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Mollenhauer 5916 H Modern Soprano Recorder

8 Customer ratings

5 / 5

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5 Reviews

Mollenhauer 5916 H Modern Soprano Recorder
4.389 AED 1.133,61 €
Plus 269 AED shipping
The price in AED is a guideline price only
Since we ship from Germany, additional costs through taxes and customs may be incurred
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This product is in stock and can be shipped immediately.

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Dynamic and expressive
Hakon 04.08.2014
I have been an amateur recorder player on and off the last 19 years, and in that time, I have tried several different recorders. Of course they have different sounds, which sometimes means they are suitable for different uses.

A regular Baroque-style recorder tends to have a very thin sound for the lower tones - or indeed a very different sound quality, making one sometimes even avoid C and C# altogether, narrowing the useful range of the instrument. Also the pitch tends to fluctuate even with small variation in breath pressure, only very precise blowing making the instrument in tune.

For the Mollenhauer Modern, volume varies more than pitch with varying breath, lending itself to a different kind of expressiveness that I find particularly useful when playing modern music, elegies or slow airs.

A Baroque reproduction recorder as a rule of thumb has more reediness and a sharper edge to the sound, which I often find preferable for Medieval music where the unrefined roughness feels more right to me as well as tending to sound better with other period instruments such as hurdy-gurdy, harp or fiddle.

The Modern on the other hand, has a more rounded, gentle sound, precise yet expressive, and with a bit of softness to it, yet without losing character. I have not tried the grenadilla version, but from what I know of grenadilla vs pearwood, I would expect it to have a louder, even more focussed and centred sound - not my preference, but of course it might be yours. I'd in any case recommend trying before buying if possible.

In my opinion, the Modern sounds better with pianos, guitars and softly-played violins, or playing parts one would traditionally expect played on tin whistles or Irish flutes.

I wouldn't recommend starting playing recorder on just a Mollenhauer Modern as one would get much less training trying to keep the pitch correct, so I believe for students it needs at least to be paired with a baroque-style recorder for balance.

For experienced players, or an intermediate hobbyist like myself, who have played enough to know what they are looking for from a recorder, or someone who has mastered the basics and moved on to putting more personality into their performance, I can heartily recommend the Mollenhauer Modern for its unique playability, dynamic expressiveness and highly accessible extended upper and lower range.

Of course, if you just dabble and don't have any serious aspirations with your recorder-playing - and indeed you feel you can afford it - the Modern will also give you an instrument that will sound more in tune with less effort.
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A pleasure to play and a learning experience
Anonymous 27.02.2014
I've played the Alto version for some years and found it easy to play and very satisfactory in the key features: strength of low notes and easy reach for the highest notes. So I expected the Soprano to be the same.. I have not had it long and feel I am still learning it.
The low notes are very strong and melodious and easy to play at volume. Some of the notes in the higher registers are not sounding true yet but I am expecting that more pracitce will make them clearer. I have found I need to add an extra finger to some of the higher notes; the D in particular is quite sharp.
The keys on the B model are a little compact compared with the Alto. Again I am assuming that practice will make perfect.
I hope to be able to report progress at a later date.

Make no doubt. This is a fine instrument. My group are all very impressed with the sound and the ease of playing.
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Mollenhauer 5916 H Modern Soprano Recorder