sound check... sound & music
Ever since the days of the first cave people, music has been part of our lives.
But what is music?
And what makes a sound, sound musical?
- Music under the microscope
A few short notes
- Doh Ray Me
Soh fah, so good for musical scales
- Techniques 1 & 2: Plucking and bowing
Meet some stringed instruments and give them a twang
- Technique 3: Blowing
Say hello to brass and woodwind instruments
- Technique 4: Banging
Percussion instruments to shake, rattle and bash
- Resonance
Find out how you can shatter a wine glass by singing to it! And why this explains how instruments make music
- Timbre And Harmony
Why a guitar doesnt sound like a trombone..
Music under the microscope
No one can say exactly what music is, and many arguments have been had and friendships lost along the way
Music can loosely be thought of as a collection of non-random sounds that have been organized in a recognisable way, and might repeat every so often.Some people would say that ALL sounds have some musical merit - even dogs barking, dustbin lids crashing, or vacuum cleaners.
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Doh ray me
A musical note is a sound of a particular frequency. So for example, the note middle C on a piano keyboard has a frequency of about 262Hz.
You get a new note which sounds like its related to the lower sounding one, but is an exact octave higher.
In western music, there are six notes between these two C notes - D, E, F, G, A and B in a family called a scale. Theyre also known to their friends as Doh, Ray, Me, Fah, Soh, La, Ti and Doh. In between these notes there are also some half notes called flats and sharps.
Playing combinations of these notes is the first step to creating music. Now we need a band.
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Techniques 1 and 2: plucking & bowing
Stringed instruments such as violins, guitars, harps, pianos and even underpants can produce music if you twanging a tight string try it.
The different notes are produced depending on the length and thickness of the string, and the tension (how much youve stretched it).
And of course twanging the sting strongly will produce a louder note than if you just gave it a little tickle.
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If plucking a string makes you want to blow raspberries then you may be perfect for playing a brass instrument such as a trombone, a trumpet or a tuba.
Blowing into the cup-shaped mouthpiece sets a column of air inside the tube vibrating and its made louder by the flared end of the tube, in the same way that shouting down a traffic cone will make your voice sound louder!
Pressing the valve buttons on the instruments (or sliding the tube of a trombone) makes the length of the column of air shorter or longer and this is how the different notes are produced.
Wind instruments such as oboes, bassoons and clarinets work in a similar way but the mouth piece has a reed (or reeds) thats set to vibrate as air is blown past it. This makes the air vibrate in the column.
If you want to try a very simple version of this, try this activity .
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If plucking and blowing make you want to bang your fists, then dont worry you can still be a musician
Theyre either tuned or untuned. Tuned ones like pianos and xylophones play specific pitches or notes, while untuned instruments like drums produce a sound with an indefinite pitch, like the sound of a hand knocking on a door.
Some people are surprised that pianos are called percussion instruments, but look inside one and youll see why. When you press a key a hammer hits a string inside. Thats what makes it percussion.
A harpsichord, on the other hand, looks like a piano, but its notes are produced by strings being plucked, so its part of the stringed section.
Untuned instruments such as drums are made from a thin membrane thats been stretched over a hollow frame. Hitting the membrane with your hand or a stick, makes it vibrate and produces the sound.
Different shapes and different materials of drums make may different sounds.
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All instruments (and indeed all objects) have a natural frequency or set of frequencies at which they vibrate when struck, plucked, strummed or made to shake.
This is called Resonance.
When a flute is blown into, a single resonant frequency is produced (depending on which note is being played). This gives a very pure smooth sound. Other instruments especially percussion and brass - produce more complex sets of frequencies that make a less smooth sound.
If a singer produces a note at the same frequency as the resonant frequency of say a wine glass, they can set up vibrations in the glass itself. If they sing loud enough, they will produce larger vibrations and can shatter the glass!
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Timbre
If you play the same notes on different instruments they dont sound the same do they?
Each instrument produces a unique combination of frequencies, which give it its characteristic sound. This is called its timbre.
Notes are said to be in harmony when some of the harmonics of each note share a frequency.
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