Ardal Powell is President 
                of Folkers and Powell, flute-makers 
                in Hudson, New York, USA. He studied 
                at Cambridge and Koninklijk Conservatorium, 
                the Netherlands.
              
              I thought I would just 
                leaf through this book and put it aside, 
                but surprisingly found myself reading 
                carefully through it. It is one of those 
                wonderful books we hardly see any more 
                with an astonishing density of facts 
                presented in such a clear and economical 
                writing style that you find out far 
                more than you could ever remember about 
                the flute; more than I ever thought 
                anyone even knew about the flute. The 
                author’s dedication and enthusiasm are 
                infectious. And I never once had to 
                go back to read a sentence twice to 
                get the sense of it. The organisation 
                of the material is mostly in historical 
                sequence, with only slight deviations 
                to group material on a single topic 
                together, which makes the book useful 
                as a reference work which is what it 
                will be to most of its intended readership. 
                We begin in 900 BCE and end up the day 
                before yesterday. Every historical source 
                known to the writer is presented, discussed 
                and analysed to determine its trustworthiness, 
                with all objections elaborated and discussed. 
                A number of ancient and medieval drawings, 
                for instance, are for various reasons 
                dismissed as mere legend or decoration. 
                There is an extensive discussion of 
                tuning systems, modern playing styles 
                and the tiniest details of the construction 
                of modern instruments. I had no idea 
                that the concept of equal temperament 
                was as critical to flute design as it 
                is to keyboard design, or that it affected 
                so many other areas of musical art.
              
              This book will prove 
                to be an indispensable reference for 
                students of the flute, composers, players 
                and conductors, musicologists, ethnomusicologists. 
                Ordinary music lovers such as my self 
                will probably be content to get it at 
                a circulating library and read as much 
                as patience allows, and maybe go back 
                and refer to it from time to time as 
                questions come up in listening. There 
                are many illustrations and they are 
                all directly to the point. I was particularly 
                interested in the portraits of people 
                like Quantz who I’ve naturally read 
                much about but never knew what he looked 
                like. The photograph of dignified Adolphe 
                Hennebains as a piping Pan, wearing 
                only an animal skin and hiding in a 
                bush with leaves on his head is certainly 
                the camp highlight of the book. The 
                seating plan of the Dresden orchestra 
                for performance of operas by Hasse in 
                1764 was of great interest when I showed 
                it to a musicologist/conductor friend 
                of mine. And here is a group photograph 
                of the first chair wind players of the 
                Philharmonia Orchestra in 1950.
              
              The book observes academic 
                political correctness in that all indefinite 
                pronouns are of the feminine gender.
              
              We are fortunate here 
                to have a local flutist who gives regular 
                recitals on the modern flute, recorder, 
                and wooden transverse flute and next 
                time I can ask her some intelligent 
                questions the book has raised about 
                what she does and how and why she does 
                it.
              
              Some interesting quotations: 
                "...the Late Victorian decline 
                of the traveling virtuoso permitted 
                early twentieth-century stars of the 
                flute, such as Moyse and Jean-Pierre 
                Rampal, to believe they were presenting 
                the flute as a solo instrument for the 
                first time. In reality it was only the 
                first time in living memory." And 
                another, "Records and rapid travel 
                have helped to ensure the prevalence 
                of a certain view, that of the post-war 
                French school, which is dominated by 
                Jean-Pierre Rampal."
              
              Paul Shoemaker