I think this is something new that you've never done before and I really enjoyed it except. Such a fun showcase for the whistle makers and sounds of the different keys. I think I prefer the high C and low F keys, but they all sounded really good. Thanks for your hard work!
😯 Loved hearing Painted Heart in this video, it’s one of my favorite songs 😍 I also always enjoy your comparison videos, and this was no exception! It was cool to hear the different colors of all these keys in one go
Thanks for the video Stephanie. I want to extend a big thanks to you because your videos got me into learning to play the whistle a little over 3 years ago. I have moved on to learning to play the Irish Flute but still pull my whistle out from time to time to play them. My favorite keys to play in whistle are mezzo A, Bb, B nat and High C. My Burke Bb is my go to whistle.
Thank you for this fun and informative video. I have discovered my love for the tin whistle about 2 months ago and have already amassed a nice little collection. I have a full set of Lir whistles from Eb to A. Carbony Celtic high D and Mezzo G, and a Tony Dixon Aluminum low D. I enjoy playing them all daily. I like to compare how each of them sound for each song I practice. I start with the high D and then play the song again in another key till I find which whistle I prefer for which song.
Very informative, listening to the different sounds. I was surprised to find I really was drawn to the both F's. I do like the low D but I have small hands and have been afraid I wouldn't be able to properly reach the holes. Thanks!
Oh that was great! I had no idea whistles came in some of those sizes and keys. And of course, you played them all beautifully. Thank you for the neat demonstration. 😀
Thanks for the showcase! I am learning a lot about tin whistle from you. I only have a standard D whistle, but I am intrigued with learning some of the others that are on the lower side.
WOW! Thanks so much! This is just what I have been looking for so that I could decide which low whistle suits me. My goodness what a stretch and lots of controlled breathing for the bass A! I love the sound of it but with my arthritis I don't think I would have much success in playing it!
Nice one Stephanie. I love the low A whistle sound but I was a bit concerned that you were going to fall over backwards to keep it in shot! Keep up the good work.
Only in your magical performance can I listen to such an amazing collection of absolutely phenomenal covers of this incredibly beautiful music. Thank you CutiePie 👍👏🌹🌹🌹💕.
Favorite range is the mezzos. Carbony B flat and A are my go-to, they have the balance of brightness with resonance as well. B flat is a great key, since it corresponds to many E flat sax backing tracks. High whistles a bit too chirpy for me, and I don't have enough air to play the low D yet.
tbh E and Bb, D and G are best in terms of cost vs sound, ofcourse the larger low whistles are great but they cost the same or even higher then some lower end Irish flutes, so as a musician I own all of them but the mentioned 3 are the ones I use most
I got John Bushby of Shearwater Whistles to make me a Bass G. It's a stretch 😝 Btw, very interesting demo. Don't know why, but there's something special about Alto F.
I meant to mention this to you before, but kept forgetting. Your name is known outside of whistling world. I am a member of The Tool Show, and on Monday nights we have a live meeting. In that meeting we talk about the show, videos, and UA-cam producing videos. Rob, who runs the channel, was talking about what various UA-camrs do. And for the one thing he said “Cutiepie does it, and she is very successful with it.”
I absolutely loved the video! It's so awesome to be able to hear the tonal differences between the ranges. Quick question: the jig you're playing on the mezzo-F and Eb, do you happen to know its name? I really like it, and I'd love to find the B section! Thank you so much for all that you do!
Hello Stephanie, thanks to your advice, I found mine Leading Tone A whistle😊🎼. The magic of the song Boolavogue ,played by Anthony Murphy on his A whistle, still captivates me. When I was looking for a groundbreaking tutorial, I didn`t really get any further. Is my idea unrealistic, because most learners play on a D whistle? It`s rare that anyone asks about it. Am I just imagining the greater magic? Thank for your time.
Thank You so much for the video I almost never hear anything about the Messo range. So thank you it was really useful. Just saw you are going to do a tut on Painted Heart | by 藤原育郎 THANK YOU . I can wait!❤
About the songs Boolavogue and The last Rose of Sommer played by Anthony Murphy on a hand-made A whistle, I began to learn D-whistle. But I love the magical sound of A. Because I lack the experience with different whistles sounds, I have a question. With which A whistle could I get closer to my goal? Thank you very much in advance.
