Au Claire de la Lune Tin Whistle Lesson

Learn Au Claire de la Lune on tin whistle with note guidance, two-bar phrase practice, and a final challenge before the full play page.

Au Claire de la Lune Tin Whistle Lesson

Au Claire de la Lune is a gentle early melody that gives beginners time to listen to spacing and tone instead of fighting speed.

What you will practice on this page

  • High D whistle in G Major
  • The note set `G A B`
  • 4 short phrase drills, each grouped into two bars when possible
  • One final challenge on the closing phrase
  • A full-song practice link when you are ready to play the whole tune in one run

Notes you need before the tune

This version stays inside a comfortable G-major note set, so the main work is smooth stepwise motion and not over-blowing the longer tones.

The note family for this arrangement is G A B.

Get the note set under your fingers

Walk through the notes used in the tune, then come back down with the same calm breath and finger height.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Fingering tips for this tune

  • This song uses very few notes, great for beginners.
  • Focus on the rhythm and note length.

Practice tips for this tune

  • Hold the half notes for their full value.
  • Keep the tempo steady.
  • Try to play it smoothly (legato).

Bars 1-2: set the opening phrase

Start the tune with a calm attack and make the first phrase feel deliberate before you move on.

Bars 1-2

Start the tune with a calm attack and make the first phrase feel deliberate before you move on.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Bars 3-4: steady the middle phrase

Keep this phrase even and let the note changes stay low and relaxed through the whole group.

Bars 3-4

Keep this phrase even and let the note changes stay low and relaxed through the whole group.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Bars 5-6: prepare the ending

Keep this phrase even and let the note changes stay low and relaxed through the whole group.

Bars 5-6

Keep this phrase even and let the note changes stay low and relaxed through the whole group.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Bar 7: close the tune cleanly

Treat bars 7-7 like their own exercise and make the last landing sound settled, not accidental.

Bar 7

Treat bars 7-7 like their own exercise and make the last landing sound settled, not accidental.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Common beginner mistakes in this tune

  • Letting the long notes thin out before the phrase is over.
  • Rushing the return notes because the melody feels familiar.
  • Using extra breath where the line should stay soft.

Final phrase challenge

Challenge Progress

Complete one scored challenge run to start tracking progress.

0% Starter

Recent Scores

No recent score yet. Your finished challenge runs will appear here.

Press Challenge to start a scored run.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Ready for the full tune?

This page is for phrase-by-phrase work. When you want to play the whole tune in one pass, switch to the full practice page and use Play, Follow, or Challenge there.

Practice the full song on the play page

Tune background

Au Clair de la Lune is a traditional French folk song whose origins date back to the early 18th century, making it one of the oldest and most recognizable melodies in French musical culture. The song was first published in print around 1703 and is often attributed to the period of the French Enlightenment, when simple strophic songs were commonly shared through oral tradition. Its gentle, stepwise melody and narrow range made it especially suitable for communal singing and later for children’s music education. Historically, the lyrics contain subtle poetic and social references that were well understood at the time, though modern usage focuses mainly on its lullaby-like character. Au Clair de la Lune also holds a unique place in history as the melody of one of the earliest known sound recordings, captured in 1860 by Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville. Today, the tune is widely used in beginner instruction for instruments such as piano, recorder, and tin whistle, serving as a bridge between early French folk heritage and modern music learning.

Next song

If this tune now feels more settled, move on to another melody with a similar note shape.

Try Frère Jacques