Piccolo help??
Piccolo help??
20:26 on Tuesday, August 18, 2009
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i-love-flute (6 points)
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For my town's youth symphony, there are only 4 flutes including me, and from the sound of it none of them can play the piccolo. I played piccolo on almost all of my 8th grade band pieces and I consider myself very good at it. So the director asked me if I had experience with a piccolo and if I owned one, and I don't at the moment.
So basically, I'm looking for a good, very playable, piccolo. My favorite brand is Yamaha, but I can go for others. Also, my master class teacher at a band camp I went to over the summer had a Grenadilla wood flute and she let me try it, and it had such a good sound!
Any recommendations on a piccolo I should get? (I don't have a price range and I most definitely DO NOT want a used piccolo or an all silver body pic.)
What do you recommend?!?
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Re: Piccolo help??
00:59 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: Piccolo help??
17:33 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: Piccolo help??
17:34 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: Piccolo help??
18:32 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: Piccolo help??
19:30 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: Piccolo help??
20:43 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Tibbiecow (480 points)
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A Yamaha 62 or a Gemeinhardt 4W should be available used, rebuilt for less than, or about $1000.
I would try Nancy Shinn of Flutestar http://www.flutestar.com
Send her an email and she'll probably be able to come up with something for you.
If you have a really excellent local technician, you could try eBay- but keep in mind that you will probably have to buy a 'returnable within a 7 day period' instrument. If you keep to Yamha 62 or Gemeinhardt 4W (probably an Emerson grenadilla picc would also do), and have the tech look at it to estimate cost of repairs, you could get a nice instrument that way. But on eBay, you will usually find 'oh, the pads are fine', or 'just rebuilt', or 'I've been playing it and it's fine' but the instrument will need some pads and adjustments to be in good shape.
I agree that a piccolo played poorly, or a metal-body piccolo, can sound dreadfully screetchy. Ick. But if one actually takes the time to learn to play picc well, it can be really rewarding.
And if you find a Haynes all-silver picc in your price range (and tuned at A=440, not 338 or 335 as some of the 1920's and earlier ones were, and a C, not a Db piccolo) you might be really surprised at the sweet and lovely sound they make. I'd sure go for a Haynes silver picc.
Some other model possibilities are Roy Seaman or Zentner, but these will have to be used, since they aren't made anymore. Gemeinhardt bought the Seaman name and the piccs that they're making just aren't as nice as the older ones. But Seaman and Zentner were essentially the same with a different name put on the instrument.
You also might try usedflutes.com
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Re: Piccolo help??
13:33 on Monday, August 24, 2009
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