It depends what type of sound you're going for. Do you want something soft and breathy? Textured? Or clean and sweet sounding? Raw and crisp? Rich and strong? If you don't have a voice/tone preference then any A whistle will be fine.
Great playing 👍, I was wondering if you know which whistle is used for the Lonesome Boatman by the FInbarr Fury the Irish Folk Singer If you heard of him , also is the whistle holes are the same or do they change and vary per whistle.
Woodwind player here. D is good.. D = all fingers down = D on the page. A "crude" instrument? It is not easy, & it sure sorts out those who can hear what's going on.
That low A looked a bit painful. I guess that is why the bass recorders and some tenors have keys or bent necks. I have heard of whistles with keys but never bent necks. You could hurt yourself playing that last one. Thanks for all this!
You can actually play it whilst kinda looking normal 🤣 you need to sit with it ideally though, not stretch to get into a video 🤣😂 and the Carbony unique design means the finger spacing is the same as a low D whistle! 🤩
Hi. I play the high f and high d. I want go lower but dont want to have to alter my fingering technique by learning the very low whistles. The Mezzos - are they still covered with the fingertips like the higher whistles?
I'm a beginner, and musically ignorant. When I play tabs (for my high D) the higher octave (key?) notes use more aggressive breath, and mellow breath notes are in the key of High D? So if I had a higher key whistle than high D (idk what key that is) would I be able to play those high notes (on High D tabs) with the mellow breath? Then anything higher would be an octave higher than that?
There isn't a whistle higher than D that would play an entire octave higher, so no, unfortunately not. A low D whistle, however, plays notes and octave lower than a high D whistle. So, its low notes are an octave lower, and it's high notes are the same as the low notes on the high D whistle 😊
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Ah got it, thank you. I just have to practice not under or overblowing those high notes then lol. That's cool about the low D whistle, I like those low notes
Do you need specific sheet music for the different keys, or can you just play the same music, as long as you use the same holes on a high A as a high D whistle? How do people approach that?
If you're using whistle tabs that show the fingering, those are usable for every whistle but of course the notes you play change. The lowest note of a D whistle is D but if you use an A whistle, it will be A instead. If you're playing alone using this kind of tabs, you can use any kind of whistle. If you play with other instruments, the key matters. If you're using actual sheet music, the key of the whistle matters because sheet music depicts specific pitches, not fingerings. You will need to transpose the sheet music if you want to change the key you play in.
So I like lots of the lower tones whistles. I already know I have issues with the piper's grip. I just ordered a low A. And now I'm wondering WHICH A they're sending! Yikes!
I was just curious, why do you play some holes with your finger tips vs others with the lower part of your fingers. Is this preference or is this the traditional way of playing? I just started down the rabbit hole of whistles
@@BenjaminMcCall86 Hello! 😁 Oh, you're in for a lot of fun! Ok here goes the explanation: AS whistles get lower in pitch they get larger in size, and the holes get further apart. This is too make sure the instrument plays in tune The wider hole spacing (and larger holes) makes them more difficult to cover fully. As the whistles get larger I use something called 'the pipers grip' which is a different hand position. It allows you to cover the holes more accurately and more easily when they're further apart ❤️
You can buy them all online. They are sold individually by the different whistle makers. I have reviewed each of these whistles on my channel and there are links to different websites under each review 😊
Do you have a video where you talk about how many whistles someone needs to have to cover all their repertoire? Or, what you would own if you had to reduce your whistle stash to a minimum? There must be some philosophy about all this, right?
@@teddidread well really you only need the most common keys of whistle. Eb, D, C, Bb, A, G and F. Maybe an E... You don't really need both low and high whistle versions of each.
Most definitely not 😂 it's small but very high pitched so it's quite a disturbing sound 😂 although it might ACTUALLY be quieter due to it's size, it doesn't seem it at all! Think of those high pitched dog whistles, vs a referee's whistle...
