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The fipple is cut away like that of a recorder.
At the opposite end is a fipple or block, similar to that used in a recorder.
Holes are cut or burnt into the tube and a fipple made at one end.
At that time, slide saxophones, with reeds rather than a fipple, were also built.
The sound is produced by a fipple at the upper end of the main body of the fujara.
There are two varieties of bansuri: transverse, and fipple.
The Generation whistle was introduced in the first half of the 20th century, and also featured a brass tube with a lead fipple plug.
Some whistle designs allow a single fipple, or mouthpiece, to be used on differently keyed bodies.
The term is also used to describe a related set of folk instruments similar to recorder, incorporating a fipple and having a constricted end.
The design was updated somewhat over the years, most notably the substitution of a plastic fipple for the lead plug design.
Zuffolo is a French fipple flute.
Unlike a recorder or tin whistle, there isn't a ducted flue voicing, also known as a fipple.
A fipple is a constricted mouthpiece common to many end-blown flutes, such as the tin whistle and the recorder.
The recorder is end-blown and the mouth of the instrument is constricted by a wooden plug, known as a block or fipple.
Many of his whistles also included a two hole fipple from hence referred to by collectors as "pig nose" whistles.
Other Chinese flute-like instruments, such as the Wudu and Taodi, however, include a fipple.
Like many old whistles, they had lead fipple plugs, and since lead is poisonous, caution should be exercised before playing an old whistle.
It is a simple end-blown bamboo flute without a fipple, which is played by directing a narrow air stream against its sharp, open upper end.
Koncovka is a Slovak duct-blown overtone fipple flute without finger holes, traditionally played by shepherds.
While the precise history of the low whistle is often debated, it is known that various kinds of vertical fipple flutes have existed in antiquity.
The most common whistles today are made of brass tubing, or nickel plated brass tubing, with a plastic fipple (mouthpiece).
The air is led to the fipple through a smaller parallel pipe, called vzduchovod in Slovak (meaning "air channel"), mounted on the main body of the instrument.
There are very many flutes, both traversely blown and end-blown "fipple" flutes, currently produced which are not built on the Boehm model.
Thunder type whistles use a shaped mouthpiece whilst police and samba type whistles use a form of fipple to constrict the flow (see illustrations).
The dentsivka is often commonly called a sopilka, however, it differs from the true sopilka in that the dentsivka has a fipple, like the western European recorder.