newbie here

For Anything and Everything to do with Flute Playing and Music

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nika
Posts: 5
Joined: Fri May 20, 2011 12:13 pm

Re: newbie here

Post by nika »

Hello,
I'm sorry for interrupting this conversation (I didn't know where else I'd write this) but I'm new here and I just wanted to say hello to all flutists here :)

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Classitar
Posts: 349
Joined: Wed Feb 25, 2009 6:49 am
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Re: newbie here

Post by Classitar »

Welcome Nika!

Vincentcnbres
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 3:17 am
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Re: newbie here

Post by Vincentcnbres »

Skip Healy and Casey Burns make some nice Irish and 6 hole flutes/fifes.

lavender-mint
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Aug 08, 2012 7:47 pm

Re: newbie here

Post by lavender-mint »

Hi, I have pretty small hands and I play an offset G Jupiter. I don't really like my Jupiter as it tends to be out of tune. There are offset G Yamahas that I've tried which sound very nice.

aemca

Re: newbie here

Post by aemca »

hello, I am from China, shanghai, its glad to see you everyone

strawb3rries
Posts: 1
Joined: Mon Feb 25, 2013 10:28 pm

Re: newbie here

Post by strawb3rries »

Hi everyone. My name is Kat and I just bought a flute on whim yesterday for fun. I used to play for a year back in 4th grade, but I'm a recent college graduate now, so it's been a while since I've played.

I was able to pick up the first octave fairly quickly though. I know how to play piano, guitar and some violin as well, so that definitely helps with learning.

Nice to meet you all. :]

ghostNote
Posts: 47
Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2013 10:41 pm
Location: Southeast Asia

Re: newbie here

Post by ghostNote »

Pretty new around here myself!

krzyflutist87
Posts: 5
Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2013 4:01 pm
Location: Tampa, FL

Re: newbie here

Post by krzyflutist87 »

Hi -- I'm new here too! Though not a newbie to flute, of course; been playing for 16 years, so more than half my life! Been playing piccolo for a little while too. ;)

wuffeeflaute
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Jun 02, 2013 2:17 am

Re: newbie here

Post by wuffeeflaute »

welcome strawb3rries!

Sparklingorion
Posts: 4
Joined: Sat Aug 03, 2013 7:02 am

Re: newbie here

Post by Sparklingorion »

Hi everyone! I'm totally new too! New to this forum and new to flute. I picked up the violin around age 21 and did till grade 5. Took up grade 1 piano and stopped as they did not have individual lessons available in the music school. Played with the idea of learning how to play the flute as it has such a beautiful sound and I can literally bring it anywhere. I bought a Yamaha YFL 361 on a whim but never really got to lesson 1 due to work commitments.

Now that I'm out of job, am considering selling my barely-touched flute to help pay bills. But am in a dilemma as I really can't bear to part with it. :cry:

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flutego12
Posts: 554
Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2012 2:51 am
Location: Southern Hemisphere, Earth

Re: newbie here

Post by flutego12 »

Sparklingorion wrote:Hi everyone! I'm totally new too! New to this forum and new to flute. I picked up the violin around age 21 and did till grade 5. Took up grade 1 piano and stopped as they did not have individual lessons available in the music school. Played with the idea of learning how to play the flute as it has such a beautiful sound and I can literally bring it anywhere. I bought a Yamaha YFL 361 on a whim but never really got to lesson 1 due to work commitments.

Now that I'm out of job, am considering selling my barely-touched flute to help pay bills. But am in a dilemma as I really can't bear to part with it. :cry:
Sorry to hear.
Have you considered renting it out to a responsible friend?
In my country, one year's rental = cost of used flute.
And if they don't wreck it, you still have a flute to rent out in the second year?
flutist with a screwdriver

Sparklingorion
Posts: 4
Joined: Sat Aug 03, 2013 7:02 am

Re: newbie here

Post by Sparklingorion »

flutego12 wrote:
Sparklingorion wrote:Hi everyone! I'm totally new too! New to this forum and new to flute. I picked up the violin around age 21 and did till grade 5. Took up grade 1 piano and stopped as they did not have individual lessons available in the music school. Played with the idea of learning how to play the flute as it has such a beautiful sound and I can literally bring it anywhere. I bought a Yamaha YFL 361 on a whim but never really got to lesson 1 due to work commitments.

Now that I'm out of job, am considering selling my barely-touched flute to help pay bills. But am in a dilemma as I really can't bear to part with it. :cry:
Sorry to hear.
Have you considered renting it out to a responsible friend?
In my country, one year's rental = cost of used flute.
And if they don't wreck it, you still have a flute to rent out in the second year?
Hi flutego12, thanks for the suggestion! It's a brilliant idea. However, I don't really know a lot of friends who plays the flute and the handful that I know of are way more advance than me. Guess I'll just keep it in the meantime till I can find someone who is interested to rent it. Am actively looking for jobs and don't really mind doing part-time jobs in clinics to pay some bills. Just hope they don't find me over-qualified. :roll: Wish me luck in job hunting! :D

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flutego12
Posts: 554
Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2012 2:51 am
Location: Southern Hemisphere, Earth

Re: newbie here

Post by flutego12 »

Sparklingorion wrote:
flutego12 wrote:
Sparklingorion wrote:Hi everyone! I'm totally new too! New to this forum and new to flute. I picked up the violin around age 21 and did till grade 5. Took up grade 1 piano and stopped as they did not have individual lessons available in the music school. Played with the idea of learning how to play the flute as it has such a beautiful sound and I can literally bring it anywhere. I bought a Yamaha YFL 361 on a whim but never really got to lesson 1 due to work commitments.

Now that I'm out of job, am considering selling my barely-touched flute to help pay bills. But am in a dilemma as I really can't bear to part with it. :cry:
Sorry to hear.
Have you considered renting it out to a responsible friend?
In my country, one year's rental = cost of used flute.
And if they don't wreck it, you still have a flute to rent out in the second year?
Hi flutego12, thanks for the suggestion! It's a brilliant idea. However, I don't really know a lot of friends who plays the flute and the handful that I know of are way more advance than me. Guess I'll just keep it in the meantime till I can find someone who is interested to rent it. Am actively looking for jobs and don't really mind doing part-time jobs in clinics to pay some bills. Just hope they don't find me over-qualified. :roll: Wish me luck in job hunting! :D
Better than luck. Wish you grace grace and lots of favour!
flutist with a screwdriver

Gocatdave
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2017 1:20 am

Re: newbie here

Post by Gocatdave »

Hi There, 52 year old flute beginner here. I've fooled around a bit with a keyless, Irish flute. But I decided to try a fully chromatic, modern flute recently. I bought a Nuvo plastic flute to get my feet wet and see how I would like the Boehm system. I quickly decided that I liked the system so I decided to commit and ordered a Pearl Flute Quantz 525RBE1RB Series Flute - Split E mechanism, Offset G, B-footjoint. It is due to arrive later today by UPS and I am very excited about it!

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pied_piper
Posts: 1962
Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2007 1:31 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: newbie here

Post by pied_piper »

Congratulations on your new flute. I'm sure you'll love it!
"Never give a flute player a screwdriver."
--anonymous--

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