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Musical Instruments


~4 Recorder Videos~


How a Recorder is Made

Video (Sm) or Video (Lg)

This is a fascinating look at how recorders are made. Not the mass produced plastic ones but the handcrafted wooded recorders used by real musicians of the instrument.

How to Play the Recorder

Video (Sm) or Video (Lg)

Here is some excellent beginning instruction on how to play the recorder.

Learn To Play Recorder
Promo Video


Video (Sm) or Video (Lg)


Dorothee Oberlinger
beim Mosel Musilkfestival


Video (Sm) or Video (Lg)

Watch and listen as Dorothee Oberlinger beautifully plays the recorder in Vivaldi's Concerto for Flautino (Recorder/Flute) and Orchestra in C Major, Op. 44, 11 RV 443.

Michala Petri:
The Ultimate Recorder
Collection (2 Disc Set)

Music available from:
Amazon.com
Rakuten.com Shopping
Barnes&Noble.com

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Aulos A209B
3-Piece Alto Recorder
This is a superior sounding plastic alto recorder. The Aulos 209B features the patented Aulos "cavity wall" design, coupled with the use of a molding powder of high tensile strength to produce a recorder that is remarkably light in weight. The A209B has a dark brown, three-piece ABS plastic body with a curved windway and Baroque (English) fingerings. The Aulos A209B Alto recorder comes with a simulated leather bag, cleaning rod and fingering chart.
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Aulos A309A
3-Piece Alto Recorder
For ensemble and solo playing. Strong full sound throughout the register. Excellent response. Curved windway. Ivory-colored mouthpiece, ring, and foot. Dark brown; three-piece; Baroque (English) fingering; ABS plastic, simulated leather bag; cleaning rod; fingering chart.
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Play Recorder
(Book & CD)
[Paperback]
Master the basics as you step into the exciting world of playing the recorder. This complete and proven method includes over fifty classical and folk tunes to play and enjoy as you learn. The CD included contains all of the music examples and tunes played by professional musicians.
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How to Play the Recorder
[Paperback]
Clear diagrams and explanations highlight this pocket-size beginner''s guide to playing the recorder. This complete course is easy and fun to play, and teaches rhythm, phrasing, and how to achieve a brilliant sound.
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Yamaha YRS-24B
3-Piece C-Soprano Recorder
(Ivory)
Yamaha 20-Series three-piece C-soprano recorder, with Baroque-English fingering.

Ivory recorder; features double holes for low C & C#, and low D & D#.

Includes carrying bag, fingering chart and owner's manual.

This recorder is approximately 12.75" long.
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Yamaha YRS-20BB
3-Piece C-Soprano Recorder
(Cotton Candy Blue)
Yamaha 20-Series three-piece C-soprano recorder, with Baroque-English fingering.

Translucent blue recorder; features double holes for low C & C#, and low D & D#.

Includes a snap-top clear plastic bag; and a fingering chart.

This recorder is approximately 12.88" long.
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Yamaha YRS-20BP
3-Piece C-Soprano Recorder
(Bubble Gum Pink)
Yamaha 20-Series three-piece C-soprano recorder, with Baroque-English fingering.

Translucent pink recorder; features double holes for low C & C#, and low D & D#.

Includes a snap-top clear plastic bag; and a fingering chart.

This recorder is approximately 12.88" long.
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Yamaha YRS-20BG
3-Piece C-Soprano Recorder
(Sour Apple Green)
Yamaha 20-Series three-piece C-soprano recorder, with Baroque-English fingering.

Translucent green recorder; features double holes for low C & C#, and low D & D#.

Includes a snap-top clear plastic bag; and a fingering chart.

This recorder is approximately 12.88" long.
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30 Irish Tunes
for Easy Recorder
[Paperback]
This delightful book contains 30 Irish airs and melodies arranged for soprano recorder. Ideal for schools and beginners studying on their own. Includes a fingering chart making this book ideal for schools and beginning players of all ages.
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Irish Music for Recorder
[Paperback]
An outstanding collection of easy recorder solos consisting of Irish songs and melodies famous throughout the world. Includes "Cockles and Mussels," "The Londonderry Air," "Galway Bay" and "The Garden Where." Contents: Believe Me If All Endearing Young Charms * Cockles and Mussels * Dear Little Shamrock * Down by the Tanyard Side * Galway Bay * Garden Where the Praties Grow * Harp That Once * I Know Where I''m Going * I Once Loved a Boy * If I Were a Blackbird * I''ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen * Killarney * Last Rose of Summer * Londonderry Air * Oft'' in the Stilly Night * O''Raffertys Motor Car * Patsy Fagan (The Dacent Irish Boy) * Rose of Tralee * She Moved Through the Fair * Spinning Wheel * Teddy O''Neale * The Gentle Maiden * The Irish Washerwoman * The Lark in the Clear Air * The Maid of Sweet Gurteen * The Minstrel Boy * The Road to Lisdoonvarna * The Stuttering Lovers * The Wild Colonial Boy * Trotting to the Fair.
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"The recorder is the easiest instrument
in Western culture to play badly."

