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All The History of the Flute The flute is classified as an edge-blown aerophone. Concert flutes are
pitched in the key of C with a range of three octaves starting from
Middle C making it one of the highest common orchestral instruments.
Alto and bass flutes produce much lower tones but the piccolo is higher
than the flute by an octave.
While the flute has been predominant in many cultures worldwide, it was
less popular in the 12th and 13th century Medieval courts. There, the
recorder was the primary woodwind until transverse flutes were brought
over from Asia. Once they were adopted by the Europeans, they became
known as German flutes and were used extensively in court music. The
flute regained popularity around 1470 when the Swiss Army adopted it for
signaling. Later in the 16th century, the flute was often the tenor
voice in court and theater music and then in chamber ensembles. The
Baroque era brought composers for the flute such as Johann Sebastian
Bach, Antonio Vivaldi, and George Frideric Handel and with that the
flute was featured in scores of operas and ballets. Though the Romantic
Era saw a shift from woodwinds to brass and strings, the innovations
created by Theobald Boehm in the mid 19th century set the precedent for
most Western concert flutes.
Theobald Boehm was the German son of a goldsmith who made his own flute
at a young age. His skill as a musician led him to become the First
Flautist in the Royal Bavarian Orchestra. Boehm studied Acoustics at
the University of Munich and then began to experiment with constructing
flutes of different metals and woods and altering the position of the
holes. He patented his first fingering system in 1847 and also
published, “On the Construction of Flutes,” in the same year. His new
flute was displayed at the London Exhibition in 1851. His flute and
finger system did not take off immediately but it is now the basis for
most other modifications and developments to Western concert flutes.
Flute music was rarely used in early jazz but has gradually found its
place in Big Band music. Drummer and bandleader Chick Webb was among
the first to incorporate the flute in the late 1930s. Since then, the
flute has been integrated into Big Bands like the Count Basie Orchestra
and the Tad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra to name a few. Flutes have also
found their place in avante garde jazz and other musical movements.
Jethro Tull is one of the only the well known rock groups to regularly
incorporate flute music but flutes have managed to sneak their way into
several songs by the Moody Blues, Men at Work, and The Beatles.
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