Octave note help!
Octave note help!
09:27 on Saturday, January 30, 2010
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Pyface (157 points)
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Hi
I'm a mainly self-taught flautist and I have a major issue. When I'm playing the middle octave (trouble notes E,G,B and sometimes A) I flicker, almost, between the middle and lower octave notes. I really need help!
Pyface
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Re: Octave note help!
11:56 on Saturday, January 30, 2010
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spark12 (64 points)
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Ahaha. Same happened to me before (and still today, at times). You should practice the middle register every single day. Start with something stable, like a B natural on the staff. Then go up a half step, B-C-C#. (Long tones! As long as you can do them). Then C-C#-D, C#-D-D#, etc, etc, up to B. Try to keep the same quality tone you made previously. Try practicing that the oppostie way, too, like from high B and down. Overtones might also help with the B. Finger a low E, and keep the same fingering down and play the middle E, then the B (so you have to control the airstream ONLY). Once the B is stable, switch to the regular B fingering, and vise versa. And also, think about air support. Sometimes, it's not just the embouchure. And if you can, please try getting a private teacher. We have no idea what you might be doing wrong...and it takes time for you to understand how to produce a good tone and how to manipulate air support as best as possible.
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Re: Octave note help!
16:27 on Saturday, January 30, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
20:38 on Saturday, January 30, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
00:19 on Sunday, January 31, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
10:51 on Sunday, January 31, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
22:14 on Sunday, January 31, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
17:34 on Monday, February 1, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
10:40 on Tuesday, February 2, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
12:57 on Tuesday, February 2, 2010
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Re: Octave note help!
19:44 on Tuesday, February 2, 2010
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Pyrioni (437 points)
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Spark12 is right, it is much simplier to use Trevor Wye's way (actually his way was just Marcel Moyse's way) - practise long tone daily, and as loud as you can, chromatically down and then up, play each note very loud, on the verge of before cracking, then you will know and will remember what force and what embouchure you will need for each notes and what are their cracking point.
<Added>
Micron is correct, it is lacking good embouchure and strong abdominal support
<Added>
Yes, the Overtones I mentioned was about the harmonic series of tones. American square shaped embouchure hole gives more overtones because (I think) more contact points(wind hitting points) gives more different waves, therefore more projective. Japanese oval shaped embouchure hole gives relatively less overtones because there is less contact points or because oval shape made the wind focused into one point, therefore lesser overtones, lesser overtons means less projective but purer tone and sweeter sound is produced. In Asia, we determine buying a American flute or a Japanese flute this way, depending on the volume or the sound we want/like.
Also, the force you blow changes the overtones(harmonic series), the harder you blow, the more overtones are heard, therefore sounded colder; the softer you blow, the less overtones can be heard, therefore sounded warmer, purer and sweeter.
<Added>
also, rounder your embouchure, the lesser your overtones. flat embouchure give more overtones, this is my experience. ;)
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