Intro to TIN WHISTLE! | Team Recorder

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • An introduction to the tin whistle!
    (Also known as Irish whistle, penny whistle, plus a bit of low whistle..)
    Here I tell you a bit about where they come from, their physical attributes, how they are played, different brands, what music you can play on them, and of course a lot of sound comparisons!
    /// LINKS
    In this video I mention:
    Irish tune resource 'The Session'
    - thesession.org
    'Is Cuimhin Liom' by Darragh Kearns-Hayes
    • Is cuimhin liom - Darr...
    'The Tin Whistle Experiment' by Darragh Kearns-Hayes
    • Tin Whistle - Finger T...
    'Eleven' by Mr Yellow Jacket (me on low whistle)
    • ELEVEN (Irish whistle...
    /// INSTRUMENTS
    I play on:
    - Clarke whistle in D
    - Chieftain whistles in D. low G and low D
    - Generation whistles in G, F, Eb, D, and C
    - a 442 soprano recorder by Moeck
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Комментарии • 327

  • @JadeDRail
    @JadeDRail 4 года назад +150

    Whenever I feel unmotivated to practice recorder (and soon the whistle) I picture myself as a freaking Satyr, dancing and playing beautifully with no trouble, mesmerizing travellers and luring them into the woods so I can trap them in the feywild.

    • @veronica4316
      @veronica4316 2 года назад +5

      Omg hahahahaha, I love this, now I know how to motive my self either xd

    • @msk-qp6fn
      @msk-qp6fn 2 года назад +2

      Or the pied piper luring the children away from their parents as a punishment towards humanity for not keeping its promise

  • @NathanielDowell
    @NathanielDowell 5 лет назад +36

    First, and most importantly, 3:40.
    Secondly, what a lovely and enthusiastic introduction to whistles.

  • @Reeldin58
    @Reeldin58 5 лет назад +134

    The wonderful thing about the whistle is it puts music within the reach of anybody. For just a few pounds you can buy a perfectly playable instrument and start having fun. One thing you didn't mention is, if you are thinking about buying a first whistle then the key of D is the best place to start. That way you can play along with the tutorials here on YT. That's how I started, I don't claim to be any good but I'm loving the journey. Great post.

    • @runrig97
      @runrig97 4 года назад +1

      And all of the tunes I have are written in the key D. Some tunes are in G, but meant for a D whistle anyway, as it's easy to play in G on a D whistle within a certain range.

    • @amandasteven1400
      @amandasteven1400 3 года назад +1

      yes and no :) Low D for a first whistle might be a mistake? however, High D would be ideal. the wide spaced finger holes on a low D instrument could create a possibly insurmountable challenge for inexperienced players (dont ask) haha

    • @aragorn1780
      @aragorn1780 11 месяцев назад

      they're also really easy to learn compared to other instruments! practice for a few weeks/months and you'll already be able to attend trad sessions, few years and you can be a virtuoso!

  • @flutechannel
    @flutechannel 5 лет назад +5

    I gotta get back tin whistle playing! Thanks for the video Sarah!

  • @Springer5
    @Springer5 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the great video Sarah and well done for giving a shout out for English Traditional Music.
    England has a rich folk music history and a diverse repertoire, and it's great to hear it mentioned here.
    Happy playing everyone :)

  • @riannehelmus8
    @riannehelmus8 5 лет назад +4

    Great video Sarah! I got a Tony Dixon high wistle for my birtday. It's tuneable and made of plastic, I love the sound!
    I used it a little while ago to play in a wedding service in an coustic setting band, worked perfectly in the church acoustics and the bride and groom loved it! :D

  • @SoggySandwich80
    @SoggySandwich80 3 года назад +4

    I’m a pianist and organist but I appreciate how fun they are to play and gorgeous the recorder and all the wind instruments sound, team recorder power

  • @alfredconqueror4422
    @alfredconqueror4422 5 лет назад +32

    Never clicked so fast on a notification! I love the sound of a tin whistle, greetings from MX

  • @soslothful
    @soslothful 5 лет назад +16

    A tutorial devoted to the full range of cross fingerings to make a chromatic whistle would be a great boon!

