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Home > Flutes | ![]() |
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Ancient Arizona flute Price: $300.00 Beginner Anasazi style Price: $140.00 Ancient Mojave Design Price: $140.00 Old Style Plains Flute Price: $280.00 Ancient Anasazi style Flute Price: $240.00 Painted Cicada Flute Price: $420.00 Little Flutes Price: $120.00 Backpacking Flute Price: $180.00 carved cicada flute Price: $420.00 Pre 1800s Hopi style flute Price: $140.00 Inlay Anasazi style Flute Price: $600.00 LARGE Painted Bird Flute Price: $1,200.00 |
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![]() **I am reintroducing a wonderful ancient flute. In stock and ready to ship- G# and A. My large pretty Anasazi style flute. 29.5 inches long, aromatic cedar, beautiful mysterious tuning based on 1200 year old artifacts. Low note is G#, plays one and one half octaves plus. Also available slightly smaller key of A, 28 inches long, slightly easier reach. Both Excellent luscious professional quality instrument. Signed, numbered. This is the return of a wonderful ancient American flute. Hard as hell to learn. Worth it. When you buy an artifact replica flute from me, you are getting a flute made by a professional musician with 30 years experience in flute building. I have played rem blown flutes since 1975 and my Anasazi style flutes are truely high performance instruments. Listen to Rainbird. and check out this YouTube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3dr16CJ-WE&feature=related I learned to make the Anasazi replicas from direct measurements of the artifacts. These measurements were provided to me by Dr. Richard Payne (I suggest you read his books). The artifacts varied in length somewhat and not all were complete, but the best examples were around 29.5 inches long and averaged G# on the lowest note. The scale is easily copied from artifacts as the size and placement of finger holes along a tube of specific size determines the tuning. The information and scale is all there even after 1200 years. My flutes are slightly modernized in that the finger holes are arranged for easier reach, the blowing edge is slightly angled for easier playing and the flute is built a little stronger than the artifacts. The difficulty: The Anasazi style flute is a rim-blown flute. That is: one must learn through trial and error to make a sound. The beginner can take an hour to a week to make their first note! The technique for playing is similar to a shakuhachi flute; any skill with true flutes such as our transverse flutes will help with the Anasazi flute but is not essential. Why the flute is difficult at first is also why the flute sounds so wonderful. The scale: playing and exploring the unusual scales of the ancient flute, with it's many higher octave notes is the reward and being part of the reawakening of a virtually unknown ancient instrument is a rare experience in this life. NOTE: in 6 years I have sold over 600 of these wonderful flutes and am pleased that people are having an easier time learning these flutes than I expected. I guess I'm the slow learner. My Anasazi style flutes are now in at least 20 counties. I am pleased! Here are some things that may help with the Anasazi and Hopi style flute. Hold the flute pointing out from your body at about a 45% angle, (half way between straight out and straight down). Let your lower lip cover most of the open mouthpiece, relax your lips, smile a little and blow a gentle, thin stream stream of air straight forward onto the sharp edge of the flute. Don’t make a round opening with your lips; make a thin slit, smile a little. Experiment a lot. MAKE THAT THING SING! (patience). Above all: be playful. MGA
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© 2002 Coyote Oldman -- ShopWorks © 2010 CenturyTel, Inc. | ![]() |
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