Why Does My Tin Whistle Squeak?
A squeak usually means one of two things: too much breath pressure, or incomplete hole coverage. Sometimes both are happening at the same time.
The good news is that this is a normal beginner problem, and it can usually be improved with a short, focused exercise.
Cause 1: You are blowing too hard
High notes need more support than low notes, but many beginners overshoot and force the sound. That creates a squeezed, unstable tone.
Try reducing the pressure slightly and aim for a cleaner attack instead of a louder sound.
Hover a control to see what it does.
High D with lighter breath
Use the first bar to steady the high note and the second bar to relax into the jump.
Cause 2: One hole is leaking
Even a tiny gap can make high notes crack or squeak. This often happens when the fingers lift too high or land at an angle.
Check your hand shape and keep the fingers curved and close to the whistle.
Hover a control to see what it does.
Check your sealing on B
Two simple bars to confirm the holes are sealing before you go back to the high note.
Cause 3: The transition is too abrupt
Sometimes the squeak does not happen on the note itself. It happens during the move into the note. Slow transitions down until they feel controlled.
Quick reset
When squeaks keep happening, stop chasing the full tune. Return to a single note or short phrase and fix the tone first. Then rebuild the phrase.
Common mistakes
- Trying again with even more breath
- Ignoring a small finger leak
- Practicing the full song before fixing the note
- Tensing the jaw and shoulders
Squeak Check
Use this short test to check whether the lesson is starting to stick.
Recent Scores
No recent score yet. Your finished challenge runs will appear here.
Press Challenge to start a scored run.
Next step
Once the squeak is under control, go back to a simple melody and test the note inside a phrase.