Yay, new flute
Moderators: Classitar, pied_piper, Phineas
Yay, new flute
My dad bought me an Amadeus Haynes 800 on Friday without letting me try it first. The body is so much better than any of my former flutes but I don't hear a difference in tone quality. Is anyone familiar with this flute? He payed $1800 for it. Also, I have never had a B footer until now... and I am having a hard time stretching my pinkie that far. Any suggestions?
- vampav8trix
- Posts: 120
- Joined: Sat Mar 08, 2008 12:03 pm
- Location: USA
I agree with vampav8trix
I do not know which flute you came from, but that Haynes style headjoint on the Amadeus is going to take some getting use to. First of all, develop a good warmup routine. Nothing fancy, just running up and down scale and arppegios. Also get back to practicing your dynamics, vibrato, and your long tones. After a couple of weeks of daily warmups and practice on your new flute, you will hear a definite difference in your tone. As time goes along, you will appreciate that headjoint more and more. I use to own a Haynes, and it did take me a couple of months to get the sound and dynamic control I wanted. Make recordings of yourself and listen. This is another method that will help improve your tone/dynamics.
It is too bad that you did not try out more flutes first. You may have found an instrument that is more responsive to your current playing style. However, I know for a fact that any person can learn how to be an effective player on any quality flute. It just may take a little more effort.
As far as the Bfoot thing. Well, just adjust the footjoint, put a plug in the "D" hole, reach for it and hope for the best.
Phineas
I do not know which flute you came from, but that Haynes style headjoint on the Amadeus is going to take some getting use to. First of all, develop a good warmup routine. Nothing fancy, just running up and down scale and arppegios. Also get back to practicing your dynamics, vibrato, and your long tones. After a couple of weeks of daily warmups and practice on your new flute, you will hear a definite difference in your tone. As time goes along, you will appreciate that headjoint more and more. I use to own a Haynes, and it did take me a couple of months to get the sound and dynamic control I wanted. Make recordings of yourself and listen. This is another method that will help improve your tone/dynamics.
It is too bad that you did not try out more flutes first. You may have found an instrument that is more responsive to your current playing style. However, I know for a fact that any person can learn how to be an effective player on any quality flute. It just may take a little more effort.
As far as the Bfoot thing. Well, just adjust the footjoint, put a plug in the "D" hole, reach for it and hope for the best.
Phineas
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- Posts: 2311
- Joined: Sun Jul 16, 2006 3:11 pm