Introducing the Baroque Recorder

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июл 2024
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    0:00 JS Bach Brandenburg Concerto no.2, 1st movement
    0:24 Why is it called a recorder?
    1:42 History of the recorder
    2:01 Development of the baroque recorder
    3:55 Treble / Alto recorder
    4:19 Range of the Alto recorder
    5:08 Descant recorder
    5:28 Sammartini's Concerto in F Major
    7:03 Flautino or Sopranino recorder
    7:12 Handel's "Augeletti che cantate" from Rinaldo
    7:54 Vivaldi's Concerto in C Major
    8:28 Voice flute
    9:29 JS Bach's Flute sonata in E minor
    9:59 Composers who wrote for the recorder
    10:32 Charpentier's Te Deum (prelude)
    Check out Tabea Debus' RUclips channel here: ‪@tabeadebus4871‬
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Комментарии • 87

  • @GamerMusicianComposer
    @GamerMusicianComposer Год назад +45

    Imagine walking in to third grade music class and everyone plays Hot Cross Buns for their solos and you play a Baroque recorder concerto.

  • @wastrel92
    @wastrel92 Год назад +33

    I really love this video series. So great to hear the different musicians discuss their love for their instruments and hear great demonstrations!

  • @krisking2
    @krisking2 15 дней назад

    I was first introduced to the recorder as a boy in French speaking Switzerland and it was called a “Flute Douce”. I still have my instrument. It only has single holes for the lowest two holes and is only made in two parts.

  • @iwavns
    @iwavns Год назад +6

    Here in Malaysia all of us had to learn the descant recorder in primary school.

  • @tessabates1078
    @tessabates1078 Год назад +30

    I am soooooo excited that you guys made this video!!! The recorder is such a wonderful instrument, and very underrated by much of the world. Huzzah!!!!❤❤❤❤❤

    • @tocandoconenma3556
      @tocandoconenma3556 Год назад +4

      Creo que eso está cambiando con el tiempo, la flauta dulce es un instrumento muy capaz y la gente lo está utilizando muchísimo en composiciónes

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 7 месяцев назад +1

      It's my favorite baroque instrument and it's so practical too. I use a Yamaha 304 tenor

  • @MizzKittyBichon
    @MizzKittyBichon Год назад +10

    So glad you featured some of Charpentier's music. Such an underrated Baroque composer.

  • @cellardoor7500
    @cellardoor7500 Год назад +20

    Dang she’s really good

  • @ReformedCrusader
    @ReformedCrusader Год назад +3

    Absolutely love the sound of baroque recorder

  • @giorgiolamborghini813
    @giorgiolamborghini813 Год назад +17

    Videos like this are really valuable! I only add that the double holes in the two lowest notes are not found in any original baroque recorder and are only a modern "adjustment", perhaps inspired by original models of baroque oboes, where they are present but in other positions.

    • @luckybag6814
      @luckybag6814 Месяц назад

      Double holes are found on some original baroque recorders, but these are rarer than those with single holes. Arnold(I think) Dolmetsch did invent them himself, unaware they had actually been used in the baroque period. Before that, he inserted a ring into the hole on the foot joint to alter the pitch for one particular piece, which could be a handy trick for someone playing an accurate replica instrument without double holes.

    • @giorgiolamborghini813
      @giorgiolamborghini813 Месяц назад

      @@luckybag6814 Yes, double holes in recorders can also be found in some baroque recorders but they are as rare as whiteflies and mostly made by Peter Bressan; however, they are different from the standard double holes of modern recorders, you can find them generally or only in the foot joint (F/F#) and also together with the G/G/# and only in a Bressan model, also in the C /C#.

  • @ultramet
    @ultramet Год назад +6

    I always admire Baroque musicians . She is phenomenal. Superior musicianship. Now if only these beautiful instruments would do their part and cooperate more to stay in tune.

    • @Blokfluitgroep
      @Blokfluitgroep Год назад +4

      Well, in good recorder quartets (or groups like the Royal Wind Music) they do cooperate and stay in tune.

