Buying a Piccolo

Flute History and Instrument Purchase

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<3 Flute and Picc
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Joined: Sun May 25, 2008 11:26 pm
Location: USA
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Post by <3 Flute and Picc »

I will probably be going tomorrow. Its been a week and I had a post-op appointment today and the doctor said everything looked really good. My mouth also feels much better which is important. :P So I really, really hope I'm going tomorrow and if I do, I will definitely post a report.

arabians207
Posts: 36
Joined: Wed Aug 08, 2007 7:10 pm

Post by arabians207 »

So i know this is a little old... Did you get to try them out??

And I just wanted to add that my flute that I started and played on for 5 years was a King. They are older (my mom got hers new in highschool) but I think they are pretty nice. It seemed to be a bit nicer than most other student flutes. At least scale wise, but I think the player is the biggest factor.. I don't have a ton of tuning problems flute or picc. But I would guess their piccolos aren't too bad either.. except older, lol.

When I was looking for a piccolo, I was deciding between a Yamaha and a Gemienhardt that was around 10 years old.. my mom commented that it was younger than her flute.. lol. I'm guessing hers is around 25 years old? Open hold, B foot. I think it was all silver, and heavy wall. No gizmo key though.

andy957
Posts: 97
Joined: Thu Jan 11, 2007 10:18 am

Post by andy957 »

I'm looking to buy a piccolo for my own personal use (not for marching band), meaning eventually to play some chamber music or some of the solo piccolo pieces, or the Vivaldi concerti (w/harpsichord). I went to a local dealer on Sat. and tried out the Gemeinhardt 4P, Gemeinhardt 4W, Yamaha YPC-32 and Yamaha YPC-62. Since I'm a beginner with piccolo (intermediate with flute), what I could produce sound wise was negligible but still I found it very interesting.

The flute specialist was not there that day (I'm going to go back when she's working) to ask questions of, but in terms of what I saw/felt, the prices were quite interesting. The Gemeinhardt 4P was $200 less than the Yamaha YPC-32; so was the 4W vs. the YPC-62. I know sometimes Yamahas are more expensive (I own a Yamaha YPL-461H that I like) and people have their strong opinions vis-a-vis Gemeinhardt in general.

I also know that every thread on this board asking "what should I buy" says that it's a personal choice, and I agree.

I did speak to the flutist there and she said the YPC-62 would be overkill for what I want to do....and the reason was, and this is where I would like your opinions/thoughts, that a wood piccolo has to be broken in and played on a regular basis; if you don't play it regularly, it could crack and have other problems. I don't plan on using it every day, actually maybe there would be a couple of weeks when I wouldn't be using it; is that really a problem?

Everything being equal, I'd rather get a better instrument up front rather than buy a plastic one and 6 months down the line realize I should have gone wood to begin with.

I like the sound of the plastic ones, actually I liked the Sonare but that's not being made any more; some mysterious reason that nobody seems to know the answer to.

Anyway would love to hear the thoughts of the very helpful people on this forum.

fluteguy18
Posts: 2311
Joined: Sun Jul 16, 2006 3:11 pm

Post by fluteguy18 »

Wooden piccs don't neccessarily have to be played regularly. I went several months without playing my wood picc and it was fine. It just needs to be kept in a stable environment while it is being stored. You do have to break them in, and while many sources give you a method of breaking them in, I generally just play them a little more each day over a period of a month.

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