Saturday 1 December 2012
from “Thirty Easy and Progressive Studies”
Here is another very simple étude from Giuseppe Gariboldi's collection of 30 Etudes faciles et progressives. Strive to play it perfectly, paying close attention to dynamics and to the quality of your tone.
Sunday 2 December 2012
Traditional Scottish jig
This jig, of Scottish origins, appears in a manuscript by Joshua Gibbons, a papermaker and musician from Lincolnshire, England, who between 1823 and 1826 collected this and other tunes from a variety of sources.
Monday 3 December 2012
from “Trattenimenti armonici”
Here is the third movement of the second Sonata from the Trattenimenti armonici collection by Italian Baroque composer Tomaso Albinoni.
Tuesday 4 December 2012
from “Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses”
This is the second movement from the fifth of Telemann's Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses, ou à deux Violons, ou à deux Flutes à bec, or “Sonatas without Bass for Two Transverse Flutes, or Two Violins, or Two Recorders”.
Wednesday 5 December 2012
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
Here is another étude by Danish flutist Joachim Andersen. This jumpy Allegretto in D minor is study No. 24 from his Twenty-Four Etudes for Flute, Op. 33.
Thursday 6 December 2012
Traditional English Christmas carol
This English Christmas carol, dating to the Renaissance era, was collected about a century ago in Derbyshire by the famous composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. The tune has since been arranged by John Jacob Niles and John Rutter, among others. It has been recorded by numerous artists, including Joan Baez, Bruce Cockburn, Shirley Collins and Burl Ives.
Friday 7 December 2012
from Flute Sonata in G major
This Allegro is the third and final movement of Sonata No. 5 in G major from John Ranish's XII Solos for the German Flute, Op. 2, first appeared in London in 1744.
Saturday 8 December 2012
from “Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses”
This “gracious” piece is the third movement from the fifth of Telemann's Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses, ou à deux Violons, ou à deux Flutes à bec, or “Sonatas without Bass for Two Transverse Flutes, or Two Violins, or Two Recorders”.
Sunday 9 December 2012
from “Thirty Easy and Progressive Studies”
This easy Waltz-like étude is taken from Giuseppe Gariboldi's collection of 30 Etudes faciles et progressives.
Monday 10 December 2012
Traditional American reel
This composition first appeared in print in Ryan's Mammoth Collection of reels, jigs and other traditional pieces, published in Boston in 1883. In the collection, the tune is attributed to one Frank Livingston.
Tuesday 11 December 2012
by Gioachino Rossini, transcribed for solo flute
L'italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers), which became Rossini's first real smash in 1813, has maintained its place in the repertory not least because of its ever popular overture. This overture features a theatrically heavy slow introduction leading to a sudden loud burst of sound from the full orchestra, and then into an exciting Allegro. What is probably the most famous theme from the opera is found at measure 82 (3:05 in the sample recording).
Wednesday 12 December 2012
from Mozart's “The Marriage of Figaro”, arranged for two flutes
This lively duet between Figaro and Susanna appears at the beginning of Act I of Mozart's famous opera Le nozze di Figaro, right after “Cinque, dieci”. Susanna is trying to explain Figaro why she doesn't like the room the Count has destined to them: she is bothered by its proximity to the Count's chambers, as it seems he has been making advances toward her.
Thursday 13 December 2012
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
Here is another étude by Danish flutist Joachim Andersen. This molto staccato (“very staccato”) “Allegro ma non troppo” in D-flat major is study No. 15 from his Twenty-Four Etudes for Flute, Op. 33.
Friday 14 December 2012
A Christmas Carol from Ireland
The tune to which this Christmas carol is sung is known as “O'Carolan's Lament”, after the blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan (1670–1738), one of the last Irish harpist-composers and the only one whose songs survive in both words and music in significant number.
It is said that O'Carolan originally composed this Lament for the nephew of the great Earl of Tyrone, who led the Irish to a victory over General Monroe's Anglo-Scottish army at Benburb in 1646.
Saturday 15 December 2012
from “Trattenimenti armonici”
This Allegro in G minor is the fourth and final movement of the second Sonata from the Trattenimenti armonici collection by Italian Baroque composer Tomaso Albinoni.
Sunday 16 December 2012
from “Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses”
This is the fourth and final movement from the fifth of Telemann's Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses, ou à deux Violons, ou à deux Flutes à bec, or “Sonatas without Bass for Two Transverse Flutes, or Two Violins, or Two Recorders”.
Monday 17 December 2012
from “Thirty Easy and Progressive Studies”
Here is another very simple étude from Giuseppe Gariboldi's collection of 30 Etudes faciles et progressives. If you can't play the low C's, you can just play them an octave higher.
