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Post by librarylady on Apr 10, 2024 15:52:03 GMT
I had to learn to play one in preparation for teaching elem. children. My college roommate was not a fan of my skills. LOL
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Post by fredfreddy44 on Apr 10, 2024 15:56:36 GMT
I did not, but my 3 kids all did around 2000 to 2010 in third grade, I think.
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pinklady
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,060
Nov 14, 2016 23:47:03 GMT
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Post by pinklady on Apr 10, 2024 15:57:35 GMT
YES! I had to take a music class in college as part of my general ed courses. I lived at home at the time and I impressed my dad with how good I got by the end of the semester. Looking back, that must have been torture for my parents!
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Post by gar on Apr 10, 2024 15:57:41 GMT
I did if I remember correctly. I don’t think anyone has ever been a fan of its ’noise’ have they? 🫣
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Post by nine on Apr 10, 2024 15:58:17 GMT
I did. They were called flute-a-phones. My kids called them recorders.
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Post by myshelly on Apr 10, 2024 15:58:52 GMT
I did
My kids did not, but they do all play a musical instrument
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breetheflea
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,582
Location: PNW
Jul 20, 2014 21:57:23 GMT
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Post by breetheflea on Apr 10, 2024 16:18:24 GMT
Yes, DS (10) brought his home just in time for Spring Break. I made him practice in the backyard. All four kids learned to screech on one in 4th grade, so this is the end of an era
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Post by JustCallMeMommy on Apr 10, 2024 16:20:39 GMT
I did. They were called flute-a-phones. My kids called them recorders. They called ours flutophones, too. In 6th grade, we had 6 week classes for us to explore all the electives we could pick the next year (band, choir, PE, home ec, shop, and I swear there was one more). The flutophone was used for the band class, and I was pretty good at playing it.
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Post by Linda on Apr 10, 2024 16:20:55 GMT
I had recorder lessons when I was 8/9 in Cyprus (British Forces school) mid-70s but no one would call that learning to play the recorder, lol
none of my kids did (graduation years 2010, 2018, 2025)
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liya
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,500
Location: Western NY
Jul 3, 2014 17:55:08 GMT
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Post by liya on Apr 10, 2024 16:21:49 GMT
I did in elementary school-I still slightly remember "Hot Cross Buns." My children also did in either 1st or 2nd grade before they were able to start band or orchestra in 4th grade.
Edited to add: My children are 27 and 30 yo.
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Post by littlemama on Apr 10, 2024 16:31:02 GMT
Yep! Ds did and so did I, although I dont recall being able to take mine home
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zippythebird
Junior Member
Posts: 97
Nov 10, 2020 19:28:23 GMT
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Post by zippythebird on Apr 10, 2024 16:39:57 GMT
Yes & to this day there has never been a situation that requied Me to play a quick blast of Three Blind Mice
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Post by cmpeter on Apr 10, 2024 16:41:18 GMT
I did and my kids did. I excelled at Hot Cross Buns on the recorder.
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smartypants71
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,843
Location: Houston, TX
Jun 25, 2014 22:47:49 GMT
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Post by smartypants71 on Apr 10, 2024 16:45:36 GMT
My ds did in elementary school. He taught himself how to play Eye of the Tiger, and he was so impressed with himself! I just told him how proud I was of him while I cried on the inside!
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Post by ntsf on Apr 10, 2024 16:45:40 GMT
my kids did.. they are 35 and 37. 2 out of three played instruments in middle school.. one continued through college and still plays in community groups. (tuba) she also played bass guitar for 10 yrs. the third kid was in choir in middle school. and studied guitar for 5 yrs
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ellen
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,805
Jun 30, 2014 12:52:45 GMT
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Post by ellen on Apr 10, 2024 16:49:51 GMT
I did. I don’t think my kids did though. We had a few years where my elementary school cut music. I taught my 4th graders how to read music and play recorders. It was surprisingly rewarding. It was a major achievement when we got certain kids to stop playing on rests. I think some of them just started to fake play and that was fine - the band was better because of it. I wasn’t going to reach them with my skill set and time allotted for this project.
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Post by stampnscrap1128 on Apr 10, 2024 16:58:46 GMT
I played the flutophone in later grade school. I played clarinet for years in school. I have several very high grade professional recorders that I used to play - I need to take it back up. They have a much better sound than those plastic flutophones. I was inspired to play because Mannheim Steamroller features them in several of their Christmas songs.
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Post by vpohlman on Apr 10, 2024 16:59:25 GMT
I learned in 6th grade (flutophones, shaped different than recorders), and I've been teaching that business since 1989 to 3rd and 4th graders! I'm retiring after next year! Yay!!! I teach K-12 vocal and instrumental music so I teach the whole shebang!
