I bought a new Amadeus 900 last October. Loved it for a couple of months, then it literally started falling apart. A cork fell off, was replaced, two days later another fell off; repairman showed me that ALL of the corks/pads were literally sliding off the flute, so he replaced them all. Then a week later I started having trouble with keys not coming back up; repairman took it apart and a wire was bent. Fixed that. Then a couple days later, the middle D would not come out. Took it back in; supposedly fixed. Then the E and F would not play. At that point, the store gave me another brand new Amadeus because the first one was obviously defective. This was 1-1/2 months ago.
At first the flute played brilliantly and effortlessly. After a month, tho, I noticed that it was getting more and more sharp in the upper registers. I began having to pull the headjoint out further and further to get it more in tune. Then last Monday at a rehearsal, it crapped out entirely. Every note above D (above the staff) was so sharp that I could not play it. I ended up playing all the songs an octave lower the whole rehearsal. I thought it was simply me, that I was just too tense that night. So the next day I worked and worked and worked on it, trying everything I could to get myself back in tune. I ended up pulling the headjoint out more than an inch, which STILL didn't get the upper registers less sharp, and also made the middle registers, which are usually very bright, dull and dead-sounding instead.
My first instinct in everything is to blame myself, so I was convinced my playing was at fault. I took two days off to let my jaws rest, and then decided to do a comparison test of my playing. I took my student flute, my Orpheo, and the Amadeus and lined them up. I played the same piece of music on each of them with the tuner on the stand and, LO AND BEHOLD, the student and Orpheo flutes were in tune, no problems at all, but the Amadeus still buried to the right of the tuner.



I have never heard this before! My other two flutes are always played with the headjoint completely in, and they are always in tune. Is this something particular only to the higher-end flutes???? DOesn't make sense to me.
Anyway, happy ending to the story, the manager of the store (who is a flute player) tried out the Amadeus and she could not get it to play in tune either. The store is going to give me another flute of my choice, which will NOT be an Amadeus!
So .... have any of you had anything like this happen before? Have I just been playing the flute wrong in the past (even tho I do manage to play my other flutes in tune .....)? Also, am I wrong to think that a flute that costs over $2500 should last a wee bit longer than THREE months!!!
I can't wait to hear your thoughts on this one.
