On Holding The Flute
On Holding The Flute
On Holding The Flute
From time to time, the topic of the "Rockstro Grip" surfaces, so I thought it would be
useful to hear Rockstro himself on the topic of how to hold the flute. As you'll see below,
it isn't Rockstro's idea at all - indeed he not only backs away from ownership but reverses
the situation - if we are to believe him everyone held the flute that way until about his
time, and he criticises those who were moving away from it.
The text comes from Rockstro's massive tome A Treatise on the Flute, 1890. I've made a
few changes to punctuation and layout to clarify the text, and snipped material not
directly related to the topic. I've retained Rockstro's section numbers so you can easily
correlate it with the original. Any comments of mine will be [in square brackets]. The
"old flute" is the 8-key conical, the "modern flute" is the Boehm or a variant thereof.
[Good to have a concise and logical reason behind the approach recommended.]
It must therefore be pressed against the lower part of the under lip by means of the base
of the left hand first finger and the tip of the right hand thumb. The pressure of the finger
and the thumb must be nearly horizontal and exactly opposed. The left hand first finger,
being placed against the outer side of the flute (at a short distance above the c"# hole, or
the touch of its key), will press the upper part of the flute inwards. The tip of the right
hand thumb, being placed against the inner side of the flute (almost between the first and
second fingers of the right hand), will press the lower part of the flute outwards.
The flute will thus become a lever of the first order [i.e. a lever with the pivot-point in the
middle e.g. a see-saw], the left hand first finger being the fulcrum, and the right hand
thumb the power. It will be evident that if the right hand thumb were placed under the
flute, exercising pressure in an upward direction, depression of the head-joint could only
be prevented by the downward pressure of one or more of the right hand fingers, or by
the upward pressure of the left hand thumb. Either of these correctives would necessarily
violate the primary rule for supporting the flute. The thumb will have no tendency to slip if
its pressure be directed exactly towards the centre of the bore.
The thumb should always be placed to the right of the first finger, otherwise the action of
the fourth finger on the open keys of the foot-joint might cause the first finger to act as a
fulcrum, and the thumb would thus acquire a tendency to move the head-joint on the lip
at the moment when the steadiness of the flute would be of the greatest importance.
713. It will be found convenient to allow the left hand thumb, and perhaps some of the
fingers of both hands, to aid in holding the flute previously to its contact with the lip.
There can be no possible objection to this temporary use of the thumb and fingers, but
during performance the flute must depend for its support entirely on the three points
before mentioned. Players on the eight-keyed, or any other flute with the old fingering,
may rest the left hand thumb against the flute, being careful that no support shall be thus
given to the instrument.
[Going back to this, we find: "the outer edge of the mouth-hole shall be rather within
than without the line of the centres of the finger-holes". Expressed differently, it
suggests that the far edge of the embouchure hole should be on the player's side of
a line through the centres of the finger holes.]
[This is clearly an overstatement, and partly an opportunity for Rockstro to put the
boot into Boehm, one of his favourite preoccupations. But it is an interesting
observation.]
Devienne. (1795) "If the mouth-hole of the flute be placed in a straight line with the
finger-holes, the player will be compelled either to raise his [left] elbow too high, or
to lower his head. . . . The mouth-hole should therefore be turned inwards."
Devienne's diagrams show the mouth-hole so turned, but only to half the extent
recommended by Quantz.
Berbiguier (1820 circa) makes no remarks on the adjustment of the head-joint, but
his diagrams show the mouth-hole turned considerably inwards.
Drouet. (1827) "The mouth-hole should be turned more inwards than the finger-
holes." In the English edition of Drouet's book (1830): the head-joint is directed to
be "turned inwards so far that the outward edge of the embouchure is very nearly in
a line with the centre of the first hole of the left hand."
Dressler. (1828): "The Embouchure. . . [should be] inclined inwards a little, so that
the line passing through the centres of the finger-holes may touch the outward edge
of the embouchure.''
Lindsay. (1828) "The first masters of the day recommend the mouth-hole to be
turned inwards to nearly the extent of its own diameter."
Tulou. (1835 circa) ... The mouth-hole should be turned so that its outer edge may
be in a line with the centres of the finger-holes" (que le bord exterieur soit sur la
ligne qui partage les trous).
Nickolson (1836) gives no directions in words for the adjustment of the head-joint,
but his diagrams show that he adopted the method of Quantz.
Coche (1838) gives directions which, though differently expressed from those of
Drouet and Tulou, have virtually the same meaning.
Authorities for pressing the Tip of the Right Hand Thumb against the Side
of the Flute.
716. Before the introduction of the "extra key" [i.e. back in the days of the 1-key flute]
the place and the action of the right hand thumb were of no great importance, because
the equilibrium of the flute could be maintained by the otherwise unemployed thumb of
the left hand, even when the right hand thumb was placed underneath the instrument.
The first author who recommended the placing of the tip of the thumb against the side of
the flute was Tromlitz (1791). Since his time the only authors of any importance who, as
far as I am aware, advocated any other position for the right hand thumb were Tulou
and his pupil Walckiers. Tulou adopted an extraordinary position for the left hand thumb,
placing it on the middle of the closed Bb key, and never removing it except for the shake.
When he required to use the key for other purposes he slipped, or rolled, the thumb on to
the touch of the key. By this inconvenient means he was enabled to hold the flute much in
the same way as Quantz held it when there was no thumb-key, but while little can be said
in defence of Tulou's custom, it should be remembered that he constantly used the fork-
fingerings in rapid passages, and therefore his left hand thumb would probably have been
chiefly used in supporting the flute, that is, in counteracting the upward pressure of the
right hand thumb.
The rational system of holding the flute was thus explained by Drouet in his Methode:
"The flute should be supported by the. . . . first finger of the left hand; by the thumb of
the right hand, and by the lower part of the under lip. It is necessary to practise holding
the flute perfectly steadily, and supported only by the three points indicated above, so
that when it is placed to the mouth every finger, with the exception of the right hand
thumb, may be free to move without endangering the steadiness of the instrument...."
The tip of the thumb should be pressed against the inner side of the third joint of the
flute, between the fourth and fifth [of the six open finger-] holes."
No one ever wrote on the subject of flute-playing whose opinions are entitled to greater
consideration than those of Drouet, and his directions, though not original, have been
more or less closely followed, until lately, by flute-players of all nations, but I regret to
say that a most reprehensible movement has recently sprung up, amongst a certain few
English players, against the true system of holding the flute. I consider it my duty to
protest emphatically against this innovation.
Conclusion
So, there we go. Rockstro is not promoting some wacky new method of aligning and
holding the flute, but in fact fighting a rear-guard action defending the old method. For
this reason, we shouldn't call it the Rockstro grip, but something more accurately
descriptive, perhaps the "19th century grip" or something similar.