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The Music Guru.
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Beyond the Wall
Posts: 4,858
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![]() Quote:
![]() Top to bottom: Bass Flute Alto Flute Soprano Flute with the B foot key (what I personally own and what most professionals use. This flute extends down to the B below middle C) Soprano Flute (no B foot key, good for beginners and intermediate students) Eb Flute (rarely used, I have never seen parts for it nor have I ever actually SEEN one.) Piccolo There are also contrabass flutes, which are played standing up and they are shaped like a backwards 4: ![]() Here are other types of bass flutes as demonstrated by this ensemble: ![]() L - R: Two Contralto flutes in G, two Contrabass flutes in C with B-foot key, one Subcontrabass flute in G with C-foot key. The alto and all the bass flutes are so rare in orchestras simply because they do not have the powerful sound required to cover the bass parts. So for low woodwind parts, composers will write for the bass clarinet, bassoon, and contrabassoon over the bass flutes. The bore of each flute is also a different diameter and the length is different - larger flutes have a larger bore and are longer (hence why the huge flutes have a curved head joint. Playing the large flutes with straight head joints is not anatomically possible.) Personally, I (and most other flutists) prefer to play the soprano C flute, simply because of the fact that there are a myriad of solo works written for it and the orchestral and ensemble parts are not as few and far between as with the other kinds of flutes. But after almost 15 years of playing the soprano flute, it is nice to branch out to the lower octaves. All of these flutes read the treble clef and have the same fingering mechanism as the soprano flute, for easy transition. Basically meaning, if you play one flute, you can play all the rest. This goes for most instruments that come in different sizes as well (like clarinets or saxophones). |
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