Wednesday 1 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Two Menuets by Tromlitz

 from Flute Partita in G major

These two minuets constitute the fourth movement of Partita No. 2 in G major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.

Categories: Classical Minuets Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Thursday 2 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Duet in C-sharp minor by Tulou

 from “Méthode de flûte”

This short study for two flutes, supposedly based on a “Russian air”, is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.

Categories: Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: easy
Friday 3 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in E minor by Fürstenau

 from “26 Exercises”

Today we propose the fourth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.

Categories: Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Saturday 4 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Paddy Whack

 Traditional Irish jig

This popular tune has been often published from the later 18th century on in both fiddle and fife collections. Its oldest known appearance is in Rutherford's Compleat Collection of 200 of the Most Celebrated Country Dances, published around 1756. Some later publications have called it “Paddy O'Whack”. The title is from a song by the same name, the chorus of which goes:

Di du mack whack,
And where are ye from?
The town of Ballyhack
Where seven praties weight a ton.

Several other songs have been set to the air, including “Villikins and His Dinah” and the American “Sweet Betsy from Pike”.

Categories: Jigs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Sunday 5 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Gavotta by Corelli

 from Violin Sonata in E major, transcribed for flute and keyboard

This gavotta is the fifth and final movement of Italian Baroque composer Arcangelo Corelli's Violin Sonata No. 11 in E major, which was originally published in 1700 as part of his 12 Violin Sonatas, Op. 5.

Categories: Baroque Gavottes Sonatas Difficulty: intermediate
Monday 6 December 2021

Tune of the Day: The Grenadier

 arranged for two flutes

This tune was composed by English poet, dramatist and songwriter Thomas Haynes Bayly.

Cried William when just come from sea,
“Does any one know my Annette?
Oh! say is she faithful to me?
Alas! 'tis so long since we met!”
“Yes, yes,” an old gossip replies,
“We all know her very well here,
She has red lip and bonny black eyes
And she lives with her own granny dear.”
“Grenadier! did you say? did you say grenadier?”
“Yes, yes,” the old gossip replied,
“She lives with her own granny, dear.”
Oh, dear! oh, dear!

The present arrangement for two flutes appeared in Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in 1833.

Categories: Ballads Romantic Difficulty: intermediate
Tuesday 7 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in D-sharp minor by Andersen

 from “24 Etudes for Flute”

This study, written half in D-sharp minor and half in E-flat minor, is the fourteenth 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.

Categories: Etudes Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: advanced
Wednesday 8 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Nell Flaherty's Drake

 Traditional Irish jig

This melody is best known as the vehicle for a humorous and much-anthologized song dating from the mid-19th century:

My name it is Nell, quite candid I tell,
And I live near Coothill I will never deny,
I had a large drake, the truth for to speak,
That my grandmother left me and she going to die.
He was wholesome and sound he'd weigh twenty pound,
The universe round I'd rove for his sake;
Bad wind to the robber, be him drunk or sober,
That murdered Nell Flaherty's beautiful Drake.

According to a commentary on the website of the National Library of Scotland,

The drake of the title is believed to be a coded reference to Robert Emmet (1778–1803), who helped to plan and led an uprising against British rule in Dublin in 1803. The uprising went wrong after an explosion at an arms depot, and Emmet was captured and hanged for his part in the uprising and the assassination of the Lord Chief Justice. Nell Flaherty represents Emmet's fiancée, Sarah Curran, (1782–1808). The author curses those (i.e. the British authorities) who killed Nell Flaherty's drake and urges the readers to keep up the fight. Irish Home Rule was a volatile subject in Britain in the nineteenth as well as the twentieth century, hence the coding in this song.

Categories: Ballads Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Thursday 9 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Gigue by Bach

 from Partita in E major for solo violin

This gigue is the sixth and final movement of Johann Sebastian Bach's Partita No. 3 for Violin, BWV 1006, which he composed in 1720. In order to fit the range of the flute, we have transposed the piece from E major to A major.

Thanks to Emee for suggesting this piece!

Categories: Baroque Jigs Difficulty: intermediate
Friday 10 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Jul, jul, strålande jul

 arranged for three flutes

Composed by Gustaf Nordqvist in 1921, this song was one of the most common Christmas carols in Sweden during the 20th century. The Swedish lyrics, penned by hymnwriter Edvard Evers, describe Christmas as white and snow-filled, and depict Christmas blessings with a wish that Christmas bring light and peace.

