Hi, buenas tardes. My name is Quentin Howard from the group Sukai and we travel so much with Sukai and so many people have asked us about the different wind instruments we play, the band pipes and kena flutes that we are happy to have this opportunity to have some time to show you how to play those instruments and to tell you what we know about them. So to do that we have Carlos Crespo who along with myself we play the wind instruments in the Andes and I guess there's a whole family of pan pipes that have been handed down from tradition, traditional festivals that still take place in the countryside among farmers and miners in the Andes today and of those family of pan pipes the smallest is called the Icas and maybe Carlos can play a small sound of it, Icas. And then four octaves away from the Icas the largest pan pipes are called Toyos and just to hear a contrast of the sound of Toyos. But the most popular of the pan pipes are Sampoña and Sanca and maybe on the Sampoña we'll just show how to hold the instrument and how to make a clear sound on it. You hold the instrument vertically like Carlos will show, you hold it vertically, don't tilt it in any one direction because you want to have the ear coming down at a 45 degree angle and the ear is coming from your diaphragm, a push of your diaphragm but also it's being pushed by your tongue and that's an important point in playing the pan pipe. So when you have your first pan pipe you want to try to get a very clear note, you keep working to get a clear sound and Carlos will play just one note. It shouldn't have a muffled sound, it should have that very clear note but then the first obstacle people have in playing the pan pipe is that they take one breath and they put the entire breath into one pipe and of course they do that for three, four or five pipes and they are hyperventilated. So the first secret of playing the pan pipe is you take a big breath and you should be able to go back and forth along the pan pipe or at least play a whole phrase of the song with that one breath by putting a little bit of air into each tube. So maybe Carlos with one breath will show us. So these are the first exercises that you should try on your pan pipe. So this is an important technique in playing the pan pipe and if you catch it right from the beginning then your playing is going to be excellent and the point is that you have to make the note with your tongue and if you can watch Carlos maybe just without the pan pipe pushing the air from his mouth with his tongue. And so you also have another style of playing in the Andes where you don't have that clear sound but you'll get an entirely breathy or windy sound and it will just have the air blown across the pan pipe. So often these techniques are even combined, the playing a strong clear note mixed with especially in the new traditional music coming from the Andes today. And when you see the pan pipe you'll see it's divided into two parts, every pan pipe. Two rows of tubes and this is because in the ancient times the pan pipe was actually separated so that two persons would play the one instrument and a musical scale actually would be alternated back and forth between the two persons. And then in more modern times the instrument was put together and played where as today Carlos will make a scale. So that was just made by alternating between the two rows of pipes, alternating the blowing to get the scale and in contrast to playing back and forth like we showed before. But now we'll try our first melody and we can try it on a piece written by Carlos called Huero in Rhythm of Carnival and he'll do the melody just using the two rows of pipes singly like is used mostly in the contemporary folk music today in Bolivia and do the melody slowly for Huero. So that's the melody from Huero in Rhythm of Carnival and you notice that one technique that Carlos was doing and of course he was doing in slow motion but when you hear the song up to speed you realize he'll be sliding the breath along the pipes to give a sound like and so a lot of times to begin a phrase or even to end a phrase sometime that technique is used judiciously in certain songs. So maybe you notice that in playing the panpipe that both Carlos and I are using different are playing on different sides of the panpipe and Carlos would be playing with the bass notes to the left like on a piano and I'll be playing with the bass notes on the right and we really haven't figured out why we do that maybe Carlos says because he's a man and I'm a woman so we have to play opposite ways but it's just a matter of preference the way you want to play but the important technique though is to remember that the air is coming up is being pushed in from the stomach from the diaphragm the force and you're taking in the air in the mouth with the mouth you're going you're sucking in the air with your mouth and that will be an important point when you start to play more rapidly on the panpipe maybe we could hear Carlos play the same melody but just a little faster like at medium speed the melody we just played before. So when there's more than one person playing and more than one panpipe playing sometime the panpipe will play accompanying chords or sometime it'll play the harmony actually the harmony or sometime it'll just play creative grace notes or something creative behind the other panpipe but in Weirdo Carlos wrote a second panpipe playing the harmony and it So now if you put those together you'll hear the sound of weirdo as we as we play it maybe in a show so this is weirdo with the harmony and the melody. So that was an example of playing the Sampoña using the both halves and remember we played a scale before in the ancient tradition of playing the panpipe separating the instrument into two parts there and that means it took two musicians to play the melody and so in that form we'll try the next piece a song written by Carlos called White Assin. So if you have a panpipe now that's already bound the two parts together you don't have to cut them open to