  • @onetouchtwo
    @onetouchtwo 4 года назад +2

    Just the video I was looking for! So well done!

  • @SC-rb2jr
    @SC-rb2jr 4 года назад +1

    Amazing playing. Very natural video style. Thank you.

  • @GayleHallAZ
    @GayleHallAZ Год назад +1

    I was thrilled to see you do a video on tin whistles! In fact, I wish you’d do more! I’m teaching myself to play the alto recorder, having been a modern flute player in an orchestra setting for approximately 10 years some time ago.
    At the same time I purchased my Yamaha 312 recorder, I also bought a Feadog Pro High D whistle and set it aside to concentrate on the recorder. But this past week, I found myself drawn to the whistle every day. I’m compelled to overcome the tonal challenges of the 2nd octave and transitioning between octaves. I can reach the higher notes, but I feel like I’m in “attack mode” when I do! I don’t remember ever having this embouchure issue while learning to play the flute, but it’s very humbling.
    Anyway, I hope you’ll do more whistle videos because you make it seem effortless to go between the recorder and the whistle, and I’m sure you can offer some excellent advice!

  • @NatureAndTech
    @NatureAndTech 3 года назад +1

    Best introduction I've ever seen. Thank you.

  • @KaganB
    @KaganB 2 года назад

    Bless you. This video is an exceptional tool for learning this instrument for orchestration.

  • @lulu12345575
    @lulu12345575 4 года назад +1

    Thank you! I didn't know how to hit the high D in my clarke sweet tone until you showed me!

  • @gsco82
    @gsco82 3 года назад +1

    Nice that you included South Africa in the countries where the whistle is played. I became aware of the pennywhistle through the videos of the S. African pop group Mango Groove.

  • @FloJV06
    @FloJV06 4 года назад

    I loved your introduction! (And your accent!) I play the flute and I like to explore new boundaries through all the woodwind instruments.. My brothers recently bought me a 'quena', the way you have to put your fingers is a little bit different and not easy at all but you should try it sometime. Its sound is charming, too. Thanks for your post! Greetings from Argentina!

  • @fredoliveira4882
    @fredoliveira4882 5 лет назад +1

    Happy New Year from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil!

  • @Escapetosea
    @Escapetosea 3 года назад +1

    You’re just a doll Sarah , love your videos 😊

  • @steveclarkmusic9
    @steveclarkmusic9 3 года назад +1

    Love to see you start a Irish Whistle channel. I saw some vids you did about 4 years back with some great experimentation. I know you probably have little time...but just a hope. Amazing. Thanks. Steve Clark. Australia.

    • @steveclarkmusic9
      @steveclarkmusic9 Год назад

      Yes. I have watched a number of her vids. Thanks.

  • @klarajelinkova1577
    @klarajelinkova1577 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing!!! Please do as many of whistle videos as you possibly can!

  • @alkistisbush7589
    @alkistisbush7589 5 лет назад +3

    Yes!!! Finally Sarah ....that was very helpful video...you are an amazing musician ❤️

  • @gk411
    @gk411 5 лет назад +1

    Happy new year 😎 your vlogs are cool 😊

  • @michaelrs8010
    @michaelrs8010 5 лет назад

    Greetings from Orange County California. I'm no rank amateur with the whistle, but I can only dream of my fingers flying over it like yours do. Good show.

  • @phadeezz
    @phadeezz 5 лет назад +1

    Just lovely!

  • @darthmazing
    @darthmazing 5 лет назад +2

    I started off playing the tin whistle last year and got a bit bored of having to wait for tabs tutorial on RUclips 😂 soon after I found team recorder and started learning how to play the recorder . I adore the sound of recorders and the repertoire. I love my whistles but I feel like I have more flexibility with one recorder.