@@artistjoh these are the most common. Otherwise you can sometimes request additional keys from whistle makers, such as F#, D#, C# or B. You can even get quirky in different scales from 'Erik The Flutemaker' who makes an Arabian pennywhistle that uses a different scale.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Thank you. I am loving your videos. Watching lots of them. Just getting into the tin whistle at age 69. I am an art historian and doing some research into early Australian colonial art, and discovered the first European music played in the colony was a fife hornpipe jig, and the tin whistle is kind of the modern way of recreating that sort of music, so here I am, starting my journey. BTW, apart from tunes like The Wild Colonial Boy, Bound For South Australia, Botany Bay, etc I am more interested in popular music from the 60's and 70's, Beatles, ABBA, Beegees, etc, but finding it difficult to find music books with that kind of music for tin whistle. Do you have any suggestions of how to find music like that?
@@artistjoh you could try sheet music for a different instrument, flute, oboe, clarinet, trumpet - any single melody-line sheet music will work. It might not always be in the right key for your D whistle though 🤷♀️ that's why so many different keys exist 😁 and of course won't have tabs printed
@@CutiepieTinWhistle That requires learning to read music. Like most beginners, we want to do it all at the beginning. Sadly, we must learn patience, and one step at a time. I have been inspired by Bemjamin Franklin who was a violin virtuoso at age 80. When asked about how he became so accomplished he said that at age 70 his schedule changed and he found he had an extra 10 minutes of free time every day, so he decided to buy a violin and learn the instrument. He is reputed to have said "Madam, what you have just heard is the sum of ten minutes practice per day for 10 years." Of course he already played several other instruments before taking up the violin so he had a head start. Besides the violin he is known to have been a guitarist, a harpist, and he played the glass armonica, which is several spinning glass bowls or wine glasses with water in them, and making the sounds by rubbing the rims with the finger. Franklin was the inventor of that instrument (in 1761) and had a reputation for genius playing. Franklin was a very inspirational guy.
I still prefer the Chinese xiao flute that will do every note you did with only one instrument. It does require some years of air control skill development.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle It's so cute that you call yourself big. I'm 200 cm and my biggest flute is 29 cm. It was very nice to see the difference in all the brands.
You can actually play it whilst kinda looking normal 🤣 you need to sit with it ideally though, not stretch to got into a video 🤣😂 and the Carbony unique design means the finger spacing is the same as a low D whistle! 🤩
Yes, although if you're learning online, or with a tutor, most will use a D whistle, so it's certainly considerably easier if you have a D whistle. High or low is fine. You can follow all my tutorials on a low D whistle, no problem at all! Having a cheap high D whistle to learn on works well if you already have a lower whistle in a different key. Once you have a good idea of how the melody goes, you can simply switch to the lower whistle 😊 A lot of the *cheap* whistles aren't...wonderful. Of the very cheap (generation, feadog, Clarke) the Clarke Sweetone and Feadog pro are the better options. Tony Dixon DX005 is a nice little plastic whistle, not too expensive. iVolga also make a reasonably priced wooden whistle (from big whistle.co.uk) but DO get one with the metal bits on.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Thanks a lot for the response. I appreciate it. I’m in the US. Could you please drop a link for alto whistles. I love the way they fit in music. Not too high and not too low.
@@Natano-v4p I'd still recommend getting yourself a cheap D whistle. Learning without one will be very difficult. Lots of whistle makers provide alto whistles. You'll find a selection of reviews on my channel, they are sold individually at the respective makers websites so there's not really a one-link-fits-all solution I can send unfortunately. If you check my playlists though, you'll see 'whistle reviews' which houses all my tree videos in one place 😁 Lower whistles tend to be more expensive. Affordable places to start would be: James Dominic Music Tony Dixon iVolga Shearwater Whistles River Whistles - (3D printed, though they're fragile and often break in the mail when traveling long distances)
@@CutiepieTinWhistle ahh I have not luck finding a website that has an Alto D whistle. Is there a link you can provide? I like the low D whistles but the alto is the sweet sound in between that I really love.
I love the high F sounds solid.
I have been searching for a video that compares all the keys that whistles come in, not necessarily the brand. So thank you for that!
That high Eb sounds incredible. I'm usually drawn to low whistles, but my goodness its so warm and mellow. Maybe the brass?
I think this is something new that you've never done before and I really enjoyed it except. Such a fun showcase for the whistle makers and sounds of the different keys. I think I prefer the high C and low F keys, but they all sounded really good. Thanks for your hard work!
totally awesome i liked the low F, also the low B that looked like a bansuri
Thanks for this information. The high C whistle sounds very good, lots of color
That bass A is pretty much an organ pipe with holes 😅
I'm ready for a low D ! Thank you for the encouragements!
