Towards the end of last year I joined a recorder group. Somewhat to my surprise, I discovered I can still play just about enough to play new pieces with the others including sight reading, though sometimes I notice I switch between the fingerings for the treble and soprano for a bar or two, until I put myself right. I also find some passages, particularly those which use notes which use the "half" holes at the bottom of the instruments rather hard, and trying to play those at speed causes problems.
While I don't think that changing instruments will make a lot of difference, I do wonder whether "investing" in new ones will give any benefits, either to the sound or the playability. Currently I have a number of plastic models descant, treble, sopranino - by Yamaha and Aulos, and a Moeck wooden treble. I have never played tenor and/or bass - and even now I'm not sure I want to try those, but maybe ....
Cheap descant recorders are, well, cheap - many plastic ones can be obtained for under £20. I don't know how much difference there is between them all. The cost rises quite a bit for trebles, and then going on to tenors and basses puts costs up a lot. I found a set by Bellisima (plastic) for under £300 - but of course there's no guarantee that any of those would be any good. https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00FSMYP...detail_5?psc=1
It's possible to pay a lot for a single wooden recorder - such as this Yamaha soprano wooden recorder for £299 - https://www.amazon.co.uk/YAMAHA-reco...=wood+recorder
I used to live just outside a town with a good music shop, and could get advice and even try instruments out, but now I don't, and also many music shops appear to have closed down.
I think there are benefits to wooden recorders, but many of the plastic ones seem adequate to me. Any comments re all this? What are the differences between models described as "student" or "beginner" - at least for plastic models the engineering - if any good - should surely be accurate enough, though I think the material used makes a difference to condensation. Also, soft wood instruments may suffer wear round the holes, making them hard or impossible to play. Perhaps some plastic models are also made of less durable materials.
Experimenting with cheap descants is probably not going to break the bank, but considering (possibly) "better" models in the treble - down to bass ranges could be really expensive.
While I don't think that changing instruments will make a lot of difference, I do wonder whether "investing" in new ones will give any benefits, either to the sound or the playability. Currently I have a number of plastic models descant, treble, sopranino - by Yamaha and Aulos, and a Moeck wooden treble. I have never played tenor and/or bass - and even now I'm not sure I want to try those, but maybe ....
Cheap descant recorders are, well, cheap - many plastic ones can be obtained for under £20. I don't know how much difference there is between them all. The cost rises quite a bit for trebles, and then going on to tenors and basses puts costs up a lot. I found a set by Bellisima (plastic) for under £300 - but of course there's no guarantee that any of those would be any good. https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00FSMYP...detail_5?psc=1
It's possible to pay a lot for a single wooden recorder - such as this Yamaha soprano wooden recorder for £299 - https://www.amazon.co.uk/YAMAHA-reco...=wood+recorder
I used to live just outside a town with a good music shop, and could get advice and even try instruments out, but now I don't, and also many music shops appear to have closed down.
I think there are benefits to wooden recorders, but many of the plastic ones seem adequate to me. Any comments re all this? What are the differences between models described as "student" or "beginner" - at least for plastic models the engineering - if any good - should surely be accurate enough, though I think the material used makes a difference to condensation. Also, soft wood instruments may suffer wear round the holes, making them hard or impossible to play. Perhaps some plastic models are also made of less durable materials.
Experimenting with cheap descants is probably not going to break the bank, but considering (possibly) "better" models in the treble - down to bass ranges could be really expensive.
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