    • @NathanielDowell
      @NathanielDowell 5 лет назад +3

      A large part of Irish music tradition is learning to play by ear. Aside from that, there's a lovely Welsh lady (CutiePie) who has a channel devoted exclusively to helping beginners learn popular tunes on the whistle.

  • @franklott834
    @franklott834 5 лет назад +2

    My favorite music teacher. :)

  • @amandalittley7120
    @amandalittley7120 5 лет назад +30

    Because.....physics....!
    Simples 😍

    • @runrig97
      @runrig97 4 года назад

      Because an open first hole on the whistle is like playing natural harmonics on a guitar (on the 12th or 7th fret..depending on whether you close all the other holes or just the 2nd and 3rd.

  • @harrisonmin5190
    @harrisonmin5190 5 лет назад

    New Year, New Great Videos!

  • @deaconsyxx322
    @deaconsyxx322 3 года назад +5

    Me:
    There’s no way a recorder/whistle channel would work
    Also me:
    Ooooooooooh a new video!! Eeeeeeeeee!

  • @theshengplayer
    @theshengplayer 4 года назад

    Nice video about the Tin Whistle! 😊 👍

  • @JadeDRail
    @JadeDRail 4 года назад +1

    I ordered an irish whistle, I had no idea you played those too!!!! I guess I know where to go for info about that.

  • @christianrosenkreuz6931
    @christianrosenkreuz6931 5 лет назад +17

    I thought that was an old video. I should turn my notifications on. I bought an alto recorder last week thanks to you ((:

    • @itsmeGeorgina
      @itsmeGeorgina 5 лет назад +6

      And I bought both an Alto and a Tenor and have started to learn how to read music again,,, after 36 years
      New life for me, I made my old Aunt cry with my newly mastered "Silent Night"

    • @DeeBroughton
      @DeeBroughton 5 лет назад +2

      And I just ordered the plastic Mollenhauer Adris Dream because of Sarah.

  • @andrericardos6554
    @andrericardos6554 5 лет назад +1

    Hey!!!! Happy new year!!!! Let's go 2019.

  • @luckybarrel7829
    @luckybarrel7829 2 года назад

    OMG I'm watching this again and noticed your Irish accent noice and I'm rolling in laughter cause it's accurate!!!

  • @eltrompetachica
    @eltrompetachica 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the whistle love 👍

  • @DellaStreet123
    @DellaStreet123 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the video. Tin whistles are really a great invention. Isn't it funny how low the low whistle appears to sound when, in fact, it isn't that low at all? With D above Middle C as its lowest note, it's still a soprano instrument, like a flute or an oboe.

  • @Maevea13
    @Maevea13 5 лет назад +1

    I had 2 tin whistle for Christmas xD Thank you for the video

  • @geekbynight
    @geekbynight 5 лет назад

    Sarah, I really enjoyed the video. When I first started playing the tin whistle, someone told me that if you immerse the plastic head in boiling water for a brief time, it melts the glue and you can pull the head off. After that, you can tune them just fine.

    • @geekbynight
      @geekbynight 5 лет назад

      Oh I forgot to say that it works!

  • @RubenTura
    @RubenTura 4 года назад +1

    Thanks! I'm a guitar player, nothing to do with whistles, but in the recent years I just got to know and love celtic music, especially things like Lunasa or Dervish for example, and I finally decided to buy a tin whistle just yesterday! I can't wait for it to be delivered! Thanks for the video, it was very helpful, as I know virtually nothing, aside from a couple of small things they taught me in the early years of school on a cheap recorder.

    • @pedromiguelabdofidelisdepa4732
      @pedromiguelabdofidelisdepa4732 4 года назад

      You should totally listen to Omnia if you haven't already :D

    • @runrig97
      @runrig97 4 года назад

      When I started many years ago, I got two books, Geraldine Cotter's and L.E. McCullough's. I much preferred Cotter's.