😯 Loved hearing Painted Heart in this video, it’s one of my favorite songs 😍
I also always enjoy your comparison videos, and this was no exception! It was cool to hear the different colors of all these keys in one go
You know I thought I'd already made a tutorial for it but I can't find it anywhere 😂🤣 so that's next week!
Glad you enjoyed the comparison though 💚💚
@@CutiepieTinWhistle 😆 Haha, looking forward to next week, then!
Thanks for the video Stephanie. I want to extend a big thanks to you because your videos got me into learning to play the whistle a little over 3 years ago. I have moved on to learning to play the Irish Flute but still pull my whistle out from time to time to play them. My favorite keys to play in whistle are mezzo A, Bb, B nat and High C. My Burke Bb is my go to whistle.
Oh this was very interesting to listen to and hear the differences
Thank you for this fun and informative video. I have discovered my love for the tin whistle about 2 months ago and have already amassed a nice little collection. I have a full set of Lir whistles from Eb to A. Carbony Celtic high D and Mezzo G, and a Tony Dixon Aluminum low D. I enjoy playing them all daily. I like to compare how each of them sound for each song I practice. I start with the high D and then play the song again in another key till I find which whistle I prefer for which song.
Wow, you are wonderful! My Generation never sounds that good, nor does my Howard Low D. You were great on each whistle!!, also you have lovely nails!
You played them all beautifully. I am still partial to the High D and C whistles. 😀
Very informative, listening to the different sounds. I was surprised to find I really was drawn to the both F's. I do like the low D but I have small hands and have been afraid I wouldn't be able to properly reach the holes. Thanks!
Oh that was great! I had no idea whistles came in some of those sizes and keys. And of course, you played them all beautifully. Thank you for the neat demonstration. 😀
Thanks for the showcase! I am learning a lot about tin whistle from you. I only have a standard D whistle, but I am intrigued with learning some of the others that are on the lower side.
WOW! Thanks so much! This is just what I have been looking for so that I could decide which low whistle suits me. My goodness what a stretch and lots of controlled breathing for the bass A! I love the sound of it but with my arthritis I don't think I would have much success in playing it!
This was extremely helpful! Thank you so much
Nice one Stephanie. I love the low A whistle sound but I was a bit concerned that you were going to fall over backwards to keep it in shot! Keep up the good work.
Only in your magical performance can I listen to such an amazing collection of absolutely phenomenal covers of this incredibly beautiful music.
Thank you CutiePie
👍👏🌹🌹🌹💕.
Favorite range is the mezzos. Carbony B flat and A are my go-to, they have the balance of brightness with resonance as well. B flat is a great key, since it corresponds to many E flat sax backing tracks. High whistles a bit too chirpy for me, and I don't have enough air to play the low D yet.
What a wonderful video! ❤ Thank you for all the inspiration you give all of us. Great to compare so many keys possible!
Loved this .. I liked the low F key ,… and sure low D ❤
I love seeing and hearing all the different ones. 🙂 Wonderful!
Thank you for all information, i thought there was only two whistles,loved H D.
Wow well done on the low b!!!!
Made it to the end lol 😅
Love it as always, thanks for this.😊
👏👏👏
Wow!!! You’re incredible !!! Thank you so much for this! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Gracias !! Estoy aprendiendo de cero con tus videos .. " aunque no te entiendo naaada. Pero sos una increíble maestra ★
Great stuff! Your channel and you are great 👍
tbh E and Bb, D and G are best in terms of cost vs sound, ofcourse the larger low whistles are great but they cost the same or even higher then some lower end Irish flutes, so as a musician I own all of them but the mentioned 3 are the ones I use most
Loved this! I have whistles from Bb up to high F, but I really want to get high and low G whistles eventually
I treated myself to an A Karavaev G whistle and it's the most beautiful instrument right after my Lir a whistle, can recommend both highly.
That C tune from phantom of the opera sounds ssoooo goood.
I got John Bushby of Shearwater Whistles to make me a Bass G. It's a stretch 😝
Btw, very interesting demo. Don't know why, but there's something special about Alto F.
