Flute in Rossini
piccolo and oboe together, then to the flute, and finally to both flute and piccolo.[1] Rossini does not use the piccolo very much, he, however, introduces two in The Bather of Seville at the words "Point de bruit"—probably a joke. He seldom gives the flute a solo of any length; several, however, occur in William Tell. The Andantino in that overture is the best known flute passage in the whole range of orchestralThe
"Willian
Tell"
Overture music; the flute playing a florid embroidery, as it were, to the Alpine "Ranz des Vaches" on the cor anglais. This passage stands out wonderfully: I have seen a first-rate player from the Hallé orchestra actually trembling with nervousness when he approached it. After the final sustained top G had died away into nothing, he remarked to me, "I never come to that passage without shaking all over like an aspen leaf; if
Rossini, Overture to William Tell.
153
- ↑ Some outstanding passages for the flute occur in Balfe's overture Le Puits d'Amour.