  • @anshbharadwaj8610
    @anshbharadwaj8610 5 лет назад +3

    "My heart will go on " was actually the first piece of music I learnt on my flute ...now I think this would be more fun (mostly easier) for me to play on tin whistles .

    • @stevewolfe3214
      @stevewolfe3214 5 лет назад +1

      "My heart will go on" is a great song... Just "perhaps" played too many times.

  • @Caglarcomposes
    @Caglarcomposes 5 лет назад +1

    At 03:40 after hearing the pitch change, I made the exact same face :o Thank you for this very valuable information. I really didn't know there was a reliably tunable whistle.

  • @-retrocat6191
    @-retrocat6191 4 года назад

    I like your pronunciation and playing. Thanks

  • @PDTUFI
    @PDTUFI 5 лет назад

    Hapy New Year Sarah !!!!!

  • @PhilipDaniel
    @PhilipDaniel Год назад +1

    I've written chamber ensemble pieces that include the English and/or French seven-keyed flageolet--an instrument that seems to me as well-suited for involvement in complex chromatic polyphony as the recorder.

  • @EarlOfMaladyCrescent
    @EarlOfMaladyCrescent 4 года назад

    Cool video! Subbed! I've been recording some tin whistle over the last couple of days. (It's not my instrument really). I like the look of those tunable ones. Mine seem to have gone 44% of a semitone sharp from concert pitch. I had to do some backing tracks for the whistle parts and sharpen them.

  • @teenanguyen217
    @teenanguyen217 4 года назад

    Sarah you're beautiful and talented and your content is fantastically educational. Thankyou!

  • @annawhistles
    @annawhistles 3 года назад

    Just to throw it out there... I have a tin whistle with a thumb hole on the back!
    Great video, didn't know you played tin whistle too!

  • @clawhammer704
    @clawhammer704 4 года назад +8

    The expensive one might be louder but the cheap one had a open more folk sound to it. But what do I know I'm a North Carolina bluegrass player and never played Irish music.

  • @lillavanderlek6737
    @lillavanderlek6737 6 месяцев назад +1

    Proof that a good musician can make even the cheapest instrument sound good

  • @damionwhittington302
    @damionwhittington302 5 лет назад

    Happy new year!

  • @johnroberts262
    @johnroberts262 5 лет назад +1

    I have played the tin whistle for many years and found the Clark original is flute like in sound.
    Also ,you don't have to play Irish tunes as the whistle covers many other types of music, I for example like to play classical tunes and English folk songs.
    Happy New Year to everyone.

  • @jessicapsalmist8205
    @jessicapsalmist8205 3 года назад

    Thanks. Very interesting and useful

  • @edgewaterz
    @edgewaterz Год назад

    Wikipedia says flutes have been reliably dated back to 40,000 years ago. I wonder what the source is for the 80k years ago. Maybe a different type of carved flute or whistle. Impressive we've had music so long!
    The Low G whistle looks like a heavy metal Drop D bass guitar of the flute world. Great video.

  • @edstud1
    @edstud1 4 года назад

    Love her videos!

  • @Binary._.
    @Binary._. 2 года назад

    Happy New Year 2022

  • @carlafogarty923
    @carlafogarty923 Год назад

    Great to see some Tin Whistle content, I follow Dean at @TinWhistleTV as in sure he would love your content on the Tin Whistle as he is trying to learn the Tub Whistle.

