Spin off of the "too many flutes" thread. What about piccolos?
Spin off of the "too many flutes" thread. What about piccolos?
13:28 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
15:24 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
15:43 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
16:14 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
17:30 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
18:14 on Thursday, March 1, 2007
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Account Closed (281 points)
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Much like your daughter, I was highly ranked at state contests, ect... and was told that, if I wanted to, I could get very far on my flute. After I was ranked in the top ten young adult flutists in my state, I realized I had accomplished what I wanted on flute and wanted to move onto something else that was "like" a flute so I wouldn't have to struggle too much at the beginning, but a bit tougher to manage. Piccolo is now my main instrument and all I play for sports bands, marching bands, and most concert settings. So, it's not too abnormal for flute players (in my perspective) to want to move on after they've accomplished what they've set out for on the flute.
She's not crazy; just wants a different point of view of music by playing a slightly different instrument! (Since playing piccolo, I've moved onto trumpet and bass drum; at least she isn't interested yet in carrying a bass drum!!!)
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
11:11 on Friday, March 2, 2007
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Tibbiecow (480 points)
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I really like playing piccolo, especially in a large concert band setting, because you can actually hear what you are playing. I find the piccolo a fun challenge because it is difficult to play in tune, and have a sweet tone rather than just belting out shreiks from Hades.
What the anti-piccolo, brass-playing band directors don't realize about the piccolo, is that they are hearing a DIFFERENT instrument playing out of tune. The piccolo, in tune, will emphasize a saxophone that is not in tune. Take out the piccolo, and the sax is still off, but the harmonics/overtones don't stick out as much. For example, listen to Prokofiev's Lieutenant Kije. When the piccolo sounds dreadful, it is not because it is out of tune but because the oboes are playing a half-step difference. (I think its the oboes, maybe its the clarinets?) Anyway, if someone's out of tune, it usually seems to be a piccolo problem when it often is not.
Also, the conical bore of the piccolo is the reverse of the flute with its tapered head, which means a flute goes sharper as the notes get higher while a piccolo actually goes flatter. So add flutes playing way high to a picc in the upper register and you can get problems there.
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
14:27 on Friday, March 2, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
18:19 on Monday, March 5, 2007
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Re: Spin off of the too many flutes thread. What about piccolos?
20:42 on Monday, March 5, 2007
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