play separate like we just did but you can if you have a friend who has another panpipe you can play the top row for instance and the other person can play the bottom row and you can have the same effect so we'll play a few times through White Assin and maybe we'll combine the technique we showed before of the breathy blowing and so panpipes come in any key any tone or key and these panpipes the typical ones we're playing Sampoña size are in the key of E minor or G major and if you're playing with other instruments like a piano or a guitar you might want to know what notes are on each pipe so maybe I'll say the notes and Carlos will indicate on them so that's E is the first row but the second pipe that starts the scale E F sharp G A B C D E F sharp G A B and they're alternated like that now any melody that you know any melody that you can sing with your voice then you can try to find on the panpipe you can play on the panpipe but maybe we'll try some more melodies written by the group this next one is called Yijia and Carlos will play on it first on the Sanca which is the octave of the Sampoña and he'll play very slowly and so if you have a panpipe try to follow along with the with the Sanca Yijia so you probably noticed that the vibrato adds a very special quality to the playing and the way the vibrato is done is it's done with the diaphragm or with the stomach but also with the air that collects in the cheeks and maybe Carlos will just show us some vibrato on the and maybe some vibrato on the on the larger panpipes and actually the longer you're playing the Sanca the more them and the kind of flute the more the muscles will begin to build around your mouth so if you can't get that vibrato effect right at the beginning you shouldn't be discouraged because it comes with time it comes with continual playing and repeating all the melodies you know on the Sampoña and then playing them over and over again and with practice comes this increased muscle in the in the cheeks and around the mouth and that gives that beautiful vibrato sound so we might learn the next simple melody using one of the techniques in the Andes that is kind of like the sound of an echo where one musician will play a very simple melody and the other musician will simply play the same melody but in syncopated time and sort of echo it back and forth so Carlos will just play the simple melody and everyone could pick that up with your panpipe so now remember with each note you're trying to get a clear sound in every tube and we'll try the melody and we'll try another person playing the melody syncopated and see the effect that makes so there's a variety of different panpipes in the Andes and one of them is a simple one road flute called Antara and it's tuned diatonically and on this flute maybe Carlos will show us another technique of getting half tones on single pipes and he does this by bending the the Antara or the panpipe toward him and then rectangle and then perpendicular again to get the regular note maybe you can show us how you do that and maybe Carlos will play to a melody a sad melody called Mama Luna that he wrote just a piece of that then now we'll go back to the two row Sampogna and just to review some of the important things that you shouldn't forget when you're practicing is you want to hold the Sampogna perpendicular don't bend it to try to get your notes even if they come more easily try to keep it perpendicular and remember that you're spitting with your tongue air into each of the tubes a little bit of air and you're pushing with the force of your diaphragm and you're resonating with your cheeks which will probably eventually come by itself so now I'll try an older melody a traditional melody that's played in the festival times when there's a lot of men playing only panpipes and drums no string instruments now if you're playing Sampogna with the Sanca you remember those are tuned an octave apart there are any kind of creative ways that they can augment each other and one of the ways is in a song we play in Sukai and it's usually accompanied by singing verses but we'll just do the instrumental part and it's called Te Estrañare and it's in rhythm of saia and starts with the Sampogna we'd like to show you how a simple melody that Carlos played one day became the song that we play in concert called Tutaiai and here's how Carlos first played it and so then as the song was being arranged Carlos chose to use the Toyos and the Icas to play the same phrase so now maybe just to hear the sound and feel free you should play along with your Sampogna because these are still tuned in the key of E minor or G and now you'll hear the song as played by Sukai in concert so the Kena is a notched flute and along with the Sampogna the pan pipes are some of the most ancient instruments that were handed down in the Andes the Kena has holes it's hollow on one end and the notch is part of a mouthpiece that's a little difficult at first for people who have never played the Kena but if you want to understand it better you might take an ordinary recorder this this one is primitive but an ordinary recorder will have a mouthpiece built on top and that will direct the air to this notch and so anyone who puts their mouth on a recorder automatically gets the sound but the Kena would be the principle as if you imagine that the top part of the record is cut off and so you have to make that mouthpiece precisely with your lips by finding the air shift and having it hit the edge actually so that half the air is actually directed in the flute and the other half out you do that by taking the Kena and moving it back and forth on your mouth and trying to hear a clear sound so you might get breath at first and then a clear sound will appear and when it does you should try to remember where that Kena was on your mouth like feel a sensation of the flute on your mouth and then it will be easier when you try to play the Kena again you'll put it back in the same place and an important thing is how to hold it you want to brace the Kena