The cost of a good quality Boehm flute is high relative to the type of simple system flute I had in mind, either made by Mr. Doug Tipple, or created in one's garage with some PVC pipe and the cork from a bottle of wine.
I'll probably make a high D flute sometime this week, if I remember to swing by the hardward store to pick up some 1/2" schedule 40 PVC pipe and a straight plumbing joint. When I'm done, after about half an hour with a hand drill, some needle files, and a mitre box, I'll have a perfectly usable flute, waiting for fine tuning of the embouchure and fingerholes, which will be tunable relative to its base note via a simple, plumbing joint. (I'll probably experiment with different embouchure designs, looking for something that will work better than my first, viable creation now in use as the headjoint of my low D flute.) The net cost to me for the instrument I'll produce, perhaps $3.00. (Ironically, about what a Clarke Meg would cost in a store.) A little time spent polishing the PVC with 400 grit sandpaper, and it will be the sort of instrument that has caused the people who see it to ask where I got the material from which it is made.
There will never be any need for an expensive trip to a music shop for pad replacement or other, routine maintenance or check-out. All of those costs are inherent in a Boehm flute, but hidden. (I won't even have to play for shipping.)
Mozart is fine. I tend to focus more on traditional music with a flute or whistle, and it is normally written to play easily on a D major flute. I have heard of cultures, as in China, with its dizi, in which half-holing simply comes with the territory. As for the flute lay-out, I suspect that most people can easily grasp how to play the scale of a simple system flute with little more than a sentence of description. That makes it less intimidating to me.
Does D major limit me? Not really. Half holing a note now and then isn't the big deal that the devotees of the Boehm flute make it out to be for most of the music that the average person wants to play. I suspect that those who tend to restrict themselves to Irish traditional works get a little spoiled, and disinclined to attempt pieces requiring that the instrument be played chromatically. I'd like to move in a more chromatic direction with the simple system flute, and am enjoying developing the necessary technique. (I was just finding my way through a book of movie themes last night, and neither the "Indiana Jones" march nor the theme from "Star Trek, the Motion Picture", nor "Born Free" seemed likely to cause a problem, except when I had to invert the melody a bit where middle C popped up, and I had to take it up an octave higher.)
No doubt you can push a tune to a pace that makes half-holing difficult, but I suspect that most people interested in playing a flute can find a massive amount of music they can play at a pace that permits half holing, and with others who aren't inclined to play as though they insist that whoever finishes first is the winner. If a classical work is too difficult on a simple system flute, there are plenty of other works from which to choose.
I truly enjoy my low D flute, and recently moved away from sheet music to improvising versions either of short works or themes, like "The Pink Panther", "Christmas Time is Here", the theme from "Star Wars", and "Linus and Lucy", so I can develop the capacity to play a few pieces without the need for a piece of paper in front of me. (It's kind of fun to lend some of these works a hint of ITM style ornamentation, including a little note bending now and then.) Its not that hard to come up with something that can be played on a D major flute that sounds convincing based on a work's signature theme, even simple classical works, such as "Fuer Elise" (with the "e" added given that I have no umlaut in this environment). ("Mood Indigo" in D major seems to be kind of pushing it, though...")
I'm not knocking the Boehm flute. Those who can play it well are very impressive, but the fact that I don't play it doesn't matter to me, given that the simple system flute is a fine instrument in its own right, that is very easy to understand and to take up, and very economical, if you have a hardware store nearby and the necessary mechanical capabilities and tools, or Doug Tipple's e-mail address (
dougsflutes@gmail.com).
So, are simple systems flutes, as I approach them, and as offered by Mr. Tipple, less expensive than Boehm flutes? Unless you get lucky with a good used one that holds up well, I think my original statement was valid. Are simple system flutes less intimidating than Boehm flutes? For the repertoire that I play, yes, they are. Do I feel limited? Not at all. (I suspect that if Doug Tipple stops selling simple system flutes for less than $100.00, someone else will.)
(I think you must consider Boehm's accomplishment relative to making the flute an "every person's" instrument by eliminating issues of finger size, hole size, and hole placement. I think that's a better basis for gauging his accomplishment than asserting that half-holing is grounds for dismissing the simple system flute in terms of its use with a more general repertoire.)