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Few pieces of sheet music capture the essence of childhood wonder as succinctly as the flute (or recorder) part for “On the Rooftop” from the various musical adaptations of J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan . At first glance, the page appears simple—a sparse collection of eighth notes, rests, and a gentle, lyrical melody line. Yet, for the musician, particularly a young flutist, this sheet music is not merely a set of instructions; it is a map to Neverland. It translates the physical act of running across a rooftop in London into the ethereal language of breath and silver sound.
Phrase B (bars 15–22) — descending, reflective, then hopeful rise 15. F#5 (quarter, p) — E5 (quarter, p) — D5 (quarter, p) — C#5 (quarter, p) 16. B4 (half, p) — A4 (half, p, breathe) 17. (brighten) D5 (quarter, mf) — E5 (quarter, mf) — F#5 (quarter, mf) — E5 (quarter, mf) 18. D5 (quarter, mf) — B4 (quarter, mp) — A4 (half, mp) on the rooftop peter pan flute sheet music
| Note | Pipe length (approx) | Blowing angle | |-------|----------------------|----------------| | G4 | longest (low G) | slight downward | | A4 | medium-long | level | | B4 | medium | level | | D5 | medium-short | slight upward | | E5 | short | upward | | F#5 | short (half-hole technique often) | upward | | G5 | shortest (high G) | strong, upward | Few pieces of sheet music capture the essence