Saturday 1 January 2022
from Flute Partita in F major
This is the opening movement of Partita No. 3 in F major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published in Leipzig as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.
Sunday 2 January 2022
arranged for two flutes
This arrangement for two flutes of the popular Scottish pipe tune is taken from Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in 1833.
Monday 3 January 2022
from “26 Exercises”
Today we propose the ninth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.
Note that all trills should be played with a final anticipatory turn, as illustrated in bar 1. This turn should follow on from the trill clearly and without any hesitation.
Tuesday 4 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
This jig is taken from Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in 1903. The title probably refers to one Adam Tobin, a native of Kilkenny, by way of Chicago fiddler James Kennedy, who gave the tune to O'Neill.
Wednesday 5 January 2022
from “8 Caprices”
This is the second of 8 Caprices for solo flute by German violinist and composer Anton Stamitz, composed around the 1780s.
This particular piece has no tempo indication in the original edition, but modern ones often label it “Andante”.
Thursday 6 January 2022
from “Méthode de flûte”
This Allegro for two flutes is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.
Friday 7 January 2022
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
This study is the twentieth piece from the first etude book written by Danish flutist and composer Joachim Andersen, his 24 grosse Etüden für Flöte, Op. 15, first published in Hamburg in 1885.
Saturday 8 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
The earliest known appearance of this jig is in Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903. It is not to be confused with the (arguably more popular) reel of the same name.
Sunday 9 January 2022
from Flute Partita in F major
This Andante in B-flat major is the second movement of Partita No. 3 in F major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published in Leipzig as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.
Monday 10 January 2022
arranged for three flutes
This tune first appeared in John A. Stevenson's Selection of Popular National Airs (1818) as a setting for Thomas Moore's “Hark! The Vesper Hymn is Stealing”. A footnote in that hymnal explained that Stevenson had added what is now the first line of the retrain to a “Russian Air”. Some later hymnals attributed the tune to Russian-Ukrainian composer Dimitri Bortniansky, but no tune resembling this one has been found in his published works. For that reason, Stevenson is sometimes recognized as the composer of the tune.
The present arrangement for three flutes is taken from Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in 1833.
Tuesday 11 January 2022
from “26 Exercises”
Today we propose the tenth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.
Wednesday 12 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
The earliest known appearance of this jig is in Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903. It is also known under the curious title “The Cow that Ate the Blanket”.
Thursday 13 January 2022
from “8 Caprices”
This is the third of 8 Caprices for solo flute by German violinist and composer Anton Stamitz, composed around the 1780s.
Friday 14 January 2022
from “Méthode de flûte”
This Allegretto for two flutes is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.
Saturday 15 January 2022
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
This study is the twenty-first piece from the first etude book written by Danish flutist and composer Joachim Andersen, his 24 grosse Etüden für Flöte, Op. 15, first published in Hamburg in 1885.
Sunday 16 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
The earliest known appearance of this jig is in Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903. O'Neill obtained the tune from the playing of Chicago fiddler Edward Cronin, originally from County Tipperary.
Monday 17 January 2022
from Flute Partita in F major
This is the third movement of Partita No. 3 in F major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published in Leipzig as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.
Tuesday 18 January 2022
arranged for two flutes
This “original Irish melody” was composed around 1830 by pianist William Eavestaff, about whom not much is known.
Oh it is not while riches and splendour surround us,
That friendship and friends can be put to the test,
'Tis but when afflictions cold pressure has bound us,
We find which the hearts are, that love us the best;
For friends will fawn at fortune's dawn,
While the breeze and the tide waft us steadily on,
But if sorrow o'ertakes us, Each false one forsakes us
And leaves us to sink or to struggle alone.
The present arrangement for two flutes appeared in Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in Philadelphia in 1833.
Wednesday 19 January 2022
from “26 Exercises”
Today we propose the twelfth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.
Thursday 20 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
This tune appears in Francis O'Neill's collection Music of Ireland, published in 1903. It was played by fiddler Edward Cronin, born in County Tipperary in the 1830s, although he had no name for it. A member of O'Neill's traditional Irish music circle in Chicago, Sergeant Early (an uilleann piper and member of the Chicago police force), upon hearing Cronin play, remarked “with evident appreciation, ‛Ah, that's well covered with moss’ — alluding to its ancient strains”. O'Neill seized upon the remark as a convenient title.
Friday 21 January 2022
from “8 Caprices”
This is the fourth of 8 Caprices for solo flute by German violinist and composer Anton Stamitz, composed around the 1780s.
Saturday 22 January 2022
from “Méthode de flûte”
This Allegretto for two flutes is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.
Sunday 23 January 2022
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
This study is the twenty-second piece from the first etude book written by Danish flutist and composer Joachim Andersen, his 24 grosse Etüden für Flöte, Op. 15, first published in Hamburg in 1885.
Monday 24 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
This tune is taken from Francis O'Neill's collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903. Irish Guitarist Paul de Grae notes that the title “Book of Rights” belongs to a Irish medieval manuscript. A very similar tune appears in the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper Canon James Goodman under the title “The Rights of an Irishman”.
Tuesday 25 January 2022
from Flute Partita in F major
These two minuets constitute the fourth movement of Partita No. 3 in F major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published in Leipzig as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.
Wednesday 26 January 2022
arranged for two flutes
This air was originally composed by British organist John Whitaker for the 1815 operatical farce My Spouse and I.
I went to the fair with a heart all so merry,
Sing hey down, ho down, derry down dee;
And I bought a gay ribbon as red as a cherry,
For the girl I lov'd best and who vow'd to love me.
I return'd from the fair gaily whistling and singing,
My true lover's knot I in triumph was bringing;
0! it wasn't for me that I heard the bells ringing;
Sing hey down, ho down, derry down dee.
The present arrangement for two flutes appeared in Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in Philadelphia in 1833.
Thursday 27 January 2022
from “26 Exercises”
Today we propose the thirteenth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.
Friday 28 January 2022
Traditional Irish jig
The earliest known appearance of this popular jig is in Francis O'Neill's collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903.
Saturday 29 January 2022
from “8 Caprices”
This is the fifth of 8 Caprices for solo flute by German violinist and composer Anton Stamitz, composed around the 1780s.
Sunday 30 January 2022
from “Méthode de flûte”
This short and sweet Andante for two flutes is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.
Monday 31 January 2022
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
This study is the twenty-third piece from the first etude book written by Danish flutist and composer Joachim Andersen, his 24 grosse Etüden für Flöte, Op. 15, first published in Hamburg in 1885.