A full Nagahara?
A full Nagahara?
10:46 on Tuesday, February 2, 2010
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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My Yamaha YFL674 needs an urgent COA or two. Too much keys noise, plops and second trill stopper fell off and I glued it back, but needs replacing.
My fantasy was triggered and I began wondering what if I buy a Nagahara silver body + C foot, closed holes offset G (in case they manufacture such an outmoded setup). The headjoint I would use on it is my new Nagahara DA cut .925 HJ
Now, Nagaharas are expensive. Very expensive, in fact. And you would be right if you think I do not need that at my student level. I know, but maybe it would not mind.
But:
What is your opinion about the mechanics and other details, scale, responsiveness, noises, fragility, whatever you could comment?
I would deeply appreciate your feedback and experiences. Thanks a lot!!!!!!!!!
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Re: A full Nagahara?
17:01 on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
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Tibbiecow (480 points)
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J-L, maybe you don't need it, but you would appreciate it. I don't think you need to make yourself guilty over something you could afford and appreciate. Since you already know that this fancy/expensive of a flute is was not strictly necessary to play the flute well, you aren't paying a pile of money so that you will all of a sudden be a 'pro' level player. You are not really a 'student', to my mind, but more an amateur, advancing your knowledge along nicely.
Now, on the other hand, I think it would be worth your time to send your Yamaha to a really good technician and have it completely overhauled, tone holes leveled, etc, by a top notch flute tech. (After all, if you DID eventually end up with a Nagahara flute, you would want a great flute tech to take care of it for you, so you need this flute tech anyway.) You might find that with expert attention, your issues with your Yamaha just go away.
I really love my Yamaha 881. I bought it at a discount on eBAy several years ago, it had a headjoint that should probably have gone back to get melted down. But I replaced the HJ, and it's a dandy flute. It is inline-G, which is slightly annoying, but its adjustment stays so well, probably because of its soldered tone holes and close attention during manufacture. Its keys are light and fast, no key noise.
It is going to cost a chunk of change for its overhaul, which is necessary soon- up to $800 or so...yikes. But I really like it.
I ride horses also, and hear many times about amateur riders acquiring horses with lots more talent than the amateur will ever be able to utilize. As long as the horse has an appropriate temperament for the rider, there is no judgment from the horse (as there will be no judgment from the flute!) that the amateur doesn't really 'need' all of that extra talent.
If you have the desire and $$ to do it, you have my permission And if you feel guilty, you could offset that a little by giving money to music scholarship funds, or some such.
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Re: A full Nagahara?
17:37 on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
17:46 on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
21:37 on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
11:59 on Thursday, February 4, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
13:15 on Thursday, February 4, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
16:44 on Thursday, February 4, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
03:40 on Friday, February 5, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
16:23 on Friday, February 5, 2010
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Re: A full Nagahara?
16:26 on Friday, February 5, 2010
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