| TOOTLE | Soft sound on the flute; or, a casual trip (6) |
| GONEWITHTHEWIND | Mitchell classic no longer here with the flute or oboe (4,4,3,4) |
| GALWAY | Irish note, ever poetical, played on the flute (6) |
| WATCHFULEYE | Why an ace on the flute could use a careful monitoring (8,3) |
| COBBER | Word for a broker, a stock trader or a wholesaler; or, a casual worker (6) |
| GROOVE | A fissure, flute or other furrow; good feeling or fine fettle; a fixed routine; or, a form of funk music (6) |
| STATIC | Crackling sound on the radio (6) |
| ZUFOLO | Little Italian flute or flageolet used in the training of songbirds due to its comparable sound (6) |
| EPPING | Note the soft sound in the forest (6) |
| SLOPES | Ornamental flutes or grooves carved vertically on a Doric frieze in classical architecture; or, typographic representations of characters (6) |
| WHOOSH | Move quickly with a dull soft sound (6) |
| APPEAL | Earnestly request a soft sound of bells (6) |
| GLYPHS | Word for carved flutes or grooves in friezes; sculpted marks or symbols; or, small graphic characters/icons (6) |
| RUSTLE | Soft sound of dry leaves (6) |
| MURMUR | Soft sound of strange spirit returning (6) |
| CHIMER | It sounds on the hour |
| RECORDER | A judge at quarter-sessions; an annalist, archivist, chronicler, diarist, registrar or other account-keeper; a fipple flute; or, a tape deck or Dictaphone, for capturing sounds (8) |
| TOOTED | The flute player did so also, Edward (6) |
| SENSES | Soft sound (6) |
| BEST | A superlative of "good"; one's smartest attire; a person's utmost effort or endeavour; a winning majority; a personal record or PB; or, a casual expression of one's regards (4) |