They sound very different from each other as a piano has wires that are hit by hammers which make a percussive and full sound the Flute is a reed instrument with a more sustained and mellow tone.
flute and piano are in the same key so you can play the piano part on flute as for clairenet i dont know...
The link below has the piano music. If you play the top line it should sound right, because its the same notes as the flute.
Widor wrote Suite Florentine in 1920 for Flute or Violin and Piano.
there is a piano, drums and i think the Flute!
because the sound is like a wood wind instrument.....and because the keys on a piano also make the sound, just like the keys on a flute It's not a woodwind instrument. Piano sound doesn't involve wind. Organs are wind instruments. Pianos are percussion instruments.
piano, violin,organ,Flute
A bassoon has a lower sound than a flute.
Ato Turkson has written: 'Three pieces for flute and piano [by] Turkson' -- subject(s): Flute and piano music
No, the piano has a much larger range than the flute. Both are in the same key, but you'd have to transpose everything below middle c and the flute can't play chords.
no Actually, it depends on what you mean. A flute is a single note instrument, so a single flute cannot play a chord. However, the notes are the same, because a standard flute is a concert pitched instrument, so a C on the piano is a C on the flute, therefore, a C chord on the piano is a C chord on the flute. the difference is, it takes 3 flutes to play a tried, but a single piano can play a triad.
You blow into the Flute's mouth, The sound comes out the rear end.
Peter Lawson has written: 'Momenta 94, for solo piano' -- subject(s): Piano music 'Valentia extramaterial' -- subject(s): Quartets (Piano, flute, percussion), Sextets (Piano, flute, percussion)