  • @FelipeFerreira7
    @FelipeFerreira7 Год назад +5

    AMAZING, im really happy after watching this video

  • @slmanbadr6832
    @slmanbadr6832 Год назад +4

    thank you so much

  • @andycordy5190
    @andycordy5190 Год назад +3

    What a wonderful family of instruments!

  • @bryan1198
    @bryan1198 Год назад +14

    Don't forget Spanish, as in Italian, "Flauta Dulce". Before learning English,I always wondered why in English, it was called like that, a recorder? Something that records sounds?? Hehe. Now, it makes sense. Amazing video as usual. Keep it there. 100% following you guys. ❤

    • @alexschubert9768
      @alexschubert9768 Год назад +3

      Tho as far as I know, the name recorder comes not from the musicians remembering their songs, and instead from the recorder being used to train birds to sing those melodies at courts, which was called recording

    • @Martha_My_Dear
      @Martha_My_Dear Год назад +6

      It's flauta dulce* :)
      (I'm from Argentina)

    • @bryan1198
      @bryan1198 Год назад +2

      @@Martha_My_Dear Estas en lo correcto, se me escapo! Gracias!

    • @valbastiancontraio2795
      @valbastiancontraio2795 7 дней назад +1

      it's flauto dolce in Italian , Italian and Spanish are two separate languages

    • @bryan1198
      @bryan1198 5 дней назад

      @@valbastiancontraio2795 You did not get what I tried to say, I meant that in Italian is the same as in Spanish! Of course, they are different languages. Recorder in Spanish is Grabador in Italian might be registratore, that is what I meant vs "sweet flute."

  • @CG-eg9wq
    @CG-eg9wq 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love how they placed the little bird in a forest. Awesome video :D

  • @onemanfran
    @onemanfran Год назад +5

    The recorder being able to be disassembled also makes cleaning a lot easier

  • @petergregory7199
    @petergregory7199 Год назад +2

    Well blow me down, that was a great recorder refresh.

  • @millennial8441
    @millennial8441 Год назад +3

    I was waiting this video for so long! Thanks for sharing. In Brazilian Portuguese it is called "flauta doce" (sweet, mellow flute) referring thus to the sweetness of its sound.

  • @mattfangrecorderstudio8325
    @mattfangrecorderstudio8325 7 месяцев назад +1

    This instrument gave me a purpose in life too, kindda cool😍

  • @musicnerd436
    @musicnerd436 Год назад +5

    I knew she was german when she started pronouncing Bach, Teleman, Handel correctly

  • @vincecomposer
    @vincecomposer 9 месяцев назад +1

    This video was sheer joy from start to finish. Love her energy, and the sound of this instrument is so fresh to my ears!

  • @doctorfashion2734
    @doctorfashion2734 23 дня назад

    Thank you so much for this beautiful video!!

  • @wdashwor
    @wdashwor 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've been enjoying playing and listening to recorder for years, and I learned some new things here. Thanks for the tour, and wonderful playing!

  • @Nettkin
    @Nettkin Год назад +4

    Yay! Have been waiting for a recorder video in this series..and so beautifully demonstrated.

  • @trevorhoward2254
    @trevorhoward2254 Год назад +3

    These videos are an absolute delight. Thank you.

  • @PlanetImo
    @PlanetImo Год назад +3

    Loved this! Thanks 😊

  • @luckybarrel7829
    @luckybarrel7829 Год назад +3

    Loved this!

  • @margaretfriederich9731
    @margaretfriederich9731 Год назад +2

    Interesting that the Samartini solo part was written in F fingering making the descant a transposing instrument.
    Nowadays we have to cope with 5 systems of fingering! Yes, 5! C and F in treble clef and C and F in Bass clef. Plus choral when in ensemble i. e. playing the treble an octave higher than written!

  • @user-ow9vv8vw9u
    @user-ow9vv8vw9u 4 месяца назад

    Lovely and clear lesson... Thanks 😊

  • @vishaalbhatnagar3924
    @vishaalbhatnagar3924 4 месяца назад

    Loved the explainer and the music.

