One of the earliest uses of flutter-tonguing was by
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky in his ballet
The Nutcracker. In the opening of the final act, Tchaikovsky makes the flutes flutter-tongue to depict the cascading river of rose-oil seen as Clara and the Nutcracker are welcomed to the kingdom of Confiturembourg: he named the effect
frullato, as did the flautist who first introduced him to the technique, Alexander Khimichenko. The effect has since been called for in many classical compositions, where it is most often used on
flutes,
recorders,
clarinets,
saxophones,
bassoons,
trumpets, and
trombones, but can be used on other
brass and
woodwind instruments as well. The technique became quite common in the 20th century, notably occurring in the music of
Schoenberg and
Shostakovich, where it can have a nightmarish or sarcastic effect, or conversely by
Benjamin Britten who uses the effect on the recorder in ''
Noye's Fludde to imitate the cooing of a dove, or in Curlew River'' on solo flute to suggest both the mental state of the Madwoman and also the curlews she identifies with. Both
Gustav Mahler and
Richard Strauss used the effect as well. In
Don Quixote, Strauss imitates the distant bleating of sheep with flutter-tongued notes in the horns. Notably, he uses the marking "Zungenschlag" (tongue-beat) in this passage from Variation II. Elsewhere in the score, he used the traditional German "Flatterzunge". Mahler used this traditional marking as well, but he also deviated from it in the finale of his Second Symphony, where he uses the marking "Zungenstoss" (tongue-thrusts). On sustained whole notes, the tongue thrusts Mahler requires have the effect of a flutter tongue. Flutter-tonguing is also common in
jazz music, particularly that which is associated with
New Orleans or
Vaudeville style.
Cootie Williams was a master of combining a plunger mute with the flutter tongue to create a conversational effect. ==Method==