Why do wood flutes sound so different?
03:10 on Saturday, March 1, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
05:14 on Saturday, March 1, 2008
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Scotch (660 points)
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If the material used in the construction is not important (at least with metals), why is it so noticeable when it comes to wood? |
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Probably for the same reason we group different metals together under the rubric metal. After all, there are different kinds of wood too.
Anyway, wood is sweeter, but metal is more brilliant and louder, and over the course of music history more brilliant and louder (especially louder) have triumphed over sweeter. Think of steel strings versus gut strings, guitar nails versus guitar flesh, the violin family versus the viols--and so on.
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
07:11 on Sunday, March 2, 2008
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Bilbo (1340 points)
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Jose,
Micron is basically correct. Wood flutes made it well into the 20th century and are still being played today in serious music. (I believe that Yamaha is still selling a wood Boehm flute.)
http://www.musicalinstruments.com/detail.asp?ProductCode=YamYFL874HW
Visit this You Tube at about 1:39 into the vid you will see two players using wood flutes. This vid goes back to 1938
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_W3Q2KpiqbU
ACtually the most unusual thing about the orchestra in that vid is not the flutes. They were probably very common. It's that it is an all female ensemble.
The primary difference in a wood flute is gnerally in the design. Where on the Boehm metal flute, the HJ is tapered and the body has a straight tube, the Hj of most wooden flutes are straight and the body is tapered to narrower at the foot joint. Boehm's designed was concerned with projection, tone, tuning and consistency of these things. Of course head joint design parameters such as hole size/shape undercut are important.
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
08:42 on Sunday, March 2, 2008
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vampav8trix (445 points)
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I spoke with a rep from the Abell flute company about his wooden flutes. He claimed that there are only 4 manufactures in the world making a wooden flute. Yamaha is one. He is in Ashville North Carolina and two more are in Europe.
http://www.abellflute.com/theabellflute.html
I know Haynes used to make one. I don't know if they still do.
I like the wooden flute. I tried it. It's different.
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
08:44 on Sunday, March 2, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
08:45 on Sunday, March 2, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
20:33 on Sunday, March 2, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
04:26 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
09:05 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Account Closed (491 points)
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concrete and wood are very different than metal... i think that is not a valid comparison.
see these piccolos. bot hby the same manufacturer. and i know you guys can tell the difference. one sounds very empty (like playing in a trash can) and the other sounds bad as well, but sounds more wooden.
http://www.gemeinhardt.com/products/piccolos4P.html
http://www.gemeinhardt.com/products/piccolos4W.html
not all plastic piccs are cylindrical. take a look at the body of a newish plastic picc. they are the conical body you speak of. you can tell just by the look of it.
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
11:47 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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Sorry, I was not addressing anybody in particular, just the general tone.
But probably I am too much sensitive these days and fearful of things that happened in the past.
Sorry again...
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
13:11 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
13:35 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
16:51 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Plekto (423 points)
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http://www.naylors-woodwind-repair.com/Grenadilla.htm
Wood also sound different because it tends to have numerous problems that can and usually do affect it. So what you're hearing as a difference may actually be a defect or a problem that has grown so bad that it needs to be fixed.
Wood is also really hard to keep in top condition. It also can't be machined and worked as precisely as metal, so scale accuracy isn't quite as precise.
Boehm himself recognized this later in life and suggested that a metal body for consistency and a wood headjoint for tone was probably the best compromise, because a wood headjoint affected the tone the most and also was easily replaceable. The body, being metal, was nearly impervious to environmental problems and since it controlled your tuning/notes, this was an optimal choice.
The most famous and often shown picture of him actually has his own flute in such a manner.
http://www.flutehistory.com/Players/Theobald_Boehm/index.php3
Metal body, wood headjoint.
P.S. a neat way to get that wood Yamaha model's sound for a lot less money is to custom order the headjoint. It will fit right onto any Yamaha flute.
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
17:07 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Re: Why do wood flutes sound so different?
19:49 on Monday, March 3, 2008
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Bilbo (1340 points)
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Not to present an argument in favor or against but these pages:
http://www.gemeinhardt.com/products/piccolos4P.html
http://www.gemeinhardt.com/products/piccolos4W.html
Have the very same image of the same piccolo. They are both of a 4W.jpg
I would think that it is a bit more difficult to tell the difference between piccolos but with wood flutes, that aren't lined in metal, I can generally tell I believe because of the bore design, head joint emb. hole and the surface imperfections of wood.
I know thatocccasionally metal players have tried to "imitate" the sound of wood flutes but I don't think that it's adviseable nor successful.
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