This blog is dedicated to the sublime instruments called nose flutes and which produce the most divine sound ever. We have chosen to discard all the native models from S. Pacific and Asia, for they need fingering to be played. We'll concentrate on "buccal cavity driven" nose flutes : the well patented and trademarked metal or plastic ones, plus, by a condemnable indulgence, some wooden craft or home-made productions.

Jun 9, 2012

Okan Khamen - Part III: The Nose Flutes

Here we are! Two magnificient clay nose flutes by Japanese potter Miss Kanae Miyazaki. Yes two, both made as masks, in the japanese tradition (see this post on that topic), on very large and one regular sized. They are called Okan-Khamen, and they are representing the parrot-Pharaoh character imagined by Komatsuka Nae (Kanae Miyazaki's alias) [see links at the bottom of this post].


Both nose flutes are made in glazed clay, and are totally hand-shaped. At the labium and mouth hole place, one can see the little bird used as a medium for Okan-Khamen speeches (since the Pharaoh-queen doesn't deign to speak or move by herself :). And both show another birdy at the top of the parrot's hairdress. And have a look at those funny little claws on the side of the flute...

The two flutes are equiped with a beautiful and long ribbon to hang them around your neck (don't think one second of a hands-free playing with the large one!) which knot and end form some funny antennas.
The hanabue are signed by a gorgeous little hand-painted logo.




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The Large Okan-Khamen


The large hanabue is very large. It measures 16 x 12 cm (6"1/2 x 4"3/4). And it weights also quite a bunch : 288 g! (10.2oz). No problem however to play it, there is room enough to grab it firmly with your fingers. On the negative side, you cannot see anything when you play it, and the only eyes which are seen are the Okan-Khamen's ones (those eyes which frightened real birds because of their falcon type)



The back of the flute is very « organic », and really looks like the back of an animal (a bit like a ray fish bottom side). It is totally shaped by hand but the technical parts (the "flute" itself) look very precisely made however, with a funny but very useful nose-shaped cavity to plug comfortably your snout.
The air exit draws a very thin line, and the labium, very narrow in width (but large in height), is regular and sharp. Both are quite well made for a hand-made clay flute.



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The Small Okan-Khamen



The "small" Okan-Khamen flute is the inhabitant of a book! Love of Life, by Jack London (here as a thick book — the original text is 16 pages long:) — serves as a craddle/sarcophagus for this little pharaoh. The book is very well done, with a magnetic cover, hollowed out in the inside. A thick "first page", stamped with phonetic Japanese (first word is "hanabue" = nose flute) and cut by an oval window, let the baby breathe and can be removed to access to her.

I love this japanese mind where you do not access to the treasure immediately: it is hidden, as in the traditional house Toko-no-ma or in the miso soup filling a lacquer bowl that has acquired a venerable patina [If you never read it, you should : Tanizaki Junichiro (谷崎潤一郎), 陰翳礼讃, In Praise of Shadows]. Sorry, I made these pictures in the sunlight! :




The flute itself is a reduced model of the large one (or is it the inverse ?). It has a "big-regular" size (9.2 x 7 cm / 3"1/4 x 2"3/4) and weights a comfortable 86g (3oz). Here again, it is not prepared for hands-free playing (as any japanese flute —I suppose that in Japan, (nose)flute playing is art in itself, and one doesn't play any other instrument together at the same time). The ribbon is here to wear your Oken-Khamen as a jewel around the neck.


The back of the flute is logically less concave than the large one is. It is also more regular, less "organic".


The technical parts of the flute are quite similar to the large ones, put apart some (important) details : The rectangular air entrance is smaller (and thus is clogged by the nasal wall), and the labium itself is shorter and less beveled. The air exit is thicker than on the larger one.





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The Sound

Yes, those flutes are not only beautiful works of art, they also are music instruments!
What follows is a very personal opinion, as a flute may or may not fit one's face shape.

The large Okan-Khamen is very comfortable, despite its heavy weight, and fits very closely my nose. Thanks to its very precisely made technical features, it is very easy to play, and sounds well, with a little "shhh!" sound, due to some microscopic imperfections (hey! it's hand-made clay!). The notes range is good, and oriented mostly to the medium and bass (large mouth hole in height). I really like to play it.

The small model is more tricky. I cannot adapt to it. My nose clogs the air entrance or, if I displace a nostril to fit it, there is too much air leak with me. And since the air exit is not as thin as the large flute one, plus the labium much less sharp, I hardly can get a sound from it.
I suppose other people, with another nose type, would, but I will keep my small Okan-Khamen as a funny and beautiful work of art, not as an instrument. But I will play the large one with lots of pleasure.

Kanae Miyazaki herself is not totally satisfied of some of her hanabue. But she is very "new" in the nose flute making (she made only 30 yet), and will certainly improve to the perfection.
On the art side, she has already reached it!

Thank you a lot, Miss Kanae!

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Here is a video I made with both flutes (images), but played only with the large one. For sure, with a parrot flute, I chose to play the Papageno's air, from the Mozart Magic Flute. Enjoy!



