Other versions of BWV 1027 exist : there is a trio sonata for two transverse flutes and continuo ( BWV 1039 ); as well as a trio sonata for organ in three movements.
32.
Because of the fixed position of the windway with respect to the labium, fipple instruments can make a musical sound without the kind of embouchure required with ( for example ) the transverse flute.
33.
The end of this era found the publication of " Essay of a Method of Playing the Transverse Flute " by Quantz, considered the greatest exposition on flute method of its time.
34.
He continued to use recorders in preference to the newer transverse flute, and the " hautbois " he used in his orchestra were transitional instruments, somewhere between shawms and so-called Baroque oboes.
35.
The airstream is directed on the labium by a fipple or internal duct, which is a narrowing rectangular slot in the mouthpiece, rather than relying on the player's lips as in a transverse flute.
36.
In his off-time he enrolled in the Conservatory of Lyons ( 1893 ), and only one year later won the unanimous First Prize of " Fl�te Traversi�re " ( transverse flute ) in October 1894.
37.
During the 16th and early 17th centuries in Europe, the transverse flute was available in several different sizes, in effect forming a consort much in the same way that recorders and other instrument families were used in consorts.
38.
The transverse flute called the " pin xiao " ( dizi in Mandarin ) and the oboe-like " aiya " or " xiao suona " are sometimes added in outdoor or ceremonial performances.
39.
Every so often, China's own traditions poke through : Liu Yuan switched between saxophones and Chinese instruments including the xiao ( vertical flute ), dizi ( transverse flute ) and sona, a penetrating double-reed instrument.
40.
Oscillators that produce harmonic partials behave somewhat like 1-dimensional resonators, and are often long and thin, such as a guitar string or a column of air open at both ends ( as with the modern orchestral transverse flute ).