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Piccolo and alto flutes

Two other flutes sometimes found in Western music are the piccolo and alto flutes. The flauto piccolo (Italian for "small flute"), in common use since the late eighteenth century, is half the length of a standard flute and plays an octave higher than written. The alto flute is noticeably larger than the standard flute, and its range is a perfect fourth lower. It is a transposing instrument which plays a perfect fourth lower than written.

Both have Boehm-system keywork (in fact, the modern alto flute was developed by Boehm), and the fact that they are transposing instruments means that a flautist doesn't need to learn a new set of fingerings for each instrument. (The fingering for a written C in the staff, for example, will be essentially the same on all three instruments).

Bass flute , a twentieth-century invention, is still quite rare.

A history and geography of the flute

The holes in early transverse flutes were spaced to give mean tone tuning . This tuning system was popular in Europe from the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries, but it made it difficult for one instrument to play well in more than one key. This limited the flute's usefulness to orchestra.

The recorder , a wooden, end-blown, whistle-mouthpiece type flute was very popular in early Western music. It was particularly popular in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. But it is not an ideal orchestral instrument because of its quiet sound.

Meanwhile, the keywork on transverse flutes was gradually being improved (see above ), and equal temperament , which allows an instrument to play equally well in all keys, became the accepted tuning standard. At that point, the transverse flute, with its wider range of timbre , pitch , and dynamics , became more popular than the recorder. Eventually the flute replaced the recorder so completely that the recorder nearly died out, until an interest in early music and early instruments helped spark a revival in the twentieth century.

The fife is a small transverse flute that - like the piccolo - sounds an octave higher than the orchestral flute. Its history since the middle ages is one of military rather than concert use, however. There were at one time fife "calls" used as signals (similar to the bugle calls still in use), and fife and drum corps still play military music.

The flute family is also the most widespread aerophone family, with representatives in more Non-Western music traditions around the world than any other non-percussion instrument. Bamboo flutes are common throughout Asia. Panpipes , which have many different-sized tubes bound together rather than finger holes in a single tube, are particularly popular in South America. Many variations of the side-blown and end-blown flutes (including double and triple flutes) have been developed in many cultures. Vessel flutes have been made in many different shapes, including animals and people, out of many different materials, including bone, wood, fruit shells, and pottery. Whistles are usually used for signals rather than music, but bird whistles , which are filled with water to get a bubbling whistle that sounds very much like the trill of a bird, are sometimes found in the percussion section of orchestras and bands. Nose flutes , played with the nose rather than the mouth, are popular in some South Pacific and Indian Ocean countries.

Repertoire

    Here is some music that should be easy to find if you would like to listen to flutes.

  • Recordings by flute virtuosos such as James Galway and Jean-Pierre Rampal.
  • Debussy's Prelude a l'Apres-midi d'un Faune ("Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun")
  • Tchaikovsky's ballet The Nutcracker features flutes in many places, including most notably the "Chinese Dance" ("Tea") and "Dance of the Toy Flutes".
  • If you wish to listen to Non-Western flutes, the easiest recordings to find will be bamboo flutes from various Asian traditions, Native North American flute music, and South American panpipes.
  • If you want to listen to jazz flute, look for "West Coast" or "cool" jazz, and smaller, more modern ensembles in general, rather than big band or early jazz.
  • The trio of Sousa's march The Stars and Stripes Forever probably has the most widely recognized piccolo part.
  • Alto flutes can be heard in the "Neptune" movement of Holst's The Planets .

Practical information for composers and arrangers

Flute and piccolo range

The written range is the same for flute and piccolo. Flutes sound as written; piccolo is a transposing instrument that sounds one octave higher than written.

Flute and piccolo are both very agile instruments that can play very quick notes, large leaps and special effects like trills and flutter-tonguing.

The lowest octave of the range is not loud, and the very lowest notes are rather weak. The very highest notes in the range can be shrill and out of tune.

The piccolo has a very piercing sound; a single piccolo in the upper register can be heard over an entire orchestra.

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Source:  OpenStax, A parent's guide to band. OpenStax CNX. Jun 25, 2007 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10428/1.1
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