  • @hopefulhyena3400
    @hopefulhyena3400 Год назад

    Penny whistles are also fun crafting projects. I made one myself out of pvc pipe and some wood and all I needed were a hacksaw, a ruler, a pencil, a pocket knife, a pair of scissors, and a phone (calculator and tuner).
    I don't really understand if it's a low g or a g, so I'll say that the G it is tuned to is G4, which is typically the 4th G on a piano, or the g string of a ukulele (tuned re-entrantly)

  • @FiddlingwithmyWhistle
    @FiddlingwithmyWhistle 5 лет назад

    wow... very good

  • @Free_Snooki
    @Free_Snooki 4 года назад +5

    I think tin whistles sound even more distinct than the flute. When she plays, I always think of the DCOM The Luck of the Irish. _🌈_

  • @Post-ModernCzechoslovakianWar
    @Post-ModernCzechoslovakianWar 5 лет назад +2

    The tin whistle is a great instrument, I love playing mine. Great video.
    The Tin Whistle is also played in Traditional Provincial South African Music called Kwela. It’s a very beaitiful form of music with many similarities to Jazz.

    • @mjsuraci
      @mjsuraci 5 лет назад +2

      It's unfortunate that Kwela Music is so seldom written down. Most of what we have are brilliant recordings. ruclips.net/video/qqSUdhsaYGU/видео.html

    • @WayneKitching
      @WayneKitching 4 года назад

      I wanted to mention Kwêla music. I am South African and used to (badly) play "Special Star" by Mango Groove in B flat on a C whistle.

    • @Post-ModernCzechoslovakianWar
      @Post-ModernCzechoslovakianWar 4 года назад

      @@WayneKitching Thanks for sharing that with me. I didn't realize I listened to that before, till I looked it up. Nice to relisten to a good classic.
      Playing in B flat on a C Whistle, that's pretty nifty, I find it extremely difficult to play a Chromatic notes on the whistle.
      It'd be cool to visit various places in Africa, South Africa probably being one of them in the future. I hope things get better over there. Thanks for sharing.

  • @thomaswright7841
    @thomaswright7841 2 года назад +4

    The large whistle sounds so much like a flute!

  • @emorybatten284
    @emorybatten284 5 лет назад

    Really fun. I love tin whistles. Thank you and Happy New Year.

  • @justanotherpiccplayer3511
    @justanotherpiccplayer3511 5 лет назад

    Woooo I got a whistle for Christmas !!!

  • @chrisgay4786
    @chrisgay4786 5 лет назад +10

    mmm more random knowledge to impress my friends with at the pub.

  • @Machodave2020
    @Machodave2020 4 года назад

    Yeah, you can play any music on any instrument just as long as you like it and can transpose it/get a score for it.

  • @idraote
    @idraote 5 лет назад

    Thank you, Sarah, for this interesting video!
    I love whistles, they are so d*** cheap and yet they sound good.
    Of course there are the top of the range ones who sound best but they cost a dear penny, whereas the cheaper ones sound good and you can take them to the beach, to the camping site, to do a bit of trecking and they don't get damaged... And if they do, you buy another.
    I remarked though that there are relevant differences between cheap ones. Some, as said, sound good. Others not so much. And they cost more or less the same, so it's not a matter of price.
    I have a D Sweettone by Clarke which has a conical bore and sounds extremely good, very mellow and "flutish". I also have a Waltons C and a Waltons D. They have a cylindrical bore and are somewhat more "tinny" but are still lovely.
    Of course I couldn't resist but buy a low D even though they are so incredibly expensive. I ended by buying a MK pro low D and it sounds sooo nice. But it's heavy... And you need a lot of breath control.

    • @gabrielvieira9832
      @gabrielvieira9832 5 лет назад

      Unfortunately in my country is not cheap at all

    • @idraote
      @idraote 5 лет назад +1

      @@gabrielvieira9832 I'm sorry to hear that. It's probably because they have to ship them overseas from Ireland or England and all the taxes.

  • @bajoelectrico
    @bajoelectrico 4 года назад +7

    Good video! I write only to say that "El cóndor pasa", as a folk South American song, it is played with a "quena", a sort of wooden whistle, where the mouthpiece is open at the top, with the bevel starting there. Better explained here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quena.

    • @SgtMacska
      @SgtMacska 3 года назад

      Thank you for the reference!