with some of your fingers the thumb and back fingers at the ends so that it feels pretty solid and you're able to hold it like this also when you're making your first sound don't put any holes don't cover any of the holes the reason being is because if a little air is escaping if they're not properly covered no sound will come out and you won't know if that's if you're improperly blowing or if it's because the holes aren't covered so first make your sound with no holes and then you'll begin to do a scale and maybe Carlos will just make a scale on the Kena so that's a scale of two octaves actually the Kena has a third octave which is sometimes hard on the ears but we'll stay today with the two octaves of the Kena and maybe Carlos can go back once more and play the lower octave and the higher octave of the Kena on each note and so he's getting the higher octave by blowing on a note and then for the the higher octave he's making his lips tighter and he's blowing harder and simply that it's the same fingering but it's just blowing harder on the note that will give the second octave so along with the Kena in the end is the Canacho or its bass counterpart is also played and they both have the same principle they have a hole in the back and then six holes in the front and then the key of the flute these this is in a minor it will begin here this is a lower note but the the flute will begin to actually on this note and that will be played in a minor or the same Kena can be played in E minor D minor or B minor the Kena is more flexible than the symphony in that aspect and also you can make half tones on the Kena and it's important that that's learned at the same time you learn to play a clear note you want to make half tones on the Kena so first we'll start with a simple melody by Carlos and then we'll show the principle of making half tones now the whole beauty of playing the songs on the Kena is that the Kena lends itself to put a lot of techniques and beautiful bends and trills and different different little ways of moving your finger to bring in a lot of feeling and emotion into the can and one of them is is a bending of the Kena maybe Carlos shows a little piece of and then also you can put grace notes on to Kena and this is used in almost every song you'll hear and that'll that'll come by just hammering down you're hammering down on the on the note and sometime you're even coming up on a note in a melody like you may go and that'll be included with trills and and bends and it'll give a beautiful feeling to the melodies you play maybe we'll try a melody written by Carlos called Tutayai and he'll start off by playing the low octave very slowly and then later the song of course is played on the second octave but maybe we can follow along with your Kena on the low octave for Tutayai do do do that song you heard a lot of notes that are bent and they give that beautiful emotional quality so maybe Carlos will show us how he bends those notes and those bends are very important because eventually you're going to be making half tones and you need to even make a half tone for the scale of for the key of A minor because you're going to be making the F in that key with the half tone even when you do that ordinary scale when you come to the F here's the E you have to make the F with the half finger so maybe Carlos will show us some half half tones and there are two ways basically of doing that some Kenes in the Andes will open the finger and others will roll the finger up roll the finger up to get a half tone or you can open it on the side and that's any way you choose any way you can make clear sounding half note is important to practice so the song Tutayai that Carlos played before on the low octave is actually played on the upper octave and he'll begin by playing Tutayai now on the high octave so now the harmony of Tutayai which you'll hear on on the record is actually much easier than the melody and it's played on the lower active so maybe we'll do the harmony and it has a few half tones in it so do and now we'll put those together the harmony and the it's not exactly the harmony it's like an arrangement of the song Tutayai two different parts actually and Carlos will play the melody and I'll play the lower part so do so now don't be discouraged if when you're playing and you're just beginning to learn the kena if you find that after getting a sound or having a sound for a few minutes then you're unable to have a sound and it's because the muscles around the lips need time need sometimes months to form and you're you may be able to get a sound at first but you have to wait and just be patient and play a little each day and then you'll have muscles that are strong enough to keep the lips tightened and if you also have a problem having your initial sound try smiling and then closing your mouth and putting the flute and be very careful not to touch the top part of your lip onto the flute the top part cannot touch the wooden edge so you're playing here and like the symphony you're also spitting air into it it's you're blowing with your tongue so you're and so maybe we'll try one more melody and we'll try the melody and then the harmony part and this is an ecuadorian piece of folklore called toro beroso so that was the melody of toro beroso and now let's hear the harmony played by carlos do so now the melody toro beroso with the kenya and harmony and melody together do so we hope you enjoyed this tape and have learned at least the basics of playing the south american uh pan pipes and flutes and also if you would like to get instruments and records or tapes you might write to sukai and care of homespun tapes we make all our own instruments the kenya's i make the pan pipes carlos makes and everyone in the group participates on them so if you have any questions feel free to write to us and that's all thanks so we're gonna maybe finish with a song uh that we play during the the tape but it's called weirdo and we'll just start off where the kenya combines with the pan pipes so so so you