I meant to mention this to you before, but kept forgetting. Your name is known outside of whistling world. I am a member of The Tool Show, and on Monday nights we have a live meeting. In that meeting we talk about the show, videos, and UA-cam producing videos. Rob, who runs the channel, was talking about what various UA-camrs do. And for the one thing he said “Cutiepie does it, and she is very successful with it.”
I absolutely loved the video! It's so awesome to be able to hear the tonal differences between the ranges. Quick question: the jig you're playing on the mezzo-F and Eb, do you happen to know its name? I really like it, and I'd love to find the B section! Thank you so much for all that you do!
Thank you! It's Shipping Up To Boston (link in the video description) 💚💚
Hello Stephanie, thanks to your advice, I found mine Leading Tone A whistle😊🎼. The magic of the song Boolavogue ,played by Anthony Murphy on his A whistle, still captivates me. When I was looking for a groundbreaking tutorial, I didn`t really get any further. Is my idea unrealistic, because most learners play on a D whistle? It`s rare that anyone asks about it. Am I just imagining the greater magic? Thank for your time.
Thank You so much for the video I almost never hear anything about the Messo range. So thank you it was really useful. Just saw you are going to do a tut on Painted Heart | by 藤原育郎 THANK YOU . I can wait!❤
About the songs Boolavogue and The last Rose of Sommer played by Anthony Murphy on a hand-made A whistle, I began to learn D-whistle.
But I love the magical sound of A. Because I lack the experience with different whistles sounds, I have a question. With which A whistle could I get closer to my goal? Thank you very much in advance.
It depends what type of sound you're going for. Do you want something soft and breathy? Textured? Or clean and sweet sounding? Raw and crisp? Rich and strong?
If you don't have a voice/tone preference then any A whistle will be fine.
Great playing 👍, I was wondering if you know which whistle is used for the Lonesome Boatman by the FInbarr Fury the Irish Folk Singer If you heard of him , also is the whistle holes are the same or do they change and vary per whistle.
I play loansome boatman in my d whistle ,but sounds good in high d ,it's a great tune
So cool!
I love the key of A
Woodwind player here. D is good.. D = all fingers down = D on the page.
A "crude" instrument? It is not easy, & it sure sorts out those who can hear what's going on.
I like the bass A whistle. That should be good for jazz, mainly.
That low A looked a bit painful. I guess that is why the bass recorders and some tenors have keys or bent necks. I have heard of whistles with keys but never bent necks. You could hurt yourself playing that last one. Thanks for all this!
You can actually play it whilst kinda looking normal 🤣 you need to sit with it ideally though, not stretch to get into a video 🤣😂 and the Carbony unique design means the finger spacing is the same as a low D whistle! 🤩
Bracker Whistles (Scotland) does bent necks for their bass Bb-G
Very nice video 👍🏻
Hi, I like the high D and the low D the most..
Hello, can you play and lay out the fingering of one melody on the flute?
Hi. I play the high f and high d. I want go lower but dont want to have to alter my fingering technique by learning the very low whistles. The Mezzos - are they still covered with the fingertips like the higher whistles?
I'd recommend trying a Lír A whistle. You should still be able to use your finger pads for that.
Wow! Well done 😮😅 it makes much more sense to me now. I just wish my fingers were a little longer 😢
I have a video coming up soon on some low whistles that are made for smaller hands :) Might be useful! x
@@CutiepieTinWhistle thanks I will look out for it. X
I love it, which one do you recommend to play fear no darkness by Adrian Von Ziegler?
That was cool 👍👍
I'm a beginner, and musically ignorant. When I play tabs (for my high D) the higher octave (key?) notes use more aggressive breath, and mellow breath notes are in the key of High D?
So if I had a higher key whistle than high D (idk what key that is) would I be able to play those high notes (on High D tabs) with the mellow breath? Then anything higher would be an octave higher than that?
There isn't a whistle higher than D that would play an entire octave higher, so no, unfortunately not.
A low D whistle, however, plays notes and octave lower than a high D whistle. So, its low notes are an octave lower, and it's high notes are the same as the low notes on the high D whistle 😊
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Ah got it, thank you. I just have to practice not under or overblowing those high notes then lol. That's cool about the low D whistle, I like those low notes
Very nice ! I have a question, it is the same note at the same place for each of them or it change for every tin whistle ? Thanks you 😊
The notes are in different places on different whistles :) This video should help explain it: ua-cam.com/video/SRgKbwRzwAA/v-deo.html
@CutiepieTinWhistle Thanks for the quick response. Im gonna have a look to the video. Cheers
Does anyone know how long you should be expected to wait on a Chris Wall whistle? He seems severely backlogged right now.