~Alec Loretto, Recorder Playing in Australia~


The Recorder

By: Charlie Buquette


A member of the woodwind family, the recorder's history is not well known, although examples of it can be found in medieval paintings, and what appears to be a recognizable recorder-type instrument dating back to the Iron Age has been found - although it is made of sheep bone rather than wood! The instrument, however, often gets a bad press, largely due to people's recollections of struggling to learn the instrument in the classroom - or perhaps being unfortunate enough to have to teach the instrument to several new classes each and every year.

Considering the fact that it is so commonly used as a learning instrument, it is actually quite difficult to get a smooth, warm tone out of a recorder, and very easy to end up with a screech or a bending note. However, with practice, the recorder can be made to produce a beautiful sound, with its distinct warm, woody tones and even vibrato. The instrument was certainly taken seriously during the Renaissance and Baroque periods; Bach, Purcell and Vivaldi wrote music for it.

School Use

There are plenty of very good reasons why the recorder has entrenched itself in the national psyche as a school instrument. First, it is relatively cheap to make, consisting basically of a tube with holes and a mouthpiece - there are no moving parts. This is enhanced by the fact that they can also be made of plastic and therefore mass-produced. Second, they are durable, tough instruments that will withstand a bit of abuse. Third, they are monophonic, so simple tunes can be learnt on them that do not tax the young player too much, and therefore sheet music is much easier to read. Fourth, they are small and easy to carry about in a satchel or bag. And fifth, they never need tuning as they are pre-tuned - there are no strings to slacken.

Unfortunately, rigidly observed school curricula quite often meant that people with no interest in music were forced to learn the instrument, and those who were interested might not have been overenthusiastic about playing rounds of "London's Burning" with the teacher doing a Toscanini at the front of the class. This could explain the humour and scornful nostalgia associated with the instrument. In mitigation, however, nobody leaves school without knowing that all cows eat grass and that every good boy deserves something beginning with an F, be it food, football, fudge or fun - or should that be five-a-day?

Range and Fingering

A recorder has a range of just over two octaves, with the lowest note being the tone produced when every hole is closed with the fingers. Since most learning instruments will be in the key of C, that will be the tone produced. Recorders do come in other keys, however. F is also a common key, and more specialist instruments come in D, E flat and G. A little known fact is that recorders are actually chromatic - they can play all twelve tones in an octave including sharps and flats. This is done by half-covering certain holes, but isn't required in "Frere Jacques".


About the Author

Charlie Buquette

(ArticlesBase SC #257553)

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/ - The Recorder


Basic Fingering for C-Soprano Recorder



If you are interested in learning to play the recorder,
here are some wonderful recorder methods (some with CD).

Teach Yourself Recorder
(Book, CD & DVD)
[Paperback]

This complete music instruction package includes a book, CD and DVD: Read the easy-to-understand instruction book designed to get you playing right away, play along with professional backing tracks from the CD, and see an expert teacher explain and demonstrate techniques and songs on the video.

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Recorder Fun!:
Teach Yourself
the Easy Way!
(Book & CD)
[Paperback]

This book/CD pack will have you playing 40 great songs on recorder in no time! The book includes all the information you will need to get started, plus an easy-to-use finger chart, and the demonstration play-along CD features professional accompaniments to make you sound like a pro!

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Basic Recorder Lessons: Omnibus Edition [Paperback]

An exceptionally clear and easy modular approach to playing the recorder and understanding music. Designed to be used either in a student/teacher situation or by students on their own. There are rounds, solos, duets; country dances, playing tips and more!

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Mel Bay Celtic Tunes
for Recorder
[Paperback]

This book was conceived to provide the player with tunes well within the comfort range of the recorder and written in manageable keys. The beautiful melodies and spirited dance tunes in this book was carefully selected from the O'Neill and Roche volumes both for their playability and to reflect the spirit of the people of Celtic lands. Guitar chords included.

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