Many thanks to Mark for contributing this arrangement for flute trio!

Categories: 20th century Christmas carols Difficulty: easy
Saturday 11 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in D major by Fürstenau

 from “26 Exercises”

Today we propose the fifth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.

To be practiced with single and double tonguing, as well as in dotted rhythm.

Categories: Double tonguing Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Sunday 12 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Out with the Boys

 Traditional Irish jig

The first appearance of this jig in print is, under the title “Irish Whiskey”, in James S. Kerr's Merry Melodies, published in Glasgow around 1880.

Categories: Jigs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Monday 13 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Andantino by Paul Merkus

 for flute and piano

Today we have a new contribution from our guest composer from the Netherlands, Paul Merkus. This piece for flute and piano was written back in 1985.

The Andantino is my first piece for flute and piano with a prelude. The flute starts off silent to give the piano the opportunity to place both consonances and dissonances in a dynamic spectrum in a series of chords, which come to rest by means of a pedal point. This is somewhat inspired by Chopin's Prelude Op. 45, which also begins with a prelude of mere chords. The prelude serves as an upbeat to the melodic entry of the flute, which is then taken over by the piano. After a relatively modest middle part in a major key, the flute follows with a reprise of the minor main theme, but then in a radiant high position.

Categories: Contemporary Written for Flute Difficulty: easy
Tuesday 14 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Besançon Carol

 Traditional Christmas carol, arranged for three flutes

This old melody, named after the city of Besançon in eastern France, may well date back to the 17th century. One of its earliest known appearances is, as “Berger, secoue ton sommeil profond” (“Shepherd, shake off your drowsy sleep”), in a collection titled Recueil de Noëls anciens au patois de Besançon (1842). Today, the melody is better known as the vehicle for the Advent carol “People, Look East”, which was written in 1928 by English author Eleanor Farjeon.

Many thanks to Mark for contributing this arrangement for flute trio!

Categories: Christmas carols Hymn tunes Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Wednesday 15 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in D-flat major by Andersen

 from “24 Etudes for Flute”

This study is the fifteenth 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.

Categories: Etudes Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: advanced
Thursday 16 December 2021

Tune of the Day: The Miller of Glenmire

 Traditional Irish jig

This jig is taken from Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903. O'Neill had the tune from a 17-year-old fiddler named George West, who, although gifted musically, was somewhat indigent and did not own a fiddle. He had formed a symbiotic musical relationship of sorts with one O'Malley, who did own a fiddle and who eked out a meager living playing house parties despite the loss of a finger from his left hand. O'Malley, however, invariably could only make it to midnight before he got too drunk to bow, at which time West took over his fiddle and finished the night's engagement.

Categories: Jigs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Friday 17 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Nocturne in F major

 by Frédéric Chopin, arranged for solo flute

First published in 1834, the three nocturnes that make up Chopin's Op. 15 are characterized by a more personal approach than his earlier works. The Nocturne in F major, set out in simple ternary form, contrasts a very simple melody with a fast and dramatic middle section in F minor. Some critics have remarked that this nocturne has little to do with night, as if sunlight is “leaking from the piece's seams”.

Thanks to Ming for suggesting this piece!

Categories: Nocturnes Romantic Difficulty: intermediate
Saturday 18 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Bring a Torch, Jeanette, Isabella

 arranged for three flutes

Several authors have commented that this carol evokes the tradition of erecting a crèche to honor the Christ Child. However, according to both William L. Simon (Merry Christmas Songbook, 1981) and Nancy J. Skarmeas (The Carols of Christmas, 1993), the tune to this carol has been known since the 14th Century — not as a sacred hymn, but as a lively dance for French nobility. Both authors state that the carol, with words and music, first appeared in a compilation of Christmas music, Cantiques de Premiere Advenement de Jesu-Christ, published in 1553 by poet and painter Nicolas Denisot, whose hobby was the collection of Christmas music.

Many thanks to Mark for contributing this arrangement for flute trio!

Sunday 19 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in B minor by Fürstenau

 from “26 Exercises”

Today we propose the sixth study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.