  • @mboykin6047
    @mboykin6047 Год назад +1

    Bravo! Such expression and feeling.

  • @itamarbar9580
    @itamarbar9580 Год назад +2

    7:54 she sounds like the top register of a handel organ

  • @margaretfriederich9731
    @margaretfriederich9731 Год назад +2

    The division of the recorder into two or three parts is mainly to make it possible to drill the cylindrical bore. It would be necessary to use several different bore bits. Also, the length of the bit was limited by the variations in the conicity of the bore.

  • @ke9tv
    @ke9tv Год назад +4

    Brava! Lovely explanation of how the recorder is NOT just a toy for primary schoolers!
    In your discussion of the evolution of the instrument, you miss what's possibly the most important development of the Baroque recorder: the conical bore. A Ganassi recorder will have a much stronger voice, particularly in the lower register, but a very limited range - Renaissance composers generally confined themselves to F4-A5. The conical bore also gave the instrument a sweeter and more delicate timbre, greatly favoured in small ensembles. Alas, that was to prove its demise - as composers in the nineteenth century moved to ever bigger orchestras and more dramatic contrasts, the recorder simply lacked the power to balance them, and composers wrote for the traverso instead. (Yes, I know there was a Romantic recorder of sorts- I've played the Heberle C-major sonata, for instance - but it was nearly entirely eclipsed by the flute.)

  • @itamarbar9580
    @itamarbar9580 Год назад +3

    I didn't know this was called a flute!

  • @frankie6490
    @frankie6490 8 дней назад

    Just to let you know, you’ll be getting a much different look with some money in the bank, I love how quick you guys are not playing fair at all…

  • @nigelhaywood9753
    @nigelhaywood9753 Год назад +3

    My teacher, a certain Layton Ring, said that Arnold Dolmetsch, who was largely responsible for the rediscovery of the instrument, decided to call it a 'recorder'. He found the term in some old text, I can't remember which. My teacher used to work with the Dolmetsch family but sadly Layton passed away four years ago. Any way, thanks for an interesting and informative video. You play beautifully and I love the gentler attack that one can get with slightly softer woods. I mean softer than the darker woods like grenadilla. Thank you!

    • @annabelwaterfield6108
      @annabelwaterfield6108 11 месяцев назад +1

      Shakespeare uses the word "Recorder" in Hamlet.

    • @nigelhaywood9753
      @nigelhaywood9753 11 месяцев назад

      @@annabelwaterfield6108 Really? Can you remember where? I read it ages ago and don't remember seeing it but that's probably just because it has been so long. I would be less surprised to find it in a text form the Renaissance than in one from the Baroque, though. In the Baroque it was always called a flute.

  • @kamrankheradbeigi8754
    @kamrankheradbeigi8754 Год назад +1

    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @pipiPepo
    @pipiPepo Год назад +3

    Are there still voice flutes that are made today? It sounds lovely ☺️

    • @jp----
      @jp---- Год назад +2

      Im not sure, but here in Peru I learned to play this descant type (or a very similar) of flute at my school. It's very common here.

    • @Albergarri788
      @Albergarri788 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yes but the tenor recorder in C is far more common

  • @jolenethiessen357
    @jolenethiessen357 Год назад +1

    In French, we differentiate between a recorder and a flute by calling one une flûte à bec and the other une flûte transverse (i.e. transverse flute). At least in my dialect!

  • @noemiemuller5310
    @noemiemuller5310 Год назад

    Hi 😊
    Could you please give the reference of the shown recorder ? 😁
    Thanks for your amazing work on this video

  • @mantistoboggan2676
    @mantistoboggan2676 Год назад +3

    One of the few instruments that is mostly unchanged from the baroque era.

  • @RogueNinjaCreative
    @RogueNinjaCreative 7 месяцев назад

    Impressive playing, but that swift exit she made is next level.

  • @alexschubert9768
    @alexschubert9768 Год назад +4

    you said the recorder came in three pieces so you (the player) could tune better.... wasn't it moreso so that the bore could be carved more accurately (as well as different angles on the pieces) like with the flute that went from 1 to 3 to 4 pieces for the same reason

    • @mantistoboggan2676
      @mantistoboggan2676 Год назад +4

      I think it did make the manufacturing easier but also I know traversos were made into more parts so that different middle sections could be made for the various tuning conventions of the time. Corps de rechange.

  • @victotronics
    @victotronics Год назад +5

    Lovely presentation. But eh, I think the story on the double holes is a little more complicated. Aren't those really a Dolmetsch innovation? In many pictures of historic instruments I see single holes.

    • @baroquewinds
      @baroquewinds Год назад +3

      There are a handful of historical recorders with double holes, about half of them being recorders by Bressan. Unlike the modern ones, they were usually equally sized holes to facilitate playing left or right handed. There are a few with the holes set of different sizes but they’re designed for left handed players. Sometimes double holes would only be present on the foot joint, other times it would be on the 2 lowest and in only one case I know of, on the 3rd hole as well.

    • @luckybag6814
      @luckybag6814 Месяц назад

      Double holes are found on some baroque instruments, but Arnold (I think) Dolmetsch was unaware of these instruments, so yes, he did genuinely invent them himself, even if he wasn’t the first to invent them. Before he thought of the double hole he inserted a ring into the hole of the foot joint, effectively reducing the size and altering the pitch, to make a particular piece easier to play with reliable intonation.

  • @manuelgonzales6483
    @manuelgonzales6483 24 дня назад

    No mention of the Garklein 😢

  • @DerpDerp3001
    @DerpDerp3001 3 месяца назад

    When people say the recorder is a kid’s instrument:

  • @mantistoboggan2676
    @mantistoboggan2676 Год назад +1

    Interesting, ive never seen a recorder with a double hole on finger 3.

  • @Jesuswinsbirdofmichigan
    @Jesuswinsbirdofmichigan Год назад

    July 1, 2023✝️

  • @ce9916
    @ce9916 2 месяца назад

    The rental flute market collapsed during Covid

  • @lucianolisa7162
    @lucianolisa7162 Месяц назад

    avete notato che il viso di macron assomiglia al viso del calciatore del piero?

  • @user-nr9to4xw4c
    @user-nr9to4xw4c 3 месяца назад

    4:09 I hear E, not F...I have absolute pitch (or whatever it's called in english). What does it mean? Is that because different kHz?

    • @oae
      @oae  3 месяца назад

      The most common pitch in the Baroque period was A=415Hz. Today's pitch is A=440Hz which is why you will be hearing a semitone lower.

    • @user-nr9to4xw4c
      @user-nr9to4xw4c 3 месяца назад

      @@oae thanks!

  • @robertoortiz2922
    @robertoortiz2922 Год назад

    She's cute!

  • @HeiligerSatyr
    @HeiligerSatyr Год назад

    Unless they are half trills, trills should be played with their resolution

  • @rvail136
    @rvail136 Год назад +1

    Im a classically trained floutist. I have never understood why musicians thing body "english" iss necessary to play their instrument. Ive always thought that waving amd swaying looked stupid.

  • @erellawrence
    @erellawrence 10 месяцев назад

    😂😂😂

  • @onewhogetsbread9975
    @onewhogetsbread9975 Год назад +2

    Let's play a game
    If you play a Sopranino pls comment 😊
    If you play a Soprano pls comment 😁
    If you play Alto pls comment 😅
    If you play Tenor pls comment ☺️
    And if you play Bass Recorder pls comment 👑
    I would be 😊😁😅☺️

  • @Fretfeeler
    @Fretfeeler 9 месяцев назад +1

    I wish Classical Musicians wouldn't claim to be in C when they're playing a Baroque tuned Soprano at A=415... You're in B now.

  • @1977ajax
    @1977ajax Год назад

    Good talk!
    Except that you used Handel's old name. Not nice to 'dead name' people.