Sound on the harp is produced by plucking the strings. The finger plucks the string, setting it into vibration. This wave of vibration travels down the string to the wooden soundboard where it is amplified (or made louder). On Irish harps the fingernails are used to pluck. On large "pedal" harps or "concert" harps, the pad of the finger is usually used. However, there are examples of using nearly everything; from the knuckles and palms to wooden and metal tuning keys.
Like any string instrument is able to be, the harp is plucked or strummed to produce sound.
The simplist way to put this is:
The strings virbrate on a sound board of the Harp
Mikayla!
If you mean an upright harp, the notes are produced by plucking each string.
a little bowl of water has virbrations from the water which feeeds into to speakers producing sound
Sound on the harp is produced by plucking the strings.
Like the piano, the Harpsichord is a percussion instrument because the sound is produced by striking.
A harpsichord produces a sound by plucking a string when a key is pressed down.
That would be a harpsichord.In a harpsichord, the keys are attached to quills that pluck the strings/wires rather than hammers which strike the strings/wires.
1. The way it generates sound - the harpsichord plucks the string while the piano hammers it; 2. The sound - the harpsichord has a more metalic sound, a cross between guitar and harp, while the piano has a more refined soft-edged sound; There are also no louds or softs in harpsichord. The notes have always the same volume; the sound on a hapsichord also fades away faster; 3. The existence of pedals - the harpsichord has no pedals; 4. Appearance - pianos are generally paint black, or wooden, while the haprsichords usually have various paintings.
False
Like the piano, the Harpsichord is a percussion instrument because the sound is produced by striking.
A harpsichord produces a sound by plucking a string when a key is pressed down.
That would be a harpsichord.In a harpsichord, the keys are attached to quills that pluck the strings/wires rather than hammers which strike the strings/wires.
its homo
1. The way it generates sound - the harpsichord plucks the string while the piano hammers it; 2. The sound - the harpsichord has a more metalic sound, a cross between guitar and harp, while the piano has a more refined soft-edged sound; There are also no louds or softs in harpsichord. The notes have always the same volume; the sound on a hapsichord also fades away faster; 3. The existence of pedals - the harpsichord has no pedals; 4. Appearance - pianos are generally paint black, or wooden, while the haprsichords usually have various paintings.
A harpsichord produces sound by plucking a string when a key is pressed. On a grand piano, the sound is made by striking the strings with a felt covered wooden hammer.
What vibrates in a harpsichord are the strings when plucked by their corresponding metal pin, and the air inside the air chamber, which is there to amplify the volume of the sound.
False
A member of her family was going to die.
A harpsichord was the keyboard instrument before piano fortes, the modern piano. Unlike a piano, where hammars hit the strings, a harpsichord's strings were plucked by quills, or "jacks." Harpsichords were used by Bach and other composers of that time period.
Clavichord is the oldest and quietest keyboard instrument. Harpsichord was very popular in Renaissance and Baroque period. Sound is produced by plucking string when a key is pressed. Other similar but smaller instruments were virginal, muselar and spinet.
I would say yes because the keys play the same notes except that on a harpsichord there are fewer strings. It would sound different but yes it would be OK.