Do you need specific sheet music for the different keys, or can you just play the same music, as long as you use the same holes on a high A as a high D whistle? How do people approach that?
If you're using whistle tabs that show the fingering, those are usable for every whistle but of course the notes you play change. The lowest note of a D whistle is D but if you use an A whistle, it will be A instead.
If you're playing alone using this kind of tabs, you can use any kind of whistle. If you play with other instruments, the key matters.
If you're using actual sheet music, the key of the whistle matters because sheet music depicts specific pitches, not fingerings. You will need to transpose the sheet music if you want to change the key you play in.
You have a detailed reply there already, but if you need further info, I have a video here:
ua-cam.com/video/SRgKbwRzwAA/v-deo.html
So I like lots of the lower tones whistles. I already know I have issues with the piper's grip. I just ordered a low A. And now I'm wondering WHICH A they're sending! Yikes!
Low A will usually be just under the Bb. Lovely key, easy to play! Very useful too! I don't think many makers actually produce a bass A.
I was just curious, why do you play some holes with your finger tips vs others with the lower part of your fingers. Is this preference or is this the traditional way of playing? I just started down the rabbit hole of whistles
@@BenjaminMcCall86 Hello! 😁 Oh, you're in for a lot of fun!
Ok here goes the explanation:
AS whistles get lower in pitch they get larger in size, and the holes get further apart. This is too make sure the instrument plays in tune
The wider hole spacing (and larger holes) makes them more difficult to cover fully. As the whistles get larger I use something called 'the pipers grip' which is a different hand position. It allows you to cover the holes more accurately and more easily when they're further apart ❤️
Thanks, that's sweet.
I would like to know how can I buy these instruments.
You can buy them all online. They are sold individually by the different whistle makers. I have reviewed each of these whistles on my channel and there are links to different websites under each review 😊
very good video.
So cute❤
Hi, which high whistle to play in the key of E
I'm not sure, I don't know who makes one
Cual la Key mas usual en musica celta. Thanks
High D
Do you have a video where you talk about how many whistles someone needs to have to cover all their repertoire? Or, what you would own if you had to reduce your whistle stash to a minimum? There must be some philosophy about all this, right?
@@teddidread well really you only need the most common keys of whistle. Eb, D, C, Bb, A, G and F. Maybe an E...
You don't really need both low and high whistle versions of each.
Is the high c whistle the lowest tone in the high range am guessing.
I think the Bb is still considered a high whistle 😊 most things below that are considered mezzo or low.
the undertale music really got me
It would be a big help if you'd identify each whistle key, thank you! Sam.
The name and key of each whistle is at the top left of the screen 👍
Can you please show us every price and where we brought it
I have reviews and further info on each of these whistles here:
ua-cam.com/play/PLfUZy8uhccNivDnl2HiHHuYs9ZC1bDDvF.html&si=EyUVwSZJ1CKssYjY
Is it posible to learn training with a tin whistle C?
It's recommended to use a D whistle if you are learning from UA-cam tutorials. You can still play the C whistle, but it's easier to learn with D.
Haha, your little arms nearly weren't long enough for the finger placement on that bass A
Is a High G quieter than a high D?
Most definitely not 😂 it's small but very high pitched so it's quite a disturbing sound 😂 although it might ACTUALLY be quieter due to it's size, it doesn't seem it at all!
Think of those high pitched dog whistles, vs a referee's whistle...
@@CutiepieTinWhistle I don't care. My neighbors hate me anyway.
What is the song name?
What other keys are made?
@@artistjoh these are the most common. Otherwise you can sometimes request additional keys from whistle makers, such as F#, D#, C# or B.
You can even get quirky in different scales from 'Erik The Flutemaker' who makes an Arabian pennywhistle that uses a different scale.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Thank you. I am loving your videos. Watching lots of them. Just getting into the tin whistle at age 69. I am an art historian and doing some research into early Australian colonial art, and discovered the first European music played in the colony was a fife hornpipe jig, and the tin whistle is kind of the modern way of recreating that sort of music, so here I am, starting my journey.
