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Can be played only softly. In the octave above middle C:
You may have to experiment with breath pressure in each case. (There are other multiphonics, but they don’t all work on all flutes.)
The “official” highest note of a standard flute is the C 3 octaves above middle C (called “4th octave C” if counting from where the flute starts, “7th octave C” on the piano), but I sometimes get asked how to finger notes above it (e.g. when CUCOS played arrangements that seemed determined to push the flutes too high). Here is a quick reference, although I do not recommend these notes as they can be noisy.
Note - Left hand - Right hand
C#: - A, G# - F
D: - thumb, G - F, E, C
D#: - All down to Eb (i.e. thumb, B, A, G, G#, F, E, D, Eb)
E: - B, A, G - tr1, E
F: - A - tr1, E - difficult
F#: - thumb, B, G - F, D, Eb+C (use little finger for both) - more difficult
G: - thumb, A, G, G# - E, tr2 - even more difficult (does not work on all flutes)
Alternative fingerings for fast passages can sometimes be found by simple experiment, but for the 3rd octave it’s useful to know that:
Quiet 3rd-octave notes *are* possible (it’s an embouchure technique; try tightening the lip muscles a little more), but this works best below the A; after that it’s increasingly difficult to play softly without an unacceptable level of “hiss”. Leaky pads can make the things worse (have the mechanism adjusted if necessary).
The GNU/Lilypond music typesetter can produce woodwind fingering diagrams (introduced in version 2.14). These can take up a *lot* of space between the staves, but if you need the above fingerings as diagrams in Lilypond, here’s some Lilypond code and the resulting PDF file.
All material © Silas S. Brown unless otherwise stated.