The Moldavian fluier (, also: , literally "fluier without a stopper") is a traditional shepherd's wind instrument used in Romanian traditional music, a type of semi-transverse open flute. It is widespread in the north of the historical region of Moldavia, as well as partially in the north of Transylvania.
The instrument is a cylindrical tube with open ends, lacking a fipple (whistle mouthpiece), with a semi-transverse embouchure. It is predominantly made of wood, sometimes metal, and has six finger holes. A distinction is made between small (25âÂÂ35 cm), medium (35âÂÂ45 cm), and large (over 50 cm, usually 80âÂÂ90 cm) fluiers; the small and large models are the most popular. In contrast to the more common fipple flutes, the Moldavian fluier requires the performer to form the air stream with their lips, directing it onto the edge of the hole â which allows for a rich timbral spectrum, fine dynamics, and expressiveness. The sound of the Moldavian fluier is typically softer, warmer, and richer in overtones, whereas fipple fluiers produce a bright, stable, but less flexible sound. Traditional performance is often accompanied by a guttural background sound () â an archaic sound production method that creates a characteristic deep, resonant effect.
The fluier played an important role in traditional shepherd society â not only as a musical instrument but also as a means of ritual and interpersonal communication. Its sound accompanied rites related to protecting the flock, initiation, courtship, and was also used as a signaling device and accompaniment for dances, festivals, and funerals. The melodies performed on the fluier covered the entire spectrum of functions â from magico-ritual to entertainment â and reflected the main spheres of life in the rural community.
The first transcriptions of traditional Bukovinian fluier melodies, collected in the distribution area of the Moldavian fluier, were made by the folklorist between 1907 and 1909.
In 1913, in Maramureà(northern Transylvania), Hungarian composer and folklorist Béla Bartók described open fluiers with a notch and six finger holes. He distinguished two types of these instruments: the (a short fluier, 30âÂÂ40 cm long ) and the (two or more times longer, literally "long fluier"). Among the melodies he recorded were the song of the "lost sheep," the (here ' is a regional name for the lyric song, the doina), as well as dance melodies. Bartók made recordings and musical transcriptions of the melodies.
The ethnomusicologist Constantin BrÃÂiloiu documented the use of fipple-less fluiers during his fieldwork in Bukovina in the 1930s.
The leading Romanian organologist of traditional instruments, , devoted a section to the Moldavian fluier in his classic monograph Musical Instruments of the Romanian People (1956).
The monograph by Moldovan researcher Vasile ChiseliÃÂa, Instrumental Music of Northern Bukovina. Repertoire for the Fluier (2002), is based on materials from ethnographic expeditions from 1982âÂÂ1990. It examines in detail the organological, genre, melodic, and other aspects of the fluier tradition of the Romanian population of northern Bukovina (now Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine). The publication contains a large number of musical transcriptions.
In 2010, musicologist ConstanÃÂa Cristescu published a catalog of traditional musical recordings made in the second half of the 20th century in Romanian Bukovina, which include performance samples on large and small open fluiers.
The monograph The Archaic Musical Style of the RÃÂdÃÂuÃÂi County (2013), prepared by researchers Florin Bucescu and Viorel Bîrleanu from IaÃÂi, contains descriptions and transcriptions of the archaic layer of Bukovina's musical tradition. The authors denote this style with the term (from Romanian â "old-style"). The publication is accompanied by an audio disc with the authors' field recordings from the 1960sâÂÂ1970s, including melodies performed on the Moldavian fluier.
In 2018, ethnomusicologist Ovidiu PapanÃÂ published the study "Semi-Transverse Fluiers from Moldova," dedicated to the organological features of the tilinca and the Moldavian fluier.
The fluier is an autochthonous Romanian wind instrument, represented in 17 varieties, differing in construction: single and double, end-blown (longitudinal), transverse, and semi-transverse, open or with a fipple, with a varying number of finger holes or none at all. The name presumably derives from the verb ( "to blow").
