Headjoint or new flute?
Headjoint or new flute?
16:23 on Friday, May 15, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
16:29 on Friday, May 15, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
00:41 on Saturday, May 16, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
05:23 on Saturday, May 16, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
15:18 on Saturday, May 16, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
16:53 on Saturday, May 16, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
08:55 on Sunday, May 17, 2009
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
03:32 on Tuesday, May 19, 2009
|
|
|
WingsRS (16 points)
|
Hey all,
damn, those heads I asked for weren't brought up and the agent who was supposed to bring them up said she was looking through available stock that she could let me try. Maybe another week though...
Anyways, if I was to buy a new flute with a better head, I'd have to sell my Yamaha 371, and I'm not sure how much I could get with that. Out of brands like Sonare, Azumi, Resona and Muramatsu, which would you guys recommend for the lowest end model? Actually, would it matter, for those four makers, if i got all silver or just a silver head? I'm sorta weighing a heap of things up here... so any help would be greatly appreciated.
Haha...I just noticed how messy everything looked up there so I'll make dot points for my questions:
1. How much, in Australian dollars, could I sell a Yamaha 371 for (less than a year old)
2. Which brand makes the most affordable, good quality flute out of Sonare (5 Series), Azumi (2000 Series), Resona (no idea which series, but the lowest end) and Muramatsu (EX)
3. Does it matter if the body of the flute is silver or just silver plated? If it does then, Sonare (6 series), Azumi (3000 series), Resona (whichever series has silver bodies) and Muramatsu (GX)
Thanks!
|
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
09:56 on Tuesday, May 19, 2009
|
|
|
Pyrioni (437 points)
|
Two years ago, my uncle - a local repair tech, like many others, so eager to want me to change to a better flute, I refused, I love my Yamaha 211, then he gave me all his NEW headjoints and fit them into my 211 body...
http://x53.xanga.com/bf8f146551635209697169/o163412404.jpg
from top to bottom:
I have Wooden Head (I even have a bamboo head)
then Sonare's Powell Signature silver headjoint (I tried P-cut too)
then Jack Moore handmade silver headjoint
then my grandma's gift - Sankyo Artist's stock NRS-1 silver headjoint
then Muramatsu GX silver headjoint
then Yamaha 371 CY silver headjoint (I tried EC and BC too)
I tried almost every headjoint, and yes I still own those headjoints in the picture (before some vendor come out again and accuse me of stealing other vendors photos)
My teachers tried them too, and they are principals or ex-principals, they all tell me the intonations are bad if you tried to fit into a Yamaha. Becoz most flute body are designed differently, they only match correctly with their STOCK headjoints!! If two different brands combine together, you will get unexpected problems!! My teachers forbidden me to use them(headjoints).
So, I never use those headjoints again, I stick with my Yamaha 211 for 4 years, never changed, I want to make the most of it before change to a new pro-flute.
So my advice as a 14 and a half yo little boy(you can take it lightly): if you have REALLY maximized your 371, then get a new very expensive Powell (conservatory or more expensive ones, 9K aurumite or 12K aurumite is the best), instead of buying middle cheap range pro-flutes. <Added>BTW, here's my sucky playing with my Yamaha 211:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW7cmd3HJeE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43tB4xEu4eA
|
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
13:00 on Tuesday, May 19, 2009
|
|
|
Tibbiecow (480 points)
|
Will a new headjoint do anything for the sound?
Well, yes and no.
No, because it is the player that creates the tone. Unless your ear (listen to LOTS of very good flutists) and your embouchure (practice tone...lots!) can create a good sound, a different headjoint will not magically make you sound better.
But... I do also have to say that yes, a new headjoint CAN affect your sound. You may find that a particular headjoint makes it easier to get the notes to speak, (or articulate) so you can concentrate more on, say, tone color and intonation and dynamics, without focusing so much on whether or not that high (or low) note is going to come out at all. So at that point, you can DEVELOP your tone/sound more easily.
The question will be whether a different headjoint will suit you. For lots and lots of excellent advancing flutists, the stock Yamaha CY will suit perfectly well. For others, another headjoint cut might be preferable.
If I personally had a limited budget, (say my flute was stolen, and I had to replace it out of my own pocket right now...) I would probably have a handmade headjoint on a student flute.
The taper of the head is definitely designed for a particular flute, but to say that only the stock headjoint is designed to work on a particular flute is going a bit too far. Some different HJs will indeed screw up the scale, and have you spending too much effort on intonation, but others will work fine. Once again, and Kara is RIGHT on the mark about this, you just have to try them out and see what happens.
|
|
|
|
Re: Headjoint or new flute?
14:46 on Tuesday, May 19, 2009
|
|
|
|
|
|