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you make pitch by hitting 2 objecs on something to make a different kind of pitch.
Anything you hit makes a vibration. Vibration=Sound. I guess it depends how hard you hit the object (in this case metal) you will be able to hear the sound. But yes, they do make a high pitched sound when you hit them (some so high pitched you will never be able to hear them).
It depends actually. There are 3 possibilities here. 1) percussion because the hammers in a piano hit the strings to make the music 2) strings because the hammers hit the strings so it's not the hammers making the music but the strings 3) keyboard because now not all people can agree on percussion or strings so they gave it its own category. Also they have keyboards which don't have strings or hammers Personally though, I like calling it a percussing or a strussion. :)
in experience I'd say they just break when you try to put them in higher tunings, not sure about making the note higher. I bought a set of Yngwie Malmsteen signature strings the first time, stringed the guitar up , stretched the strings and so I clipped off the strings and the highest note the high E would go into was C. Shortening the string just makes it impossible to reach higher tunings as far as I know, almost smashed a 300$ guitar I owned .. but when that happened it was a long day of fixing guitars.
yes
An instrument with short strings will make a rubber band type sound but real high pitched.
Tightening the strings on a guitar will always make the pitch higher, more or less depending on how much they are tightened.
Violin strings are held on a violin with tuning pegs. The pegs are then turned until the strings reach the correction tension. The correct tension is when the strings are in tune. Adding more tension to a string by turning the pegs will increase the pitch and turning the pegs in the opposite direction will lower the pitch. The strings on a violin are tuned to the notes G D A E from lowest to highest.
because it has STRINGS and freats.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------String instruments have strings stretched over a box or board. The violin, guitar and banjo are string instruments. Sound is made by plucking the strings. (The piano is a percussion instrument because its strings are struck.)The pitch of these instruments depends on the length, thickness and tightness of the strings. The longer the string, the fewer the vibrations and, therefore, the lower the pitch.Tight, thin strings make sounds with high tones. Loose, thick strings make lower tones.
a high pitch
the different tautness helps make different sounds like a guitar. tighter strings = higher sound
well, the center stings are in the middle of the pitch. The ones above it (nearer your head as you play) are lower. The ones beow it are higher.
Hi! In a piano there are lots of strings. The keys that you press make hammers hit those strings, and the vibration makes sound. The strings are of different lengths, so they each vibrate more or less, making the sound higher and lower in pitch. Hope this helps.
No, slow vibrations make a low pitch. Fast vibrations make high pitches.
It depends if the violin is flat you tighten the pegs. I f it is too sharp then you loosen the pegs.
no, higher pitch.
the pitch of the string goes higher. if it doesn't, then either something's wrong with said guitar, or I'm wrong and you should go ask Albert Einstein or your guitar teacher or someone who's smart.