Like folk songs, traditional musical instruments vary from one region of the country to another, their development occurring under specific historical and cultural conditions. For instance, the fipple flute with six finger holes is more common in the south of RomaniaâÂÂin Oltenia, Muntenia, Dobruja, and southern Moldavia. Its elongated version with five holes in Oltenia is called a caval (Oltenian or Romanian caval). Folk transverse flutes are also found in a small part of Oltenia.
In Dobruja, an open fluier with six finger holes on the front and an additional hole on the back is common. The larger Bulgarian caval is also used â an open, semi-transverse flute consisting of three sections, with seven finger holes on the front, one additional hole on the back, and four resonator holes in the lower part of the instrument.
In the northern regions of Romania â especially in the north of the historical Moldavia region, in Bukovina (including its Ukrainian part) â open fluiers without a fipple are common. These include the tilincàâ a simple semi-transverse flute without finger holes, about 80 cm long â as well as semi-transverse fluiers with six finger holes. Tiberiu Alexandru classified such fluiers as "Moldavian".
The fipple-less fluier is considered a more archaic form compared to the fipple fluier. Some researchers view the Moldavian fluier as a transitional form between the tilincàand the more common fipple fluiers. Alexandru quotes a folk master and performer from Bukovina, Mihai LÃÂcÃÂtuÃÂ: "The true grandfather is the tilincÃÂ, the father is the fluier [without a fipple], and the child is the triÃÂcà[here â a double pipe fipple fluier]" ().
The fipple-less fluier with six finger holes is characteristic of the northern part of historical Moldavia. It is found in Suceava, BacÃÂu, and IaÃÂi counties, among the Romanian population of Ukrainian Bukovina, and in the Transylvanian territories adjacent to Romanian Bukovina â in the NÃÂsÃÂud, BistriÃÂa, and TopliÃÂa areas, where it spread from the Vatra Dornei region.'
The Bukovina area is considered by researchers to be a zone of early formation of the Romanian folkloric tradition. The region's specific geographical and historical conditions contributed to the preservation of archaic forms of folk culture, which is also reflected in its musical tradition. Pastoralism â one of the main economic activities of the Vlachs in the foothill regions â played an important role in this. Therefore, it is in the Bukovinian area that rudiments and even entire strata of the most ancient forms of musical creativity are recorded.
In the north and northwest of Romanian Bukovina, the small fluier is called , and the large instrument is called . The word "fluieraÃÂ" is also used to mean a fluier player.'
In central Moldavia, the small instrument may be called , and the large one , by analogy with the Oltenian caval.'
In the distribution area of the Moldavian fluier, the fipple fluier is also known, which in the northern regions is also called .' Alexandru noted that the existence of two or more names for the same instrument, as well as the same term designating different instruments, is a common phenomenon in the world of Romanian folk instruments.
Vasile ChiseliÃÂa, studying fluiers in northern Bukovina (Ukraine), also pointed to the heterogeneity of folk terminology. Although the general term "fluier" is most often used, special names reflecting the instrument's structural features also exist. Moldavian fluiers of increased length (50âÂÂ80 cm and more) are called long fluiers or large fluiers (). For instruments 25âÂÂ35 cm long without a fipple, the term "small fluier" () is used, and for instruments with a fipple â . The term "caval" is not found in the Northern Bukovinian tradition. The double fluier is called in some places and consists of two wooden tubular bodies: one with six finger holes, the other without.
Similar open folk flutes with six finger holes are found in the Carpathian region among the Hutsuls: the frilka (30âÂÂ40 cm long) and the floyara (about 60 cm). These parallels reflect the common structure of Carpathian shepherd culture, formed during inter-ethnic contacts, including in connection with the migration of the Romanian (Vlach) population in the XIIIâÂÂXIV centuries. Medieval chronicles note the spread of shepherd settlements organized under "Vlach law" () among the Slavic peoples of Central Europe â in Galicia, Slovakia, the Polish Podhale, and Moravian Wallachia. The name of the shepherd's flute â fluier â became widespread in various forms among other peoples of the Carpathians: , fujara (Slovak), and (Podhale region, Poland).
