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  2. Native American flute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_flute

    Authentic Native American flutes and Native American 'Style' flutes are available in a wide variety of keys and musical temperaments—far more than typically available for other woodwind instruments. Instruments tuned to equal temperament are typically available in all keys within the range of the instrument.

  3. Anasazi flute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anasazi_flute

    Flutes carved with tadpoles found in Pueblo Bonito in the Chaco Culture National Historical Park.. The Anasazi flute is the name of a prehistoric end-blown flute replicated today from findings at a massive cave in Prayer Rock Valley in Arizona, United States by an archaeological expedition led by Earl H. Morris in 1931. [1]

  4. Robert Mirabal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Mirabal

    Raised traditionally by his mother and grandparents on the pueblo, and born in 1966, Mirabal spoke Tiwa at home and began making flutes at the age of 19. In school, he had learned how to play clarinet, saxophone, piano, and drums, but found his true musical voice in the traditional Native American flute.

  5. List of woodwind instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_woodwind_instruments

    Western concert flute; Fife; Alto flute; bass flute; Contra-alto flute; Contrabass flute; Subcontrabass flute; Double contrabass flute; Hyperbass flute; Bansuri (India) Irish flute; Koudi (China) Dizi (China) Native American flute; Daegeum (Korea) Nohkan (Japan) RyĆ«teki (Japan) Shinobue (Japan) Švilpa (Lithuania) Venu (India) Kaval (Anatolian ...

  6. World Flute Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Flute_Society

    The World Flute Society (WFS), a successor to the International Native American Flute Association, is a non-profit organization dedicated to cultural flute playing from around the world. [1] WFS has a particular emphasis on the study and development of the Native American flute .

  7. R. Carlos Nakai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._Carlos_Nakai

    He began playing a traditional Native American cedar flute after an accident left him unable to play the trumpet. Largely self-taught, he released his first album Changes in 1983, and afterward signed a contract with Canyon Records , who produced more than thirty of his albums in subsequent years.