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On the same topic, please visit (chronologically) :

- Komatsuka Nae, a talented Japanese artist
- Covered with gifts
- Okan-Khamen - Part I: Covered with gifts!
- Okan-Khamen - Part II: The Parrot-Pharaoh
- Okan-Khamen - Part III: The Nose Flutes
- Okan-Khamen - Part IV: Komatsuka nae's answer

Related links :

- Komatsuka Nae's (Kozakurapon) blog
- Kanae Miyazaki's Facebook page
- A page in English about Kanae's work
- Kanae Miyazaki's works on Toumoto photo website
- Opi Toutomo's Facebook page

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Don Luis : an humble hobbyist maker

Don Luis is retired from his programming job, and spends his time crafting some inexpensive things and instruments. « I make simple things with simple materials like paper, wood, cord, wire, etc. ». On his website, among the instruments, besides the kazoos, lay the nose flutes.



He also publishes his outline to make a nose flute :



Don Luis just finished a new nose flute, and put a video on his Youtube channel with the description : « I think it works well, but I am not a good player. »

Jun 8, 2012

Sho testing the Pharaoh hanabue

Here is a video made by Opi-Toumoto, probably at Kanae Miyazaki's place, in which our friend Sho Hirasawa (aka Shownoseflute) tests an Okan-Khamen (small model) hanabue.

Okan Khamen - Part II: The Parrot-Pharaoh

Before to present to you the nose flutes made by Kanae Miyazaki, we need to expose who the character Okan-Khamen is.

Kanae Miyazaki is a potter and an illustrator, living in Osaka, Japan. She was a craftman in Kiyomizu-ware for 10 years : « My job was to draw pictures on japanese traditional tablewares. I retired from that work 5 years ago. I make my opus in my homekiln now. »

Kanae is fond of birds, and particularly penguins, parrots and parakeets. Two of those live at her home - Pon and ChaCha - who are often the heroes of stories written and drawn by Komatsuka Nae (Kanae's alias), or the subjects painted on her ceramics. Opi also, the personal winged friend living c/o Opi Toumoto, birds photographer and Kanae's friend.

But it was not enough, and Komatsuka Nae has invented a new bird character : the parrot-Pharaoh Okan-Khamen (オカンカーメン).



« Okan-khamen is the queen of the parrots. She was living in the royal palace of Tutankhamen. After the King Tut died, She went on a trip around the world (She came to Japan). She has a high status, She does not talk and move Herself. Her strong bird smell is a symbol of power. Instead of Her, a bird in Her hands tells Her opinion ». Komatsuka Nae feels it necessary to add « This is a fictional story ».
« At first, I made it as a vegetable container for birds. But birds were afraid it, because it has eyes similar to a falcon ones. But bird fanciers were amused by Okan-khamen character. ». Indeed, it has become some kind of "cult" among a genteel community.



The name Okhan-Khamen is a pun with Tut-Ankh-Amen, where « Okan "means "Mother". It's slang in japanese. Okan-khamen's hairstyle is similar to old mothers hairstyle. »



The drawing on the back of the card looks like a western women with hair rollers. But Okan-Khamen hair style looks more like traditional japanese ones.



So, as you can read on the card shown above, the parrot-Pharaoh rides a bicycle, but does not deign to pedal Herself, and is motorised by a scarab.

So what is the story ? I suppose there are many. But thanks to the book Kanae sent me and had the delicacy to translate in its important scenes, we can get an idea : The archeologist Opi (Toutmoto's personal birdy) and his assistant Pon (one of Komatsuka Nae's friend) discovered the Okan-Khamen treasure and were able to retrace Her story.






Many many other pictures of Okan-Khamen, by Opi Toumoto, can be seen here (chose a Picasa link in the bottom of the page)

And the nose flutes ???

Kanae began to produce nose flutes last november, and made about 30 of them. « I am going to make for a while. I have not yet made a satisfactory noseflute. » Well, we can already say the large Okan-Khamen in our possession is a very easy and good hanabue!

At the question concerning Komatsuka Nae's playing, she answers : « Sorry, I am not good at playing musical instrument ». We would like to judge by ourselves!

Thank you Kanae!


One last word... I showed one Okan-Khamen hanabue to my cat Patafix, who loves birds, particularly when young and crunchy :) And Kanae imagined a meeting between Pon, ChaCha and Patafix, where the nose flutes are used as protective shields. Here is the funny drawing (the text say "Pleased to meet you!").




Don't miss the last post of this series : Okan-Khamen - Part III: The Nose Flutes

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On the same topic, please visit (chronologically) :

- Komatsuka Nae, a talented Japanese artist
- Covered with gifts
- Okan-Khamen - Part I: Covered with gifts!
- Okan-Khamen - Part II: The Parrot-Pharaoh
- Okan-Khamen - Part III: The Nose Flutes
- Okan-Khamen - Part IV: Komatsuka nae's answer

Related links :

- Komatsuka Nae's (Kozakurapon) blog
- Kanae Miyazaki's Facebook page
- A page in English about Kanae's work
- Kanae Miyazaki's works on Toumoto photo website
- Opi Toutomo's Facebook page

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