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Veṇu

Flute

A side-blown bamboo flute with eight finger holes. The most direct melodic voice.

The veṇu (also called pullanguzhal) is a simple bamboo tube with eight playing holes and an embouchure hole near one end. There are no keys, no pads, no mechanism — pitch is changed entirely by finger placement and breath pressure. The Carnatic veṇu is held obliquely, with the embouchure hole against the player's left cheek.

Tuning

Three-octave instrument; fundamental Sa is approximately set to the tāmpūra — the player's breath pressure, embouchure, and finger half-holes do the rest

Posture

Standing or seated, head slightly tilted left. Both hands relaxed, fingers curved over the holes. Embouchure hole resting against the left cheek.

Anatomy

The named parts you'll hear a teacher use. You don't need to memorise these — just know they exist.

  • 1

    Embouchure hole

    The small oval near the top. This is where you blow. Aim the airstream across, not into.

  • 2

    Eight finger holes

    Six for the fingers, two at the lower end (cross-fingering or thumb control). Covering / uncovering changes the pitch.

  • 3

    Thread wrap

    Decorative binding (often red + gold) near the embouchure. Also marks the alignment point.

  • 4

    End caps

    The natural closed ends of the bamboo. Don't try to open them — pitch is set by hole placement.

Your first three sounds

The easiest three sounds a complete beginner can produce. Do these in order. Don't skip ahead.

  1. 1

    Long Sa (all holes covered)

    Cover all seven holes. Blow a steady, focused stream. Listen for the lowest note to emerge.

  2. 2

    Sa → Ri₂ (lift one finger)

    Lift the right index finger. The pitch jumps up. That's a whole-step.

  3. 3

    Sa → Ri₂ → Ga₃

    Lift the next two fingers. Three notes, ascending. Your first scale.

What trips most beginners

The four traps almost everyone falls into. Knowing them now saves you six months.

  • Trap #1

    Blowing too hard

    Instead

    Blow ACROSS the hole, not INTO it. Like blowing across a bottle. The note should emerge, not be forced.

  • Trap #2

    Finger holes not fully covered

    Instead

    Each hole must be airtight. Even a small leak makes the note flat or airy.

  • Trap #3

    Tightening the lips

    Instead

    Lips relaxed, slightly forward. The opening of the embouchure is the same size as your lower lip.

  • Trap #4

    Skipping breath control

    Instead

    Use diaphragmatic breathing. A flute is unforgiving — short breath = short phrase.

Now turn it on

Open the practice studio

The full studio is the deep practice space for the Flute: real-time pitch detection, fretboard / fingerboard / strike-zone visualizer, gamaka grading, and a structured lesson path.

Tampura drone

Sa = A3 (220.00 Hz)

Four-string tampura — Pa / Ṡa / Sa / Sa (octave below). The audio is server-rendered then looped seamlessly in your browser.

Practice

Sarali Varisai

The first 7-note scale every Carnatic beginner learns. 100 BPM default. Listen, then play along.

Alankāra Varisai · Alankāra 1 (2-matra phrase)

Practice the phrase patterns

15 notes · 60 BPM

The Alankāra teaches you to hear relationships between svaras, not just pitches. Play it slowly at first; the pattern is more important than speed.

Sa
R₂
G₃
M₁
P
D₂
N₃
Ṡa
N₃
D₂
P
M₁
G₃
R₂
Sa

Jānta Varisai · Jānta 1 (2-matra doubled)

Drill consonance

30 notes · 60 BPM

The Jānta doubles every svara. The ear learns to hear identical pitches (Sa → Sa is unison) as a single sustained event, and the motor learns to articulate each svara consistently across repetitions.

Sa
Sa
R₂
R₂
G₃
G₃
M₁
M₁
P
P
D₂
D₂
N₃
N₃
Ṡa
Ṡa
N₃
N₃
D₂
D₂
P
P
M₁
M₁
G₃
G₃
R₂
R₂
Sa
Sa

Paramparā — the lineage

Carnatic music runs on guru-śiṣya paramparā — teacher-to-student transmission. Here is the lineage this onramp follows, with reference recordings to start your listening.

The T.R. Mahalingam (Mali) bāṇi — the revolutionary who made the veṇu a solo instrument

  • T.R. Mahalingam (Mali) — Any recording

    The origin. Mali showed that the veṇu could carry a full concert. Listen for his breath control.

  • N. Ramani — Mōhanam

    Mali's foremost disciple. Pure, singing tone — the veṇu as the human voice.

  • Shashank Subramanyam — Any Ālāpana

    The modern virtuoso. Multi-octave runs, percussive tonguing, and the fullest dynamic range on the instrument.

Where to go next