Tuesday 18 December 2012
Traditional English hornpipe
This composition is often attributed to William Shields, a popular 18th-century musician and composer originally from Swalwell, Northumberland. However, as scholars have pointed out, Shields often appropriated traditional or folk melodies, and “Morpeth Rant” may not be original to him.
The town of Morpeth is in Northumberland, a market center on the River Wansbeck. A special dance specific to this tune has been performed for over two centuries, and the dance itself is called the Morpeth Rant. Like many such dances, however, numerous tunes could be used as the vehicle for the steps.
Wednesday 19 December 2012
Popular Argentinian tango
One of the most popular tangos in Argentina, this song was written by composer and singer Ángel Villoldo in honor of the nickname of the proprietor of a nightclub, who was known as El Choclo (literally “the corn cob”). The piece was premiered at a restaurant in Buenos Aires in 1903, and has since been recorded by many dance orchestras, especially in Argentina.
Thanks to Monique for suggesting this piece!
Thursday 20 December 2012
from Mozart's “The Marriage of Figaro”, arranged for two flutes
The aria “Non so piu cosa son, cosa faccio” (“I don't know anymore what I am, what I do”) is sung in Act I of Mozart's famous opera Le nozze di Figaro by Cherubino, the Count's young male page. In the aria, Cherubino confesses his blossoming interest in all things feminine and particularly for his “beautiful godmother”, the Countess. This aria is an example of an aria agitata: an aria sung in a breathless manner which tended to signify “virtue in distress”.
Friday 21 December 2012
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
Here is another étude by Danish flutist Joachim Andersen. This Adagio in B-flat minor is study No. 16 from his Twenty-Four Etudes for Flute, Op. 33. It can easily be considered a study in accidentals... don't let all those sharps and flats scare you!
Saturday 22 December 2012
Traditional English Christmas tune
This hymn tune, known under the name of “Forest Green”, is used in the United Kingdom (and sometimes in the US, especially in the Episcopal Church), to sing the Christmas carol “O Little Town of Bethlehem”. The tune has its origins in an English folk ballad called "The Ploughboy's Dream", which the famous composer Ralph Vaughan Williams collected from a Mr. Garman of Forest Green, Surrey in 1903.
In the United States “O Little Town of Bethlehem” is most commonly sung to the hymn tune known as “St. Louis”.
Sunday 23 December 2012
from Flute Sonata in D major
This Larghetto is the opening movement of Sonata No. 6 in D major from John Ranish's XII Solos for the German Flute, Op. 2, first published in London in 1744.
Monday 24 December 2012
from Sonata for two flutes in G minor
This Gavotte in G minor is the second movement of the fourth of Belgian Baroque composer Jean-Baptiste Loeillet's second book of Six sonatas of two parts, made on purpose for two German flutes, first published in London in 1720.
Tuesday 25 December 2012
Merry Christmas from flutetunes.com!
This is one of the many Cornish Christmas carols that appeared during the 19th century. The melody was first transcribed from the singing of Thomas Beard, a villager in St. Day in the parish of Gwennap, Cornwall. The village itself is named after St. Day (or St. They), a Breton saint venerated in Cornwall.
Wednesday 26 December 2012
from “Thirty Easy and Progressive Studies”
Here is another simple étude from Giuseppe Gariboldi's collection of 30 Etudes faciles et progressives. If you can't reach the low E-C# passage (measures 5-6, 21-22, 45-46), you can play both notes one octave higher.
Thursday 27 December 2012
by P.I. Tchaikovsky, transcribed for solo flute
This Tarantella, a type of fast traditional dance from Southern Italy, appears in Act II of Tchaikovsky's famous ballet The Nutcracker, right before the Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy.
Thanks to Sarah for suggesting this tune!
Friday 28 December 2012
from “Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses”
This Siciliana is the opening movement from the third of Telemann's Sonates sans Basse à deux Flutes traverses, ou à deux Violons, ou à deux Flutes à bec, or “Sonatas without Bass for Two Transverse Flutes, or Two Violins, or Two Recorders”.
Saturday 29 December 2012
from “24 Etudes for Flute”
Here is another étude by Danish flutist Joachim Andersen. This Andantino in A-flat major is study No. 17 from his Twenty-Four Etudes for Flute, Op. 33.
Sunday 30 December 2012
Irish folk song
This beautiful waltz-time song was written by Kenneth North sometime before 1950, and has been covered by nearly every Irish band since. The lyrics tell of a traveler who has left Ulster and longs to return to the beautiful scenery of the glens (valleys) and to one particular person that he left behind. The Nine Glens that radiate from the Antrim Plateau to the coast are an area of outstanding natural beauty and are a major tourist attraction in Northern Ireland.
Thanks to Michael for suggesting this tune!
Monday 31 December 2012
from “Trattenimenti armonici”
The “Grave Adagio” in B-flat major we present today is the opening movement of the third Sonata from the Trattenimenti armonici collection by Italian Baroque composer Tomaso Albinoni.