A harpsichord produces a sound by plucking a string when a key is pressed down.
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.
Like the piano, the Harpsichord is a percussion instrument because the sound is produced by striking.
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.
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.
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.
A double manual harpsichord's lower keyboard can be shoved in so that both keyboards are playing at the same time, which can produce a louder sound, and if it has a buff stop, one keyboard will be playing with the buff stop while the other is not.