Care is to be taken that the rhythm is steady and that the passing from one note to another is clear and accurate. The surest way of achieving this is by small and gentle movements of the fingers. In fortissimo passages, it is well to bear in mind Hans-Peter Schmitz's maxim “Forte playing — piano fingering”.

Categories: Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Monday 20 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Entre le bœuf et l'âne gris

 Traditional French Christmas carol

Dating from sometime between the 13th and 16th centuries, “Entre le bœuf et l'âne gris” (“Between the ox and the grey donkey”) is one of the oldest Christmas carols still sung today. It is also known as “Le sommeil de l'enfant Jésus” (“The sleep of baby Jesus”).

Categories: Christmas carols Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Tuesday 21 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Polonaise by Tromlitz

 from Flute Partita in G major

This polonaise is the fifth and final movement of Partita No. 2 in G major for solo flute by German flutist and composer Johann Georg Tromlitz, which was first published as part of his Sechs Partiten für Querflöte solo.

Categories: Classical Polonaises Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Wednesday 22 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Noël des ausels

 Traditional Christmas carol, arranged for three flutes

Not much is known about this old “Carol of the Birds”. Some hymnals refer to the tune as “Bas-Quercy”, which is the name of a small region in the southwest of France where it may have originated. In the English-speaking world, the melody is usually associated with the lyrics “Whence Comes This Rush of Wings?”.

Many thanks to Mark for contributing this arrangement for three flutes!

Categories: Christmas carols Hymn tunes Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy
Thursday 23 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in B-flat minor by Andersen

 from “24 Etudes for Flute”

This study is the sixteenth 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.

Categories: Etudes Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Friday 24 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Joseph, O Dear Joseph Mine

 Traditional Christmas carol

The lyrics for this carol (“Josef, lieber Josef mein”) may well date back to 14th-century Germany. By the late 15th century, they became linked with this very lovely and equally old anonymous tune. The carol appears as a lullaby sung by the Virgin Mary in a manuscript dating from around the year 1500, as part of a mystery play acted in a church around the crib.

Before it was affiliated with “Joseph Dearest”, the tune was attached to a well-known Latin hymn, “Resonet in laudibus”.

Saturday 25 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Joy to the World

 arranged for three flutes

“Joy to the World” is a carol that hardly needs any presentation. The hymn was originally written in 1719, but it was initially sung to tunes entirely unrelated to the one commonly used today. This first appeared in Lowell Mason's 1836 book Occasional Psalm and Hymn Tunes, where it was given the name “Antioch” and attributed as being “From Handel”. Any resemblances between Handel's works (particularly the Messiah) and “Joy to the World”, however, have been dismissed as “chance resemblance” by modern scholars, who rather tend to explain this attribution by Mason's well-known admiration of Handel's work.

Many thanks to Mark for contributing this arrangement for three flutes, and a very merry Christmas to all!

Categories: Christmas carols Hymn tunes Difficulty: intermediate
Sunday 26 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in A major by Fürstenau

 from “26 Exercises”

Today we propose the seventh study from 26 Übungen (26 Exercises) by German flutist and composer Anton Bernhard Fürstenau, first published in 1835.

Categories: Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Monday 27 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Daniel O'Rourke

 Traditional Irish jig

This jig, also known by the title “The Merry Huntsman”, is taken from Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in Chicago in 1903.

Categories: Jigs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: intermediate
Tuesday 28 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Allegro moderato by Stamitz

 from “8 Caprices”

This Allegro moderato is the first of 8 Caprices for solo flute by German violinist and composer Anton Stamitz, composed around the 1780s.

Categories: Classical Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Wednesday 29 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Duet in B major by Tulou

 from “Méthode de flûte”

This melodious Andante for two flutes is taken from the celebrated Méthode de flûte by French flutist Jean-Louis Tulou, published in Paris in 1835.

Categories: Etudes Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate
Thursday 30 December 2021

Tune of the Day: Study in E-flat major by Andersen

 from “24 Etudes for Flute”

This study is the nineteenth 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.

Categories: Etudes Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: advanced
Friday 31 December 2021

Tune of the Day: New Year's Song

 Traditional Irish air

This lesser-known new year's song appears in Chicago police officer Francis O'Neill's celebrated collection Music of Ireland, published in 1903.

Categories: Slow airs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy