palewine wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:11 am
Cyberknight - thanks for your thoughts. Quick question: you mentioned the current design I posted above wouldn't be able to do more than an octave. Is there a physical limiting factor that is the reason for that?
I was imagining that you could get as low as you wanted, depending on the length of the flute. Granted, the holes get further apart as you go lower, so the key arms may need to be angled (almost like a typewriter). I can't think of any reason why this wouldn't work. But then that's one of the reasons I'm posting here - I don't know what I don't know! So I appreciate those who know more than me offering ideas / critique.
I was thinking this could be an advantage of the instrument - that it could play both very low (the tube's length, however long you make it) and very high notes (holes close to the fipple) within the same instrument.
Keep in mind that I have absolutely zero experience or knowledge when it comes to designing or building instruments! My only experience comes from being a player.
Well, I guess it could do more than an octave, now that I think about it. You'd have two options, the way I see it. One option would be to have the keyboard itself only cover one octave, and then have the player "overblow" to play an octave higher. My only concern with that would be getting the two octaves in tune with each other. I have a vague idea that this would be difficult given the "closed hole" design (i.e., the fact that only one hole is generally open at any given moment). But someone who actually makes woodwinds should chime in here.
The other option would be making the thing longer and just adding more and more holes so that it can access two octaves. This would allow you to have a full two-octave keyboard, and you'd never have to overblow to the second harmonic. I think that would be problematic, though, because you'd need an extremely long tube, I would think, or else you'd run out of room for extra holes at the top to make the thing go higher.
palewine wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:41 am
Cyberknight - responding to some of your other thoughts:
"It can't do slides" - you're right. I wonder if there's a smart modification that could be made where slides become possible? For example, on a traditional piano, one of the foot pedals shifts all the hammer heads over slightly, so it changes the timbre. I could imagine on the Pianoflute, some mechanism that shifts the pad of the desired note forward slightly (half uncovering the hole, like you would with your finger doing a slide on a normal whistle). Then lifting all the way off. In theory, do you think that would work?
"If you're willing to sacrifice open holes" - that's an interesting statement. Can you explain this more? Is there an advantage to having more open holes as you play notes, over fewer?
"I don't see the advantage of having a keyboard" - there may not be much of one for experienced players such as yourself
It's a lot like the difference between harmonica and melodica. A really good player can bend notes and play chromatically on a harmonica. And harmonica isn't even that hard to learn! But even so, the melodica has its own niche in that sound-space (i.e. metal vibrating from blown air, with that distinctive sound). I think this is because, sometimes, people just want to pick up something and have the familiarity of a keyboard to use.
Another interesting advantage here is that Pianoflute could also be done with other instruments, like Clarinet. Perhaps you're a great whistle player, but don't want to learn the new fingerings and embouchure technique required to play Clarinet. Pianoflute (err...at that point it'd be called Pianoclarinet? Claripiano?) could have a version that has a reed head and bell-shaped end, like a Clarinet does. You could just sit down and play clean notes immediately. There's a certain appeal to that.
I'm sure you could make something that would allow slides, yes. But that's further complexity added to an already complex design.
When I talked about "sacrificing open holes," I was talking about the ornamentation advantages they afford. They're better for slides, as I mentioned. I also think (and I've heard disagreement on this point) that open holes are better for certain other ornaments, particularly taps (also known as strikes). But admittedly, the advantages you gain from open holes over a keyboard design that somehow allowed for sliding would be minimal. And anyway, there's nothing wrong with an ITM instrument that can't slide or do woodwind-like ornaments; concertinas and accordions are incapable of exactly imitating woodwind-like ornaments, but they're extremely popular for ITM and have their own unique styles of ornamentation. So I don't want to overstate my point here. The point is simply that the design wouldn't be
quite as good for the "ITM woodwind sound" as flute and whistle are, particularly if it was unable to slide.
Regarding the advantages of keys, I'm not sure the analogy between a harmonica and a melodica is the best. The harmonica is extremely difficult to play well because of the exact precision it requires of your lips and (I believe) your tongue. The melodica is much easier to differentiate individual notes, so I'd argue it's naturally more intuitive for playing melodies than the harmonica is, even for someone who has no experience with keyboards whatsoever. Contrastingly, while the finger system of the Boehm flute may be initially more counterintuitive than the piano's finger system, the flute's design, if anything, makes it easier to play quickly and precisely. Thus, a person who has no experience with flutes or keyboards, after a few weeks of practice with both designs, would probably find the flute's design much easier and more ergonomic than the keyboard layout on your instrument. Of course, things are totally different if the player already plays a keyboard instrument, as you mentioned. So if your audience is people who play piano and want an easy woodwind instrument to learn, I guess your instrument would fill that particular niche.
I think a better analogy would be the melodica/piano accordion vs. the concertina/button accordion. The concertina/button accordion layout is, I think, a bit more ergonomic and better for extremely fast playing than a keyboard is. Yet, piano accordions and melodicas abound, perhaps because people just want something slightly more intuitive for a beginner, and more familiar to someone who plays keyboard. Then again, the counterpoint to this would be that the piano accordion is easier and more flexible than the button accordion in numerous ways that are totally unrelated to its keyboard layout, and the melodica is super inexpensive; these facts could account for the two instruments' popularities.
Finally, your point about clarinets raises an interesting problem, which is that a keyboard layout isn't just going to make embouchure difficulties vanish. Clarinet embouchure is very difficult, but you wouldn't be able to get an instrument with a keyboard layout that sounds like a clarinet while ALSO making those embouchure difficulties go away. You'd have three options: 1) make it have the same headjoint as the clarinet, but with a keyboard layout (thus making it just as difficult, embouchure-wise, as the clarinet); 2) make it a single, free-blown reed instrument like a hulusi, but with a keyboard layout (thus completely changing the sound of the instrument and possibly ruining its ability to switch octaves); or 3) make it a multi-reed free blown instrument (congrats, you've just reinvented the melodica!). Now, with the pianoflute design that you propose, this same principle rings true, but to a lesser extent. What you're proposing is basically a large low whistle with a keyboard layout. This means that all the same things you need to do embouchure-wise on the low whistle, you'd still have to do on the pianoflute. The good news is that low whistle already requires relatively simple embouchure compared to pretty much any other instrument in that octave (the only things you have to worry about are breath control and, to a very minor extent, blowing angle and airstream thickness). So the embouchure wouldn't be THAT hard, but it would still be a concern. The only way you could eliminate all embouchure requirements is if you completely redesigned the instrument so that it had a separate whistle for every note. But then it would sound a bit different from a low whistle.