BTW, apart from tunes like The Wild Colonial Boy, Bound For South Australia, Botany Bay, etc I am more interested in popular music from the 60's and 70's, Beatles, ABBA, Beegees, etc, but finding it difficult to find music books with that kind of music for tin whistle. Do you have any suggestions of how to find music like that?
@@artistjoh you could try sheet music for a different instrument, flute, oboe, clarinet, trumpet - any single melody-line sheet music will work. It might not always be in the right key for your D whistle though 🤷♀️ that's why so many different keys exist 😁 and of course won't have tabs printed
@@CutiepieTinWhistle That requires learning to read music. Like most beginners, we want to do it all at the beginning. Sadly, we must learn patience, and one step at a time. I have been inspired by Bemjamin Franklin who was a violin virtuoso at age 80. When asked about how he became so accomplished he said that at age 70 his schedule changed and he found he had an extra 10 minutes of free time every day, so he decided to buy a violin and learn the instrument. He is reputed to have said "Madam, what you have just heard is the sum of ten minutes practice per day for 10 years."
Of course he already played several other instruments before taking up the violin so he had a head start. Besides the violin he is known to have been a guitarist, a harpist, and he played the glass armonica, which is several spinning glass bowls or wine glasses with water in them, and making the sounds by rubbing the rims with the finger. Franklin was the inventor of that instrument (in 1761) and had a reputation for genius playing. Franklin was a very inspirational guy.
@@artistjoh well, I have a good selection of music and tutorials here, even pop songs, for you to start out with 😁
I still prefer the Chinese xiao flute that will do every note you did with only one instrument. It does require some years of air control skill development.
🎶🎧💕
May I ask you how tall are you? As a reference. That bass A looks huge!!
It's pretty big. I'm 160 cms 😁 it's 78cms long.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle It's so cute that you call yourself big. I'm 200 cm and my biggest flute is 29 cm. It was very nice to see the difference in all the brands.
Essentially 5', 3".
Like the F
The biggest whistle was ebony 😏😂
Looks like you need an hour on the rack to play that bass A 😂
Last one looks like it was made for some eldritch beings and not for humans. lol Sounds nice though.
You can actually play it whilst kinda looking normal 🤣 you need to sit with it ideally though, not stretch to got into a video 🤣😂 and the Carbony unique design means the finger spacing is the same as a low D whistle! 🤩
These mezzo and bass ones are not tin at all. You should call it "great whistle".
Can a beginner learn on an alto whistle? And if so, which brand is cheap but not crap? Thanks
Yes, although if you're learning online, or with a tutor, most will use a D whistle, so it's certainly considerably easier if you have a D whistle. High or low is fine. You can follow all my tutorials on a low D whistle, no problem at all!
Having a cheap high D whistle to learn on works well if you already have a lower whistle in a different key. Once you have a good idea of how the melody goes, you can simply switch to the lower whistle 😊
A lot of the *cheap* whistles aren't...wonderful.
Of the very cheap (generation, feadog, Clarke) the Clarke Sweetone and Feadog pro are the better options.
Tony Dixon DX005 is a nice little plastic whistle, not too expensive.
iVolga also make a reasonably priced wooden whistle (from big whistle.co.uk) but DO get one with the metal bits on.
@@CutiepieTinWhistle Thanks a lot for the response. I appreciate it. I’m in the US. Could you please drop a link for alto whistles. I love the way they fit in music. Not too high and not too low.
@@Natano-v4p
I'd still recommend getting yourself a cheap D whistle. Learning without one will be very difficult.
Lots of whistle makers provide alto whistles. You'll find a selection of reviews on my channel, they are sold individually at the respective makers websites so there's not really a one-link-fits-all solution I can send unfortunately. If you check my playlists though, you'll see 'whistle reviews' which houses all my tree videos in one place 😁
Lower whistles tend to be more expensive. Affordable places to start would be:
James Dominic Music
Tony Dixon
iVolga
Shearwater Whistles
River Whistles - (3D printed, though they're fragile and often break in the mail when traveling long distances)
@@CutiepieTinWhistle thank you very much
@@CutiepieTinWhistle ahh I have not luck finding a website that has an Alto D whistle. Is there a link you can provide? I like the low D whistles but the alto is the sweet sound in between that I really love.