
THE ANASAZI FLUTE
In this posting we're going to look at a completely different type of Native American flute. The Ancestral Pueblo or "Anasazi" flute, which is currently being reproduced by Michael Graham Allen aka Coyote Oldman. He is making these from measurements of artifacts that were provided by Dr. Richard Payne, an avid collector, historian and author. Unlike all the other Native American flutes (NAF) we've looked at so far, this flute pre dates any European influence. In this sense it is a true Native American flute, but as we shall see below, it shares many characteristic with flutes throughout the world.
Examples of this flute can be heard on Scott August's latest release "Lost Canyons" available from Cedar Mesa Music.An Echoes radio "CD of the Month" this release features three pieces for solo Anasazi flute and three pieces for Anasazi flute and world instruments.

AN END-BLOWN FLUTE
The
major difference between the Anasazi flute and the modern (1800-present
day) Native America flute is how the sound is produced. The Anasazi
flute is not a fipple flute, like the modern NAF, but is an end-blown, or rim-blown, flute. End-blown flutes are some of the oldest flutes in the world. One of the oldest is the Ney from the Middle East, which dates back to the time of the Pyramids. In Turkey there are the Nai and the Kaval. The most well-know end-blown flute is the Japanese shakuhachi. In the Western Hemisphere an end-blown flute called the Quena can be found along side Pan-Pipes (Zampoñas) in South American, while
in North America the Hopi culture has an end-blown flute that is still
used for ceremonies, and the Southern California native cultures also
have a end-blown flute made of Elderberry, but it is no longer in
common use.
PLAYING TECHNIQUE
Unlike
a modern NAF, the player has to learn how to place their lips against
the mouth piece to produce a sound. It can take an hour to a week for
the beginner to produce their first note! I was lucky, getting notes
within the first hour, but even now, four months later, there are times
when I have difficulty making a sound. 
The
flute is a hollow tube. The mouth piece is a slight depression on the
top side of the tube. The player covers most of the lower part of the
tube with their lower lip and chin while blowing a stream of air across
the depression. If the stream air doesn't hit the flute just right no
sound, or high squeaking overtone results.
THE "ANASAZI" SCALE
This
flute is 30" long and has a bore of 3/4" at the far end. It is made of
cedar. The root note is G# and has a scale that is surprisingly close
to the modern NAF scale in that it is pentatonic. But the mode is
differetnt. This scale is a major pentatonic scale with the addition of
a minor 3rd. The pitches are G#, A#, B, C, D#, F, then the Octave.
Notes above, and including the Octave that can be played by
over-blowing are: G#, A#, B, C and even D# and a higher G# -two octaves
above the root. With alternate fingerings a player can get some
chromatic pitches, such as G (half step below the octave), F#, and E.
As you can see in the photo above the finger holes are much different
than the modern NAF, being closer to the bottom of the pipe and there
is a larger gap between each set of three holes than on the NAF.LIsten to a Sample of this flute...
http://www.cedarmesa.com/samples/anasazi_sample_64.html
HISTORY
This
type of flute dates back to AD 500. During this time the cultures of
the Four Corner area of North America were called Basketmakers. Pottery
was just beginning to be made, but weaving was the at it's height
during this time. This was before the cliff dwelling of Mesa Verde, and
the giant pueblos of Chaco Canyon. People lived in Pit-houses, a
semi-subterranean "earth-lodge" with an earth covered log roof. This
was also the high point of Rock Art creativity, especially so of
Kokopelli. This flute is Kokopelli's flute.
In
1931 Earl Morris, who reconstructed the great Kiva at Aztec, NM, was
excavating in the Prayer Rock district of northern Arizona, near Canyon
de Chelly, when he unearthed four flutes in a cave he later named
Broken Flute Cave. These flutes were made of Box Elder which has a soft inner pith that can easily be removed. (End-blown
flutes from southern California were made of Elderberry which also has
a soft inner pith.)
Morris also found similar flutes in Mummy
Cave in Canyon del Muerto, part of Canyon de Chelly in 1934. These
include ones with only five holes. These five hole flutes match Hopi
flutes from the 1900's. A living history that stretches back 1,500
years! These flutes are reported to be in the collection a the
University of Colorado, Boulder.
Morris describes the Mummy Cave
find In a National Geographic Magazine article. He describes that the
flutes found were buried with "The body...of an old man, surely
once a priest or chief. Beside the usual offerings of beads, baskets,
and sandals, there lay above his buckskin wrapping a flute, one end
beneath the chin, the other between the thighs. ...
Along the
left side was a mass of wooden objects, all readily perishable, hence
extremely rare in perfect condition. Conspicuous among them were
bone-tipped flint flakers with which knives and projectile points were made, several spears, four handsomely wrought spear throwers, and three more flutes."
Note: In my research on these flutes, especially as regards Morris' finds there are some discrepancies with dates that I have yet to sort out.
HEAR MORETo hear more of the Anasazi flute sign up for my quarterly free mp3 downloads, through my free E-mailing list.
References:
Campbell, Grant, Canyon de Chelly: It's people and rock art, 1978, University of Arizona, Tucson.
Clint Goss, 2005, www.flutekey.com/brokenflutecave.
Robert Gatliff: 2005, Personal Correspondence.
Labels: Anasazi flute, Maker Profiles










My cousin plays the flute and I have always loved the sound. Also, recorder music appeals to me as well. Nice post!
Thank you, and now I'll put on my CD of the Native American flute music. Carlos Naki is on top of my list, ever heard his music?
This was tremendously interesting! I absolutely love music...no, not just listening to songs on the radio or seeing/hearing popular performers, but the whole realm of music. Yes, I do like rock and folk and classical...but I like the instrumentation, the changes throughout history, the mirroring of life during different periods of time/life, writing techniques and "trends", vocals, music from different cultures, and things from the simplest forms to the most complex works. I love music's purposes and how it achieves them, and I love it's language...how it speaks...in addition to or in absence of any lyrics or description, or introduction there may be. So, of course, I would find this post extremely interesting.
Yes, I have heard Native American flute music before, but have never really read some of the details you included, such as the description of materials used in making the flutes or the notality that these flutes are capable of performing. Now I have a better understanding and appreciation for these instruments, which adds to the appreciation and enjoyment of the music they make. Thank you for teaching me something so personally enjoyable.
you are welcome, so glad this will help your experience of this Culture, and the instrment and music.
I too appreciate all music, and it is true when we learn about an instrment it make listening much more enjoyale. I am inspired now to share about the.....
"didgeridoo" is the spelling in the dictionary, and "didjeridu" is, I believe, the preferred transliteration for australian natives and many non-native musicians."
More to come after I collect some info to share.