Flute Rock has been 35,000
years in the making!
It all started when a musician living in the Ice Age made the
first real flute. It was carved from the tusk of an actual wooly
mammoth! The flute was held vertically and had holes that could
be covered with his fingers to change the notes. Since then,
humans have tinkered endlessly with the flute's design. They
have moved the holes around, added keys and made flutes out of
different stuff – like bones, wood, metal and plastic.
In 1847 in Germany, Theobald
Boehm perfected what we think of when we picture "the flute."
Finally the blasted instrument could play in tune with the
violins! And the violas! And the cellos! Hooray! Because of him,
important European composers began using the flute in their
important compositions, and it took on its stuffy reputation as
a "classical" and "serious" instrument.
In 1982, a girl in Texas
started playing the flute. Her name was Audrey. She liked the
flute. In fact, she liked it so much that she set out on the
adventure of a lifetime trying to discover all of its
possibilities.
Audrey discovered that she
could make different sounds on the flute. Did you know that it
can sound like a drum, an electric guitar or a tea kettle? That
it can be played really loud?
Playing those sounds made
Audrey like the flute even more. In fact, she got so excited
that she decided to share them with as many people as possible.
She joined a famous rock band, The Polyphonic Spree, and began
touring the world. She's played the flute in front of millions
of screaming fans. She played the flute for the Nobel Peace
Prize Concert. She's played the flute on the radio. Her picture
has been in hundreds of magazines and newspapers. She's even
been on television a bunch of times.
One day, when Audrey was in
Brooklyn, New York, she met her biggest fan – Fafa – a small
groundhog. She also met his friends, Mario, Flink and Gorilla.
They liked the flute and each other so much that the five of
them decided that it was high time to make a video about how to
play the flute, and the video should be called Flute Rock.
Audrey's new friends did not
know how to play the flute, but because of her thoughtful
teaching, they learned not only how to play the mysterious
instrument, they learned a lot of cool stuff about it too: the
flute is not just an instrument for pretty classical music, but
it's also been an important instrument in popular culture and
history for tens of thousands of years. George Washington never
told a lie, but he did play the flute. Robots have learned to
play the flute. Boys can play the flute!
Flute Rock will teach and entertain you,
whether you are a classically trained flutist, a first-year
student or someone who is just curious. Flute Rock answers some
of life's most perplexing questions: "How do I put this thing
together?" "How do I make a sound on it?" "What's up with all
those keys?" "Was Beethoven a rocker?" "Will Fafa overcome his
terrible fear of playing the flute?" "How can I make the flute
rock?"
Wow! The flute is cool. And given the
right tools, anybody can play it. Flute Rock makes learning how
to play the flute easy for everybody. And Flute Rock is really
fun too. It's fun for aspiring flutists, patient parents, music
teachers, and people who just like to watch weird videos!