Hello :) thank you for your video, I have a beautiful native American flute that I've owned for about a year or so now, Im still learning to play so I haven't played it a ton yet and it has gone through some stages of not being played for a little while. I didn't know that I had to take it apart after playing for 5 minutes and give it a shake to get all the moisture out. Usually I would leave it out of the case although I began traveling around 5 and a half months ago and since then it has always stayed inside the bag.. Even after playing it. I recently noticed it has changed in how it sounds with the top notes being squeeky even when the holes are properly covered. Is this something I can tepair?? Or will I need to get a new flute all together?
Thank you, this is helpful.
Thanks for doing these tutorials. Does the flute need to be oiled on the inside?
I'd like to know as well... my flute is wood with a small amount of coating inside.
Some people do it especially in very dry conditions.
YES, the inside needs more care than outside because off the moisture formed when you play it….this vid is terrible guidance!
Hello :) thank you for your video, I have a beautiful native American flute that I've owned for about a year or so now, Im still learning to play so I haven't played it a ton yet and it has gone through some stages of not being played for a little while. I didn't know that I had to take it apart after playing for 5 minutes and give it a shake to get all the moisture out. Usually I would leave it out of the case although I began traveling around 5 and a half months ago and since then it has always stayed inside the bag.. Even after playing it. I recently noticed it has changed in how it sounds with the top notes being squeeky even when the holes are properly covered. Is this something I can tepair?? Or will I need to get a new flute all together?
Great tips, I have a flute made out of bamboo