Moldavian fluiers are semi-transverse flutes without a fipple â tubes open at both ends. They have bevelled rim (), which facilitates sound production. Wooden fluiers have a slightly conical shape; metal ones are cylindrical.
In size, they are distinguished as small (25âÂÂ35 cm), medium (35âÂÂ45 cm), and large fluiers (50âÂÂ80 cm and more). An instance 105 cm long is known, which belonged to a tall shepherd.
The instrument has six finger holes on the front, cut in a straight line. On large fluiers, they are grouped in threes; on small ones, they are evenly spaced. The holes are more often elliptical (oriented along the axis), less often round. The distance from the lower end of the tube to the first hole is noticeably greater than the intervals between the others, and the sixth hole is located approximately in the middle of the tube.
Sizes and proportions vary from one instrument to another, which is related to differences in the measurement methods used by folk masters.
For the manufacture of wooden fluiers, local hardwoods are used: for long ones â maple, hazel, less often ash; and for small and medium ones â plum, cherry, elder. Since the 20th century, metal fluiers â made of brass, copper, or aluminum â have also been produced. Wooden fluiers sound softer, warmer, and hold their tuning better in temperature changes, but are more fragile. Metal ones are louder, with a sharper timbre.
All types of Moldavian fluiers are made either by the performers themselves or by village craftsmen. Many musicians prefer to make their instruments themselves, fitting them to the length of their arm and achieving the desired sound. The instrument's construction is relatively simple, and the measurement methods are empirical (using fingers, string, wood chips, etc.). Therefore, the tuning of the fluiers is generally non-tempered and varies from one instrument to another. Only a few masters achieve standardization in accordance with a tuning fork.'
Mihai LÃÂcÃÂtuàfrom Câmpulung Moldovenesc (Bukovina) described the traditional process of making Moldavian fluiers in detail. It begins with selecting fresh wood: maple, cherry, hazel, beech, elm, rowan, pear, sweet cherry, or elder. The wood is harvested in winter. A fresh branch is tightly wrapped with a cord and a hole is drilled through it. After this, the cord is removed, the bark is stripped, the wood is treated with mineral oil, and then smoked in a chimney for 5âÂÂ6 days. If desired, the branch can be wrapped with cord again before smoking â the smoke will then leave a decorative pattern. After this, the wood can be stored for years, remaining suitable for instrument making.
Before final processing, the blank is trimmed and sanded. The end that is blown into is always chosen from the thick side, where the tree's annual rings overlap like tiles. This facilitates moisture drainage.
The holes are marked in a straight line, using a measuring stick (), and then drilled, after first piercing the wood with a sharp nail. The holes are cleaned (reamed) with a hot iron. It is taken into account that the wood shrinks as it dries: for example, a hole drilled with a 12 mm bit may shrink to 11 mm.
In northern Bukovina, a unique "tempering" hardening method was sometimes used: to increase the density of the walls of large fluiers made from softwoods, they were boiled several times in sweet sheep's cheese â urda.
The Moldavian fluier sounds when an air stream is directed onto the sharp edge of the tube. The pitch is changed by opening and closing the finger holes, which affects the length of the sounding air column. When all holes are closed, the fundamental tone sounds. Sequentially opening the holes forms a diatonic scale. By increasing the airflow (overblowing), it is possible to transition into the second and partially the third octave.
Additional notes are produced using the technique of half-covering the holes, as well as by using alternative "fork" fingering (non-standard combinations of partially open and closed holes). The pitch can also be varied by changing the instrument's angle and the angle of blowing.
The range covers approximately two octaves. Folk performers usually speak of two registers, calling playing in the low register â , and in the high register â . Alexandru distinguishes three registers: the first includes the first fifth of the first octave and is characterized by a weak, whistling, and slightly hoarse sound; the first two or three notes in it are very quiet and difficult to intone; the second covers the rest of the first octave and the entire second octave, its sound becoming progressively brighter and more penetrating; the third consists of a few notes in the third octave (approximately a fourth), which sound shrill and become increasingly difficult to produce as the pitch rises. Due to the difficulty of playing the very low and very high notes, as well as their imprecise or harsh timbre, musicians rarely use them.
