Here’s a little fun jamming to bring out the kid in you.
http://www.cartoonnetwork.com/games/classof3000/funkbox/index.html
Enjoy!! ![]()
Okay, going off topic here…
Daughter (reading over my shoulder) says “Happy Fluting” to you too…as she cleans her trombone.
(Nyah Nyah, mine’s begger than yours!)
--she’s 16; now you know what I have to put up with. ![]()
I think you may be mis-reading the small finger spelling. I can see the thumb denoting the letter “T”.
Thanks, LOL, I realized after a moment what it had to say (it’s been a long day) and went back to edit the message.
Trombone players will be trombone players regardless of age. ![]()
One of roommates from college (who is still a very dear friend of mine) was a bass trombone player. I was “furtunate” enough to get to “enjoy” the company of trombone and tuba players throughout my undergrad at UK. What an experience that was… ![]()
Just show your daughter this. (Not a pic of me, but…) I got to play a hyperbass flute one time…
I think the size of this monster could give a trombone some competition. ![]()

Holy tubular monoliths Batman, that thing’s massive! ![]()
Brings new meaning to the term ‘cosmic drainpipe’!!! ![]()
Referring to the original link to the cartoon network, in the class of 3000 at the auditorium you can program seven instruments in the orchestra and listen to the music mix. The program is easy to use and a lot of fun.
i had fun too and put this in my favorites.
Wow! Nice set of lips. ![]()

djm
I suppose that you got her name from her name tag.
As for the contrabass flute, I don’t particularly like to hear the bass sounds from a flute. It bothers me. I do like the alto flute, but my favorite is the concert flute range, which is not too low and not to high (piccolo), but (you guessed it) just right, IMO.
I, on the other hand, have expressed my love for the extreme low end, especially the low saxes. I had a barri sax that was just getting into the fun part of the sonic spectrum. There is something almost orgasmic about the low end saxes.
I get the love of the low saxes from my dad. He found a buzzer that could be adjusted past the high and low ends of human hearing. He found the high end for him ended before anyone else couldn’t hear it any more as he turned it up, but the low end ended for everyone else when he could still hear it clearly as he turned it down. If I can feel vibrations but not hear something, I can discern a pitch. I found I could discern pitches from a speaker in my hand connected to an oscillator in the low end, and could still discern a pitch when it was turned below even my lowest audible frequency. I can also discern a pitch from a rapidly flashing strobe light or visibly vibrating object. I can’t hear a pitch directly from visual or tactile vibrations, but I imagine what I’m observing sounds like. Auroras can seem to sizzle and boom when I watch them and snow passing by a window seems to produce white sound. When I told my dad about being able to discern pitches in vibrations, even pitches lower than what I can hear, he acted surprised I found this amazing.
I vote she oughta form a duo with:
gee that flute even puts the gran zampogna to shame