


Moderators: Classitar, pied_piper, Phineas
Oooh how I long for a Miyazawa. Yes, the are very nice, and I know of the exact flute you speak of. I have played it, and it is amazing. Just make sure that you have the right head joint though, cause how you play on a certain flute really depends alot on the head joint you have.ljjones wrote:I have been playing flute for 30 years and have had my current flute for 24 years. It is a Gemeinhardt and has served me very well, but I am ready to buy a new flute and have been looking at different brands. I would like one that is semi-professional or professional. I am an intermediate to moderately advanced player, but I have about $8,000 to spend and I would like to invest in a high quality flute for the rest of my playing career. One I am especially interested in is the Miyazawa brand (solid silver, hand-made, B-foot). Does anyone have experience or knowledge of this Japanese brand? Is it a good brand? What other brands to you recommend for me? Also, for all the years I have been playing, I never had an open-holed flute.
When I buy the new instrument, it will most likely be open-hole because that is what is most prevalent and preferred amongst the higher-end flutes. Of course, at least at first, I will need to use the plugs to put in the keys to be able to play it. But has anyone else tried to learn to play open-hole for the first time after playing for many years on plateau, and were you successful? How hard was it to learn (and unlearn the fingering positions you were used to)? My fingering positions have gotten kind of sloppy over the years, as you can imagine, and I am just wondering what it will be like to try to learn to play open-hole