Cheap wood.

http://www.leevalley.com/gifts/page.aspx?c=1&p=44257&cat=4,104,53201&ap=2

http://www.leevalley.com/gifts/page.aspx?c=1&p=44256&cat=4,104,53201&ap=2

Less than $25 USD including shipping to the States.

Tempting.

Mike

Lee Valley Tools rocks. Has for years. No, they don’t pay me to say this!

I noticed last month that the doc fixing my leg wound (now healing nicely) was usind Canica surgical tools, designed by Leonard Lee himself.

Whistle / flutemakers might want to look at Lee Valley’s selection of turning blanks. I’ve turned their dogwood blanks before, and they’re dead stable. They’ve been aging for decades. They also have some exotics that can be tough to get, depending on where one lives.

Their tools (Veritas) are comparable to Lie Neisson Toolworks, have more original designs (in my opinion), and are a bit cheaper. Entertaining catalogue, too.

Sorry to rave on, but I always get a bit wild-eyed and drooly around cool tool stuff.

Arghh!

Couldn’t help myself. I just ordered one. $22.50 US delivered to my house! I will report the cat’s opinion (she’s the most sensitive critic around here) when it arrives.

:slight_smile:

ARRRGGHHH! Must…order…whistle…can’t…stop…WHOA… :boggle:

Around here, my dogs are my most vocal critics. I ordered one–been looking for a wood whistle in a low price range to try before I jump off the deep end and by a several hundred dollar work of art! :slight_smile:

I will also report back…Thanks for the tip, Dale! :smiley:

Also, the fife that’s on the other link appears to be the same model I picked up as a keepsake from attending a Civil War re-enactment here in Southern Californina last fall. It’s made by Cooperman, and is a nifty little player. My KORG tuner has not arrived yet, so I cannot really speak to how accurate the intonation is, but it sounds OK to me, if that makes any sense. :smiley:

Will someone please tell me why people insist on adding “flute” to the word “whistle”? Why don’t people write “rcrd*r flute”? Because it’s not a flute! It’s like calling something a “trumpet tuba”. Sheesh…

I picked up one of those wooden whistles a couple of years ago. It was very hard to get a sound out of it and not quite in tune. The poem I learned as a tiny tot has taught me well:

I bought a wooden whistle but it wooden whistle,
I bought a steel whistle and I steel couldn’t whistle.
Then I bought a tin whistle and now I tin whistle.

I’m not speaking out against all wooden whistles. Just this one in particular. :slight_smile:

Not a great analogy. Tuba is latin for trumpet, I believe.

I do get your point, though. It’s a real pain in the butt (and unethical) practice on EBay as well, and makes running searches tricky.

The wood whistle looks nice and made well, but the hole spacing looks off. I have a fife like that one and it has a nice tone to it. Right now i don’t remember where it is. :slight_smile:

Whistles, recorders and transverse flutes including fifes/piccolos, diagonal flutes (kavals and neys) and vertical flutes (shakuhachis and kena etc) are all broadly classed as flutes because that is what they are. Check it out in any reputable music book.

The whistles and recorders belong to the fipple branch of the flute family.

Boy Scouts and Girl Guides blow whsitles but the “whistles” we play are a type of fipple flute. Get over it.

Yeah… Coopermans.

Aren’t Coopermans considered THE fife of fifers and madfifers everywhere?


I wondered about the hole spacing on the wooden whistle flute. However in spite of the nice price I need neither one at the moment.

That particular Cooperman, although maple, is their low-end mass-produced gift shoppe version. I am enjoying mine–it’s fun to play and practice on (made one out of PVC using it as a pattern–worked great! :smiley: ), I wouldn’t try showing up to a fife and drum muster with one, though :astonished: . A good fife (which I don’t have yet) will run you between 80 and 120 USD.

I have one of the low end Cooperman’s too and I like it a lot. I got it at the gift shop in Colonial Williamsburg and had about 100 to choose from so I picked through them and found one with some birdseyes on it. When I got it home I stripped the varnish off, applied a very light golden stain and then an oil finish. The finish came off the brass end ferrules too, so now they’ve aged a bit and the whole thing has a rather attractive antique look.

I have one of those low-rent Cooperman’s too, and I wouldn’t give it to anybody for fear they’d hold it against me. :laughing: … or throttle me with it… :astonished: It is pretty to look at but not at all in tune, even with itself. Now, I understand there is a higher end model that looks much the same (the finger holes may be slightly champhered?) but is actually a decent quality instrument.

I wonder if those in the link are equal to the former or the latter?

In some countries people think recorders are a kind of flute

French - flûte à bec
German - Blockflöte
Italian - flauto diretto
Spanish - flauta de pico

In my country the translation to recorders is “Flauta Dulce”.

Danish - Blokfløjte

I ordered one when this thread came up. It came today. Yes it is a Cooperman, and it is packaged with a one-page instruction and tune sheet. Looks like they were made for sale at touristy gift shops and museums.

Mine barely plays. Extremely breathy. But it is in tune. I need to play with determination to get anything in the upper register to come out. I think I can tweak it to play better. It might eventually become a quiet practice whistle.

We got all three catalogues from Lee Valley and they are beautiful.

Oreo Phil

Oreo

Mine came today too. It is indeed the low end Cooperman. Not very good. One third of the air makes a tone and the remaining two thirds used just produces nothing but wooshing sounds. Upper register is pretty bad. I wonder if Jerry Freeman has ever worked on one of these. Or, maybe if I saw the head off and put a …