I don't mean it in a deliberate way but...
Instead of pulling off a JenCluff by varying your tone using embouchure and blowing angles), do you find yourself preferring one flute or headjoint (which you find particularly flattering) for a particular piece of music?

For example:
Yamaha 371H for Jethro Tull's Bouree or Hromek's Celtic Guitar type music or Claude Bolling's Suite For Flute & Jazz Piano Trio Nos 1 & 2
Miyazawa PA202 for Poulenc's Sonata for the Flute & Piano or Debussy's Syrinx maybe ... in the absence of a Louis Lot!
Altus 807 for Boehm's Caprice No 16 in Ab Minor (YouTube's Michael Nyugen plays this beautifully on his higher-end Yamaha) or Vivaldi's Four Seasons perhaps.
Altus 1307 + for Enescu's Cantible et Presto (such exquisite raw dark tonal colours - see YouTube by Carnivorious at the Mellby Atelier, Sweden) shivers! Compare this with Rampal's more controlled
version. Much as Rampal is my all time benchmark, I admit I preferred Carnivorious's rendition. Was it the flutist? flute? or simply superior recording technology?
Muramatsu for Jacques Casterede's Etude No 5 (I loved this on two YouTube clips, one on a Muramatsu (see Mauro Scapini) and the other on the exquisite Abell (see E Gaston)... wonder if a Guo New
Voice will do it?

but it would seem that Emma Resmini could make her entire repertoire sound good on her initial flute (?) and subsequently the Powell Conservatory. Watching a pint sized little girl/young lady emerge with such expression (with volume) leaves me with no excuses - that all things are possible.