  • @alejandrocastillo6664
    @alejandrocastillo6664 4 года назад +1

    I was curious about the tin whistle because of Eluveitie.. it sounds very cool in their folk metal style xd

  • @JadeDRail
    @JadeDRail 4 года назад

    I can't wait to get mine in the mail. :3

  • @christophertsiliacos8958
    @christophertsiliacos8958 5 лет назад +1

    8:32 If you're enamored with your "all-time favorite": "My Heart Will Go On," you'll love it's counterpart from the same movie and from same composer: "Unable to Stay, Unwilling to Leave." 😊 ♫

  • @courier007
    @courier007 5 лет назад

    Sarah, thanks for all of this (and I love your enthusiasm). Talking the other night with a performer about his tin whistles and noticed they DO have thumb holes. Is that something new? Or just expensive? I'm just learning, mostly in the hope of restoring some lung power/breath control

  • @dracopalidine
    @dracopalidine 3 года назад

    I started using Susato ones because they just produce a lot more volume for pubs or for me at the time to play along with a pipe organ. I honestly just like the sound more now. I use my generation ones when I need to be quiter lol.

  • @funkykoval2099
    @funkykoval2099 5 лет назад

    Happy new year for all family ! Will You show some hiper-simple yet catchy tunes for whistle in the future?

    • @soslothful
      @soslothful 5 лет назад

      Check out tutorials by Cutiepie.

  • @Tuttodunfiato.N.A.F
    @Tuttodunfiato.N.A.F 5 лет назад

    Buon Anno Sarah 👍🐶😀😀

  • @irishrocker225
    @irishrocker225 4 года назад

    Have you ever played a Mike Burke whistle? They have an added thumb hole for making the fingered C natural actually in tune. Highly recommend checking them out

  • @tenienteramires4428
    @tenienteramires4428 5 лет назад

    Here in Valencia and Catalonia we have something similar called "flabiol" (or "flabiol de gralla" in Catalonia), which is like a wooden recorder, but with only six holes (in Valencia it may have seven) plus a thumb hole.

    • @deldia
      @deldia 4 года назад

      Yes, that’s another fipple flute.

  • @srproduction8290
    @srproduction8290 5 лет назад

    Thanks a lot for the information :)

  • @peachwood8884
    @peachwood8884 4 года назад

    I already know how to play the tin whistle, but still. I'd recommend this to advanced players. Just to refresh on your memory.

  • @Fretfeeler
    @Fretfeeler 4 года назад

    I have C and D tinwhistles, currently ABS because I hate the sound of the metal ones, but honestly I much prefer the versatility of the Recorder, although the Tim whistles are sometimes handy for octave tremolos that don't work on Recorder. Still the tinwhistles mostly stay in my bag.

  • @josevalverde2656
    @josevalverde2656 4 года назад +1

    I love you, greater flutist

  • @paulosoares7034
    @paulosoares7034 3 года назад

    Nice! Thanks!

  • @ahmedsalem4057
    @ahmedsalem4057 3 года назад +1

    Because of this video i made an Irish whistle from a multilayered water pipe and it was so good to play
    THEEEEEEEN
    I accidentally found a feadog key of D in junk store in a touristic place in Tunisia, i took it for less than 2 $ !!!

  • @RaynLeatemia
    @RaynLeatemia 5 лет назад +3

    Hi Sarah, would u please do a review of Yamaha Venova? Would be great to see you do it!

    • @DellaStreet123
      @DellaStreet123 5 лет назад

      Hi, I am a "reedocorder" player, and I think if you don't want an instrument that you can play everywhere, including the bathtub, I'd rather buy a Kunath Clarineau with 3 keys. Better tuned and you can get it in recorder fingering for the lower register.