The tuning is diatonic but can vary depending on the master and region. The pitch of the notes and the interval relationships are unstable, as the instruments are made by hand without precise measuring tools. The long tube gives the sound a softness and a slight "breathiness," especially noticeable in wooden fluiers.
In 1950âÂÂ1951, Mihai LÃÂcÃÂtuàconstructed a set of three Moldavian fluiers, intended for simultaneous performance by three players, to produce a three-part harmony. It included:
Through experimentation, he achieved tuning agreement among the three instruments according to an acoustic principle, where the ratios of their fundamental tones approximate the harmonic intervals of a fifth and an octave â similar to how it was done for fluiers made for playing in professional ensembles.
The sound on the fluier is produced with pursed lips. The instrument is held at an angle (semi-transversely), and the air is directed onto the sharp edge of the tube. The sound is formed without a fipple, by splitting the air stream â a kind of "improvised whistle".
Changing the instrument's angle and the angle of blowing allows the pitch to be varied up to a semitone, which makes it possible to produce quarter-tones and flexibly adjust the intonation. Half-covering the holes is used to obtain intermediate notes.
Despite having six holes, in practice, only the top three are often used, while the others are used mainly in cadences. When playing the small fluier, the sound production is accompanied by a light whistle, forming a characteristic timbre. The large fluiers, thanks to the special arrangement of their holes, allow for playing in two modal scales â Lydian and Mixolydian.
A characteristic feature of traditional performance is the guttural sound (drone), created by the vocal cords. It gives the melody expressiveness and is especially often used in doinas and funeral songs. A musician who plays in this manner is said to "play in the shepherd's style".
In experienced performers who use the guttural hum, the lower supporting tone sounds continuously, is stable, and fixed in pitch. This creates a two-part texture (biphony): the lower tone functions as a support and mostly drones. The musician becomes a kind of extension of his instrument, and his voice acquires an instrumental function. In folk aesthetics, mastery of this technique is perceived as a sign of a refined and sophisticated manner. At the same time, ConstanÃÂa Cristescu noted the negative reaction of professional musicians â even laughter in the audience â to performances by folk artists using this archaic playing style.
According to Vasile ChiseliÃÂa, the playing traditions of the large Moldavian fluier influenced not only the performance style but also the development of the region's instrumental makeup. The droning principle, characteristic of the fluier, was later "materialized" in the construction of other folk instruments, such as the cimpoi (Romanian bagpipe) and the triÃÂcà(here â a double fipple flute). To produce stable supporting notes, they are equipped with special droning pipes. In the playing of old violinists, the use of an open string as a drone is also noted, which distinctively imitates the guttural hum of the large fluier.
Performance on the large fluier is predominantly solo. Ensemble playing is found only in funeral laments, when two to four fluier players may perform simultaneously. In such cases, instruments with the same tuning are selected. Joint performance with instruments of other types is not practiced in traditional shepherd music. When accompanying songs, colinde (carols), or laments, fluier players usually duplicate the melody in unison or at the octave, which introduces elements of heterophony.
Despite fipple flutes being much easier to learn, in northern Moldavia, the preference for open Moldavian fluiers is traditionally maintained. They are valued for their powerful sound and wide expressiveness, as well as for the ability to flexibly vary pitch and timbre, which makes the instrument particularly significant in the local performance tradition.
Mastery of the fluier, cultivation of a taste for fluier music, and assimilation of the corresponding repertoire are traditionally transmitted from father to son, predominantly in shepherd families. Playing the fluier, like shepherding itself, is considered an exclusively male occupation, with rare exceptions.
The process of learning the different types of fluiers is distributed by age category and depends on the sound production features. The fipple fluier requires less effort, so it is suitable for beginners â children aged 5 to 8. In the peasant environment, such a fluier is considered a toy that children amuse themselves with ("whistling into the fluier").
Small and medium fipple-less fluiers are learned by adolescents aged 10âÂÂ14: sound production on these instruments requires a special embouchure and considerable physical effort.
