Recorder: Difference between revisions

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It is really easy to play quartertones on a recorder. Honestly. One uses the right alternate fingerings. There is one pitch that requires one to lift a leg so as to point the tube towards full closure (lowering the instrument a quartertone, to F 1/4 flat).
It is really easy to play quartertones on a recorder. Honestly. One uses the right alternate fingerings. There is one pitch that requires one to lift a leg so as to point the tube towards full closure (lowering the instrument a quartertone, to F 1/4 flat).


Quartertone fingering chart for alto recorder by Tui St. George Tucker: [http://tuistgeorgetucker.com/scores/alto%20recorder.pdf http://tuistgeorgetucker.com/scores/alto%20recorder.pdf]
Quartertone fingering chart for alto recorder by Tui St. George Tucker: http://tuistgeorgetucker.com/scores/alto%20recorder.pdf<nowiki/>{{Dead link}}


A video by Robin Andrews showing the use of recorder to play an[[Arabic,_Turkish,_Persian| arabic maqam scale]] (Sikah): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghttCq9Uuls https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghttCq9Uuls]
A video by Robin Andrews showing the use of recorder to play an[[Arabic,_Turkish,_Persian| arabic maqam scale]] (Sikah): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghttCq9Uuls


Jon Lyle Smith posted fingerings for some just intervals in the [http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/MakeMicroMusic/message/13201 following posting] on MMM (assumed 1/1 = F):
Jon Lyle Smith posted fingerings for some just intervals in the [http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/MakeMicroMusic/message/13201 following posting] on MMM (assumed 1/1 = F):