  • @robertatricarico3728
    @robertatricarico3728 5 лет назад

    Very good

  • @alishermoshayi893
    @alishermoshayi893 3 года назад

    I like to play asian melodies with my whistles!!! The sound is so awesome 😍😍😍

  • @RecordersRocketsBEC
    @RecordersRocketsBEC 5 лет назад +1

    Great fun! When I saw that Chieftain low D I wondered how you would cover that huge hole (second from the bottom) but you obviously have much more agile fingers than I do. I find I have to use a “piper’s grip” on the lower hand only when I grab my Dixon low D to play, even though I find the Mollenhauer Dream tenor quite comfortable with a “recorder grip”. Oh - a recommendation for a PVC whistle that sounds lovely and is very portable: parkswhistles.com. No affiliation, just a satisfied customer as they say. I keep a Walkabout (3 piece) D whistle in my shirt pocket pretty much all the time for impromptu playing.
    Happy New Year!

  • @lilapiselloduga1752
    @lilapiselloduga1752 3 года назад +2

    I have a little question, I've played the flute for quite a while and I was wondering if you need to clean the inside of the whistle after playing like you would with a flute or other woodwind?

  • @quailypoes
    @quailypoes 4 года назад +1

    Those low whistles are amazing! Do you think they're something I could play being a 5'3" shortie with small hands? Thank you so much for your wonderful content and all of your enthusiasm!

    • @spacewad8745
      @spacewad8745 4 года назад

      You should have no problem. Go at it.

  • @joshhallmark9777
    @joshhallmark9777 5 лет назад +3

    Because...physics, (scrunches face). :) Good video. Thanks.

  • @TinWhistleTV
    @TinWhistleTV 11 месяцев назад

    Great video Sarah, do you have a playlist for the Tin Whistles?

  • @laurencemann4952
    @laurencemann4952 2 года назад

    I enjoy your videos Sarah but I would be really interested in your opinion about the Chalumeau ?

  • @JHVermaat
    @JHVermaat 5 лет назад

    El Condor Pasa is of course known by the Simon and Garfunkel version, but is was writen far before that by the Peruvian composer Daniel Alomía Robles (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Cóndor_Pasa_(song) ). It was based on traditional Andean music.

  • @OboeFiles
    @OboeFiles 5 лет назад +3

    Omg I love Sarah’s videos so much! I was wondering how common is it for recorder players to double on tin whistles? I’m always trying to be more like you on my channel, thanks for the inspiration!

    • @jamescruz7001
      @jamescruz7001 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah Ive only known one other recorder player to double, but they doubled traverse flute... I dont know that many recorder players...

    • @playloudandsoft7489
      @playloudandsoft7489 5 лет назад +1

      I also wondered this!?

    • @Team_Recorder
      @Team_Recorder  5 лет назад +1

      Good question! When I was back in England it was quite common amongst my folkie friends.

    • @muiscisawesomeyo3852
      @muiscisawesomeyo3852 5 лет назад

      Lol Folkie where do people play tin wisltes like fairs or in concert halls,... that might be a dumb question i guess

    • @msk-qp6fn
      @msk-qp6fn 2 года назад

      i suppose it is likely to be common. as common as clarinet players doubling as saxophone players.

  • @person7200
    @person7200 Год назад +1

    I am a Scottish fiddler and whenever someone is like
    “do you have the music for this” I’m like give me a second
    *me opens up the session on my phone*
    “Here you go!”

  • @richardcrilley11
    @richardcrilley11 5 лет назад

    Sarah, could you do something on the intro to Irish Heartbeat by Van Morrison. Are they using a recorder or a tin whistle? Could you do the notes and/or tab to this intro?

  • @proserpina4448
    @proserpina4448 3 года назад

    Hi Sarah, do you have any tipps for the overblown notes? I'm teaching myself to play the tin whistle and I struggle with the high notes. I often don't get them clearly / purely.

  • @robcory3744
    @robcory3744 4 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @mihokradovan
    @mihokradovan 3 года назад

    Because physics....... You are great, sarah...

  • @BizzaroBrainBoi
    @BizzaroBrainBoi 4 года назад +1

    "because physics" xD great video