Whats your age?
Moderators: Classitar, pied_piper, Phineas
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cello is beautiful
I think the Cello is a beautifiul instrument. I love that piece, in the Carnival of Animals, Le Cygne I think.Phineas wrote:I am 39. Been playing flute for approximately 15years. Started out on Cello and Guitar at 7 years old, played professionally at 14. Now I play 30% Music, and 70% Engineering for income. Presently working in Japan. I play flute more often than guitar these days. I stopped playing cello 20 years ago.
Bloody big instrument to lug about. Flute is a little more graceful I think
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Ha ha, music was the only thing that got me out of bed and got any passion in me fired up!MeLizzard wrote:Turned 36 over the weekend, began playing in 1981 (!?!). Don't even say, "Geez, I wasn't born then!". As I'm relatively well-preserved, I hear that from incredulous teens quite a lot (they usually guess 22 ). I have a music ed degree (flute & bassoon), and most of a Masters. I play in two regional orchestras and sing in two good choirs, and play chamber music with my husband ('cellist). I suspect flute/band was the sole motive for many of us to go to school, LOL.
I'm 21, and started playing when i was about 14 I think. I got my grade 5 in less than a few years (ABRSM)
I've been playing the flute , actually practising , for just over a month now and am practising the F major scale at the moment because I can produce that High F at last. Now , to all you youngsters here , I say , keep up the good work in music , because it keeps you young along the passage of life, I know that because Im now 56 . I remember the Great Arthur Rubenstien's answer to a question at his 80th birthday, it goes something like this: " You are a great pianist, what progress can you still look forward to?" , his answer was something like this: " music is endless , and I am still at the beginning of it..."
I played the recorder since 5 or so , but picked up the bassoon at 16 at the White Horse Military Band , as it was given to me by the band leader. I worked hard on it until I auditioned to the radio symphony orchestra in South Africa , and got a post as second Bassoon , after a couple of years , (which I now regret) , I turned to Engineering (My present occupation) but went on playing in various amateur orchestras and chamber groups.
I always envied the flutists along the the way... and I've finally jumped the wagon , and got this Mura EX beauty
I played the recorder since 5 or so , but picked up the bassoon at 16 at the White Horse Military Band , as it was given to me by the band leader. I worked hard on it until I auditioned to the radio symphony orchestra in South Africa , and got a post as second Bassoon , after a couple of years , (which I now regret) , I turned to Engineering (My present occupation) but went on playing in various amateur orchestras and chamber groups.
I always envied the flutists along the the way... and I've finally jumped the wagon , and got this Mura EX beauty
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hi cflutist.. I am also 50.. what a fun time of life this is actually all of the phases in life are pretty terrific... (optimist that i am heheh)
I first picked up the flute in 1975 whilst doing my BA at Latrobe University (Australia). I borrowed a sterling silver armstrong and hyperventilated by the lake... until i got a sound.. wow.. It has been 30 somthing years now and i have never stopped 'tooting'. Continued to be selftaught, have made a few cds with friends, composed a few ditties along the way etc.
Mainly my flute is an extension of my being.. playing: clears the head/gives the eyes a rest (i am a painter)/releases inner tension/expresses any feeling that one may wish to express and just generally gives one a 'lift'. Those endomorphines are wonderful.
I think this is a really valuable 'thread' that we all on at the moment because it does help, in conversation, to have some idea of where the person is 'coming from'. I really believe that age is a little bit immaterial in matters of creativity/music because, in matters of creative endeavours, whether it be music or visual arts, it is creativite ability/knowledge/skill that are important.. In those things age is no barrier. A shared interest/passion is the important thing here. An opportunity to share/learn/have fun/relate.
I first picked up the flute in 1975 whilst doing my BA at Latrobe University (Australia). I borrowed a sterling silver armstrong and hyperventilated by the lake... until i got a sound.. wow.. It has been 30 somthing years now and i have never stopped 'tooting'. Continued to be selftaught, have made a few cds with friends, composed a few ditties along the way etc.
Mainly my flute is an extension of my being.. playing: clears the head/gives the eyes a rest (i am a painter)/releases inner tension/expresses any feeling that one may wish to express and just generally gives one a 'lift'. Those endomorphines are wonderful.
I think this is a really valuable 'thread' that we all on at the moment because it does help, in conversation, to have some idea of where the person is 'coming from'. I really believe that age is a little bit immaterial in matters of creativity/music because, in matters of creative endeavours, whether it be music or visual arts, it is creativite ability/knowledge/skill that are important.. In those things age is no barrier. A shared interest/passion is the important thing here. An opportunity to share/learn/have fun/relate.
I'm 30. I have my BA in Flute Performance. I started playing when I was in 6th grade, but the following year we moved overseas -- tiny school, no band -- so I didn't really play again until the spring semester of my junior year in high school. Finally got lessons when I started junior college. I had planned to major in piano, but got bit by the flute bug! Lots of hard work, and an amazing teacher, and I caught up with everyone else in my class, then went on to university, etc. Now I teach private lessons (I chose to be a performance major for that reason... I didn't want to be sidetracked by studying all the other band instruments) and I perform in chamber ensembles whenever I can. I'm very blessed that I get to do music as a full-time job.
Visit [url=http://www.monikadurbin.com/formiapress]Formia Press[/url] to check out my compositions and arrangements for flute and more.