Emphysema and woodwinds
17:22 on Thursday, October 1, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
20:39 on Thursday, October 1, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
21:17 on Thursday, October 1, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
04:54 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
09:37 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
12:32 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Bilbo (1340 points)
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"I started this thread because the other day I commented with a colleague at the swimming pool that I was studying the flute. His comment was: Oh so nice, it's a pity that it can produce emphysema...."
Hmm, interesting. I wonder where his information came from on this.
Regarding music in general and the flute more specifically, there are a lot of misconceptions I think floating about the pool of consciousness regarding music's bad influences and evil natures.
If you ask me generally, they are old wives tales which have no basis in fact. For example, it may have been at one time, an individual with emphysema visited a doctor and the doctor associated his illness with the fact that he was a known flutist without considering enough evidence of other possibilities.
For my hist., my grandfather (a smoker) died of emphysema but he was 89 and he was told to smoke by a doctor here in the US about 1920. He didn't play music in any way as far as I know.
I also smoked for a few years (It was rather popular back in the 60s.) and at one point while I was taking a univ. flute lesson, there were three prof's in the studio room smoking various manner of tobacco while I was trying to have a lesson. One of the profs was my own flute instructor.
Regarding the flute, I can say that I experienced more viruses and colds back when I was smoking that I could attribute to also playing the flute but since I stopped smoking, these sinus infections and colds are much more rare. I can say from experience that I believe that the effects of nicotine on flute playing aren't good because it constricts the small blood vessels. When you want more lip control and sensation, the nicotine can cause less.
So, I attribute flute playing directly to nothing ill in particular but practicing is an addictive habit that is actually more good for the body and soul than anything detrimental that could happen....other than possibly annoying your family members and the neighbors.
~bilbo
N.E. Ohio
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
13:32 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
17:05 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
17:47 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
21:57 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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vampav8trix (445 points)
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I believe that if one were to investigate this subject, the discussion dates back about 150 years to medical journals of the time. |
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If you think about it; a lot of people smoked back then. That would mean more cases of Emphysema.
Tobacco was still big business in the US.
I couldn't imagine smoking and trying to play the flute. I can't breathe in a smokey room. I am amazed when I come across a wind instrument player who smokes. Some of them can sustain notes for quite a long time. I wonder how much longer they could hold a note if they didn't smoke.
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
21:59 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
23:25 on Friday, October 2, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
04:37 on Saturday, October 3, 2009
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
05:30 on Saturday, October 3, 2009
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Bilbo (1340 points)
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"I couldn't imagine smoking and trying to play the flute. I can't breathe in a smokey room. I am amazed when I come across a wind instrument player who smokes. Some of them can sustain notes for quite a long time. I wonder how much longer they could hold a note if they didn't smoke."
Some answers. As I said, smoking was in earlier times not considered as an addictive drug akin to the illegal ones although it was known that it was addictive AND bad for you. When I was young, smoking as advertised everywhere, on billboards, magazines, in movies and on TV. So, if you wanted to be cool, you should smoke cigarettes like the movie stars, James Dean, Marlin Brando and not only any cigarette but the same brand that they used. Even back in the mid 70's in the movie "Jaws", you can see the town's mayor smoking a cigarette in the hospital lobby like there's nothing wrong with it.
As far as the effects on your breathing. It depends on the individual and the amount, but at first, the lungs aren't damaged greatly. One smoking experience doesn't do that to you. It happens gradually over years as the individual is also becoming addicted to the nicotine physically and psychologically.
So, the lungs basically still work...until serious damage occurs later on.
One only has to look at the Marcel Moyse study books (With the black covers) and see his picture with the pipe. If you look up Moyse's history, he grew up in a family which owned a tobacco store and he smoked cigarette tobacco in his pipe as opposed to pipe tobacco. Moyse also had other lung problems from his childhood which led to asthma but his lungs still worked like a bellows and he probably practiced very hard.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIFlRDum4wY
~bilbo
N.E. Ohio
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Re: Emphysema and woodwinds
08:58 on Saturday, October 3, 2009
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