that was a weird thing to say, and then i saw who made the comment. I knew there was something fishy going on...
@@emilynightingale7758 aw sheit, busted! 🤪
My zucchini saxophone's still better
I mean it used to be, I ate it after I'd made all my flatmates angry enough
I'm a bagpiper, and i'd love to see you make a bagpipe from scratch!
"Stay up to date and be disappointed with everyone else" :)) Glad you were with us during that ride andy!! We were not alone!
For the bamboo, you usually drop a hot cinder in one end and it burns through each layer.
My ears.....ahhhhh........The guy 1st place, the ocarina 2nd place (little more work would have been first place by miles), Bison horn........wellllll at least you can play jaws. In the end the musical guy (I am horrid with names) takes home the gold. He had lots of positive to say even while being very critical. Ocarina would have killed......still could.
I’m in my 70s, my grandfather, who was born in 1879 and had a muzzle-loading rifle when he was a kid told me how to smooth a cow (bison, what-have-you) horn. No sandpaper. He, and I as he guided me through the process, used the sharp, broken edge of glass to scrape the horn smooth. Scraping with broken glass works very well on horn.
the woman who made the ocarina is precious and i love her
i freaking love Andy. petting the cat😂😂
Glad you got some time off Andy’ love the humor y’all bring and the projects you guys do!!
"see if I have the agility.......oooooooooo I DON'T have the agility!!" *spits coffee*
This was all AWESOME! I never knew how they made clay! Makes me appreciate the clay I used in school much more. Meeting the bison who donated the horn was an cool touch. Now I know how to deal with the parts of bamboo I couldn't figure out how to remove when I was a kid!
Oh, and the master-petting-the-cat-like-an-evil-super-villain at 17:57 was classic!
The end killed me. Also credit to the ocarina girl she was pretty cool!
Pouring clay water down the sink is brave 😂
Lmao, all I could hear at the end was screaming. “Help me” “we where forced to do this” “don’t beat us again papa”
Idk, just me?
I heard a preschool talent show at the end
13:22 I'm willing to bet she's went to a few Cybergoth raves in the past.
Sam, Joey, and Annalise seem like a great addition to the team. Hope to see more of them.
The guy who made the flute has to be Andy's brother. They have very similiar expressions
I think this is a cover of the dude who played Africa by Toto on a potato
The girl with the ocarina reminds me to Aubrey Plaza
Good that you're using protection, never go raw clay.
I love the fact that you're from MN and I get all the references of where you went.
I love that this channel is from Minneapolis because I can just visit all the same sites and do similar projects. Thanks for representing the twin cities y’all
This video was the best in a long time. (You post rarely)
Not sure if this is a diss on the quality or the rarity of uploads.
I know we need more pan flute bands to keep away the genea pigs
Couldn’t stop laughing during the recital part.
16:06 my last two braincells when they realize it's summer vacation
13:16 best part of the video, the excitement is palpable
Did i see a wicker man in the intro? I made one for may day and set it on fire with “sumer is icumen in” playing in the background, great fun.
I really like your team's personalities, they seem like they're having fun
I think this is one of the funniest episodes yet!😂😂😂😂
The girl who made the ocarina actually seemed like a really cool person
Yo... Annalise, you are a badass, just using a chop saw to slap off edges of a circle like that. I’d never do that out of fear for my fingers. I respect you friendo
The final recital had a real chaotic and cursed energy
Make a guitar from scratch please!!!!! That would be awesome!
That ocarina girl is my spirit animal 😂😂
These people are fun. Would like to see more of them as well.
So far this has been my favorite HTME video. I would really love to see the interns in more videos.
Im glad your cat stuck around because mine ran out of the room with a terrified look on her face as soon as the final recital started
The music at the end... My ears are crying tears of blood!😂
I have made many ocarinas myself so it was entertaining to watch her go through the same problems that I did when I first started
Being from Minnesota myself, it’s always so fun to watch you guys go to well known places here; every time I think to myself “hey!!! I’ve been there too!!!” 😂
*Ahem* DON'T PUFF OUT YOUR CHEEKS
THAT SONG AT THE END- TRULY A MASTERPIECE
The final recital was everything... No pun intended
How to make everything: Uilleann / Union Pipes
omg the final recital lmao
My uncle taught us how to make flutes out of reed when I was 8 :) no power tools needed only a knife and patience
When i was a scout i learned how to make a flute/ whistle from a birch stick. Mostly only worked during wet seasons. Only a knife was needed
@@CarpetHater Yeah, we have a long standing scout tradition in my family as well.
I am proud of the fact that my family was actually one of the founding members of our tribe. You should've seen the things we build in camps just with logs and some rope.
A carousel was one of the easier things XD and I will never forget the tent castles we built when we had camps together with other scout groups.
@@FreyasArts i wish wood carving was still a occupation, i would have loved to have that as my summer job.
This was hilarious. Brilliant episode!
The ocarina maker's "It works!" dance is hilariously adorable!
this was a really nice video with all the interns, really liked it
I really liked everyone in this video, I hope we see more of them! Really impressed by how the instruments came out, and the ocarina dance was fun haha.
YOU are all so funny as hell! Never a dull moment. Incidentally, I saw a Japanese video article on wind instruments made from unusual things and one was made from a carrot.
I think starting with wind instruments was ambitious! It's actually very difficult to get the hole placement and size tuned correctly on a first try...I applaud the great effort!
But, I think I would have tried to start with strings. I feel like a home-made violin, fiddle, zither... something would maybe be a bit easier. ...I mean, I'm not expecting a Stradivarius--the shape (and thus tone) doesn't have to be perfect. I'm talking just a hollowed body, and then some gut strings with a horse-tail bow. I bet you could make a pretty darn decent string instrument, especially because it's easier to modify the string length and tightness to get the pitches you want instead of having to start all over if it goes awry.
Also, I'd love to see some hide drums. :) Maybe a rain stick?
If you could make a didgeridoo, I think I'd have to support you on Patreon.
the coughing really sells the final performance. i almost shed half a tear (in horror)
"A weird solution is still a solution." Yessir! The only kind of solutions I can come up with most if the time.
I love the Shia LaBeouf reference at the end
okay, i was also super happy when the ocarina worked! that was adorbs
holy carp, that flute works NICE!
the horn was great! i like it!
we need more videos with the kids (sorry, i dunno how to call them).
I hear the breathy moans of drunken ghosts singing in the next room.
I love your mom's attic is your studio space. Way to spend that college fund sir
that bit at the end where he stands up. I see you Andy! XD love it
From making my arrows from bamboo I know you can pop the chambers simply by inserting a heated meta rod and burn through the chamber walls before straightening ...it’s either that or pop the chambers with a needle at the nodes so the shafts don’t explode.
Well....that ending was terrifying
Again the best UA-cam channel
6:24
When a bathroom disaster is cleaned with a towel
Alternative title diy club forges alliance with the glee club to impress diy guildmaster returning form his pilgrimage
My god finally someone uses a pitch reference to tune their flute
That ending was golden
This channel is hysterical
Bamboo segments can be removed with a red-hot rebar.
HOw the hell does one get a doctorate in piano performance and composition? NEat.
yall are so great this one was extremely funny hope the vacation went well :]