Mastery of the large fluier begins only at an older age â from 16âÂÂ18, coinciding with the completion of the voice's mutation (breaking) and its stabilization. It is only then that it becomes possible to produce the guttural sound characteristic of traditional performance.
The fluier occupies a special place in folk culture, and fluier players (fluieraÃÂi) are traditionally respected in the community. This attitude is linked to sacral beliefs about the instrument's origin. A folk proverb says: "God made the fluier and the sheep, while the devil made the cimpoi and the goat" (). It is believed that the sound of the fluier is endowed with magical properties and is "blessed by God," so it is not subject to religious prohibitions: one can play the fluier even during Lent. Fluier music is considered more "natural" in the popular consciousness and is contrasted with other musical traditions, primarily the lÃÂutÃÂreascÃÂ music.
The instrument is used in various spheres of traditional life: in shepherd practices, in ritual and calendar ceremonies, in dance music, and in lyric pieces for listening. This distribution of functions reflects both the utilitarian and symbolic roles of the fluier in folk culture.
The main area of the fluier's use is related to shepherd life. The tradition distinguishes two main genres: road signal-tunes () and pasture melodies (, literally "plai tunes"). Both genres are closely linked to the functions of managing the flock and to shepherd beliefs.
are signal melodies played by shepherds on the move for orientation and flock management. Such tunes guide the sheep to the pasture, helping to keep them in the flock, especially in the dark. The shepherd, playing the fluier, walks ahead, and the flock follows him. Although these melodies trace back to bucium signals, the ' melodies are distinguished by a more developed structure and lyrical character, owing to the technical capabilities of the fluier.
are tunes played on the pastures (on the plai), predominantly in the morning, at sunrise. They are associated with magical and protective functions â a sonic appeal to the deity of light, symbolizing life, abundance, and fertility. Although their original meaning is forgotten, performers emphasize the antiquity of this tradition: "it has been so since the ancestors." The sun motif indicates a possible connection to pre-Christian, particularly Dacian, cults.
The fluier occupies a central place in the shepherd's system of acoustic orientation. Along with other sound-producing devices â the cowbell (), the bell (), the jingle bell (), the whip, and the bucium â it ensures the management and protection of the flock.
On high-altitude pastures, shepherds play both for their own pleasure and based on the belief that the sound of the fluier promotes better grazing and abundant milk yields. There is also a belief that fluier music possesses a protective power, warding off wild animals and evil spirits ().
Large fluiers (80âÂÂ90 cm long) were traditionally used by the (head shepherds), who did not accompany the flock but remained at the (a summer shepherd camp outside the village, usually in the mountains).
The instrumental version of the musical poem "When the Shepherd Lost His Sheep" is performed on the fluier, as well as doinas â .
A small set of melodies existed that performed a signal function and served as a means of communication among unmarried youth. This repertoire includes, for example, the melodies "When I went to the girls" () and "When I returned from the girls" (). In the recent past, this practice also had an initiatic character.
The fluier was used in various ritual ceremonies:
A significant part of the fluier's repertoire consists of dance melodies. Dances common in the region include: Hora, BÃÂtuta, CorÃÂghiasca, Arcanul, BÃÂtrâneasca, HuÃÂulca, Ruseasca, Cozacul, Ardeleanca, and others.
Unlike in other regions, the fluier in Bukovina is an integral part of the traditional lÃÂutari tarafs (folk bands), which accompanied village dances (). For example, the taraf of Sidor Androniciescu, recorded in the 1930s by Constantin BrÃÂiloiu, included a violin, fluier, cobza, and double bass.
Unlike signal or ritual tunes, its main purpose is not to accompany an action, but rather focused listening and the conveyance of deep emotions. Such pieces are typically performed solo and have a deeply personal, improvisational character:
The characteristic sound of the large Moldavian fluier is used by contemporary performers who draw on traditional music. Among them are Florin Iordan and the group Trei parale, Mierla Neagrà(Romanian for "the blackbird"), CÃÂlin Han, as well as the maker and performer Horaà £iu Neagoe.