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Post by Merge on Apr 10, 2024 17:07:28 GMT
Oh, now you're in my professional wheelhouse. I never learned to play the recorder in school. No idea why. We didn't have instruments of any kind unless we joined band. I learned to play along with my students during my first year of elementary music teaching. Yes, we teach recorder because it is cheap and accessible, but more importantly because it allows students to put into practice musical concepts that would just be theory otherwise. It's been proven in numerous studies that learning to play music has huge benefits for brain development. My 3rd graders are always surprised at how difficult it is to read the notes and rhythms on the page and then translate that into the correct use of breath and fingerings to produce a tune. Though not recognized often enough by academic literature, reading and playing/singing music is among the highest of higher-order thinking skills we can bestow on students. We synthesize a lot of different information while playing, and simultaneously evaluate our playing and that of others. In an ideal setting, students then use those skills to create their own music. The human voice, of course, is free, and many teachers choose to simply teach singing, as it checks all the same educational boxes. In the past few decades, though, our culture has stopped seeing singing as something that all humans do, and rather as something that should only be done by the extremely gifted. Thus, many students are not comfortable singing in public and it presents a major roadblock to learning. But when you put recorders in students' hands, the playing field is level. Nobody's instrument is better or worse than anyone else's. Nobody is afraid to play because we all sound terrible at first. Contrary to popular belief, though, it's not difficult at all to produce a pleasant sound on recorder. Once students are able to experiment a bit with breath pressure, 99% make a tone that is much, much better than their violin-playing peers will make for at least the first year. I even have special ed. students in my class who play beautifully. The first time I send the recorder home, I send a note to parents saying that their child knows how to make a pleasant sound, and that any loud, shrill noises they hear are the result of the child's choice to make that sound - and I would take the recorder away at that point and send it back to school. This is my last year of school teaching, and my final group of 3rd graders will put on their recorder program in early May. It will be bittersweet for me. The vast majority of my students have loved playing recorder. The pride on their faces after they perform for their parents is magical. And I know the learning they've done and the confidence they've gained will help them for years to come, even if they never pick up another instrument. Finally, I'm trying to figure out who the heck is teaching Three Blind Mice as a first recorder song. Hot Cross Buns is the most common first song because it uses only three notes. Three Blind Mice would be much more challenging and require the student to know a lot more notes. (As for my kids, they were in my elementary music classes, so yes - they both learned to play recorder. )
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Post by workingclassdog on Apr 10, 2024 17:10:33 GMT
I did not, but all three of mine played in early elementary school.. around 3rd or 4th grade. They never picked it up again after that.
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Post by compeateropeator on Apr 10, 2024 17:11:54 GMT
Yes.
I learned to “play” the recorder in grade school in the 70s. I graduated in 1982. My brother leaned in the 80’s. He graduated in 1992. My niece and nephew learned and the are in jr high and highschool right now.
“play” - is actuality perception and not reality. Hahaha.
Hot Cross Buns come roaring back to anyone? 😆
ETA - should have read Merge’s post first. Hahaha.
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Post by Zee on Apr 10, 2024 17:16:57 GMT
I'm sure they did in school but my son took it one further and taught himself to play the ocarina. I think he was inspired by some gaming something or other. He even still has his fancy ocarinas we bought him, I think, though he doesn't play them anymore.
It makes kind of a haunting sound we'd hear in the middle of the night when he couldn't sleep, coming from the basement. Kind of like living in a haunted house. 🤣
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anniebeth24
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,778
Jun 26, 2014 14:12:17 GMT
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Post by anniebeth24 on Apr 10, 2024 17:21:36 GMT
I did, and so did my kids. It's a right of passage for 4th graders in my mind.
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Post by fotos4u2 on Apr 10, 2024 17:32:19 GMT
I did in around 3rd or 4th grade and like others they called it a flutophone. All three of my kids had a recorder in 2nd grade (3rd grade is when they could join choir or "band"). Assume it was part of the state curriculum.
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Post by Restless Spirit on Apr 10, 2024 17:36:02 GMT
Yes. I had a white and red flutaphone in 4th grade. DD had a black recorder. I went on to take up playing the flute in 6th grade and all through middle school and high school band.
The grandson went to private school. I think he did one semester of recorder in 2nd grade and then in the fall all 3rd grade students took violin in music class. He played violin until he went to middle school.
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Post by Delta Dawn on Apr 10, 2024 17:42:33 GMT
My son and I did and the funny thing is both recorders have vanished. It’s like someone in the house got rid of them on purpose. Now who would have done that??? My mother!
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Post by its me mg on Apr 10, 2024 17:43:52 GMT
We did the recorder in music class and some of us got chosen to play "Ode to Peace" at the spring sing - I don't know how I ended up in that group but I loved playing the recorder!
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twinsmomfla99
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,117
Jun 26, 2014 13:42:47 GMT
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Post by twinsmomfla99 on Apr 10, 2024 17:49:50 GMT
All 3 of my girls played a recorder in class concert as part of their 4th grade music curriculum.
I played the flutophone in 4th or 5th grade in the early 70s.
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twinsmomfla99
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,117
Jun 26, 2014 13:42:47 GMT
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Post by twinsmomfla99 on Apr 10, 2024 17:58:12 GMT
I was curious about the differences between a flit iPhone and a recorder, and there are a few. This one stood out to me, though: “Flutophones have a less refined tone due to its whistle mouthpiece, which can give it a shrill quality.” I guess I should be glad my girls (now 30, 24, and 24) had recorders instead of flutophones. The recorders were shrill enough LOL. www.liveabout.com/profile-of-the-flutophone-2457219#:~:text=Flutophones%20have%20a%20less%20refined,with%20more%20concert%20band%20quality.&text=The%20finger%20holes%20of%20the,recorders%2C%20the%20holes%20are%20smooth.
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mich5481
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,752
Oct 2, 2017 23:20:46 GMT
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Post by mich5481 on Apr 10, 2024 18:08:42 GMT
I'm sure they did in school but my son took it one further and taught himself to play the ocarina. I think he was inspired by some gaming something or other. He even still has his fancy ocarinas we bought him, I think, though he doesn't play them anymore. It makes kind of a haunting sound we'd hear in the middle of the night when he couldn't sleep, coming from the basement. Kind of like living in a haunted house. 🤣 Probably a Legend of Zelda game
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