Nelson,
As all the other replies have shown, I should have said "The only notes I've
ever *come across in honkyoku* are the first two octaves and ro and tsu meri
in the third octave," although Phil did remind me that there is tsu no chu
meri in the third octave, ha no yon.
Apologies for the misinfo and the above run-on sentence.
Best,
Zachary
> From: "toby" <kymarto@gol.com>
> Date: Sun, 7 Jan 2001 09:46:59 +0900
> To: <shakuhachi@weber.ucsd.edu>
> Subject: Re: How many octaves?
>
> If you are not a traditionalist, and you play around you can get almost a
> full three octaves. The third octave is not as amenable as the first two to
> meri and kari, so there are a few semitones that I have not been able to
> figure out in the third octave, but it's almost complete. Many flutes are
> missing some of these notes however, or are weak on one or another, but with
> a good flute you can go all the way up the 3rd octave.
>
> Toby
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Nelson Zink" <zink@newmex.com>
> To: <shakuhachi@weber.ucsd.edu>
> Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 12:08 PM
> Subject: How many octaves?
>
>
>> How many octaves should a good shakuhachi be able to play?
>>
>> thanks,
>> Nelson
>>
>>
>
>
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