the bigger an instrument is, the lower the sound that it makes
the bigger an instrument is, the lower the sound that it makes
Yes, brass instruments produce a lower pitch than woodwind instruments. Woodwind instruments use a reed to vibrate the air to produce sound, whereas brass instruments produce sound from the player's lips vibrating in a mouthpiece.
Because the sound of an instrument is different but the actual pitch for the instruments are the same.
Brass instruments produce sound by the vibrating of the player's embouchure in a mouthpiece, and the valves and slides on the instrument alter the length of the tubing in the instrument which affects the pitch of the notes produced. The farther the air has to travel in the instrument the lower the pitch of the sound is, whereas the less distance the air has to travel the higher the pitch the instrument will produce.
the bigger an instrument is, the lower the sound that it makes
Brass instruments are different from all the other instruments in that the person playing is solely responsible for the sound of the instrument. Brass instruments require the player to buzz their lips in the mouthpiece. This sound reverberates throughout the instrument and produces the sound that comes out of it. This differs from other instruments, where the player makes part of the instrument vibrate (i.e. reed, string, drum head). The pitch of brass instruments is then changed by changing the frequency of the vibrations created by the lips. If you buzz your lips at a higher pitch, the instrument plays a higher note. The opposite is also true. Buzzing your lips at a lower pitch creates a lower note.
Instruments are in different keys because the length and size of the instrument affect the pitch it produces. Instruments in different keys are designed to play in specific ranges of notes that are most comfortable and sound best for that particular instrument.
Hudhud instrument is a head of butete... if you press downward it makes a sound.. a low tune sound (a low pitch sound) but if you press it upward it'll make a hudhud sound FHUCK IT!
Snare drums are not pitched instruments, and so the pitch of their sound cannot be measured, even though a smaller instrument will make a sound with higher pitches than a larger one.
This is a basic physics concept. The longer an instrument, the lower the frequency of the sound waves coming out of it, and therefore a lower pitch. The Oboe is a small, short instrument. The bassoon, on the other hand, is a large instrument. Because it is longer, you get a lower pitch. This principle applies for all instruments.
First of, everything depends on length. Basically, the longer the instrument the lower its initial sound will be because it takes your air longer to go from your mouth piece out through the bell
Brass instruments go flat when cold because the metal shrinks slightly when cold causing the pitch to go flat. It is similar to the effect of pushing in a tuning slide when the instrument's pitch is sharp (it shortens the length of the instrument).As the instrument warms, the metal expands, raising the pitch similar to pulling out the tuning slide.