Lots of very fine woodwind-related blog posts this month.
- Barry Stees exposes a common bassoon technique weakness (even for players at the highest level) and begins to explore solutions (promising more to come).
 - Oboist Susan Laney Spector explains some of the difficulties musicians face in the highly-competitive world of orchestral auditions.
 - Jennet Ingle has a breakthrough with an oboe student just by teaching some vocabulary.
 - Saxophonist Bob Reynolds does some YouTube archaeology and shows the difference a couple of decades can make in musical maturity, even for a very accomplished player.
 - Anna Norris and Nicolasa Kuster each share their experiences auditioning for the Chicago Symphony principal bassoon vacancy.
 - Cate Hummel advises against the “kiss and roll” method of teaching flute.
 - Oboist Patty Mitchell comments on practicing quantity vs. quality.
 - Jennifer Cluff shares a methodical flute warmup.
 - Flutist Katherine Emeneth shares a roundup of tips for “potent practicing.”
 - Saxophonist Bill Plake explains how to approach technique a little less, well, technically.
 - David Pierce rounds up some editions and recordings of the Mozart bassoon concerto.
 - “The Phantom Clarinet” at the Adventures in Woodwindland blog explores the extended low register of the bassoon [update: link dead].
 - Saxophonist Ben Britton reviews a new weird gadget that, to my surprise, seems to be getting a number of positive reviews. (I haven’t tried it.)
 - On Powell Flutes’s Flute Builder blog: how a wooden headjoint is cut.