Short of building a recording studio-like room, there is not much you can do to stop bass frequencies from coming through a wall, as the low-end vibrations are particularly hard to silence. An extra layer of drywall hung on special sound isolation channel might help, but then there are the windows and the floor to deal with, and by the time they are dealt with the whole sound-proofing project can become very expensive. It may be better to go over to the neighbor's house and simply ask them to turn down the volume. Of course, another option is to turn up the volume on your stereo, but that would not be neither polite nor neighborly.
Bass
See: How_a_drum_makes_noise
It makes a big BOOM.
Both pink and white noise sound like static; pink noise sounds like white noise with the bass turned up a bit.
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Either at a bass reunion party or through a bass dating service.
You can play bass through it, but that little 8 in. speaker isn't made for bass. You'll get a lot of midrange and treble harmonics from your sound, but not so much bass.
No
Yes
The low frequencies of the bass destroy a guitar amp , so use a bass amp.
A bass bomb is an extremely low bass note which, played through a subwoofer, produces a tone which shakes the speaker.
you can- they work and produce a noise. However, i would advise against it. They just sound WRONG and produce a horrible tone