The vibrating part of a recorder is the mouthpiece, specifically the labium, which is a thin edge that the air passes over when the player blows into the instrument. As air is directed against the labium, it causes the air column inside the recorder to vibrate, producing sound. This vibration is then shaped and modified by the length of the instrument and the opening of the tone holes.
No, it's a woodwind. You play it by blowing and vibrating the air.
A lyre is a stringed instrument, so the vibrating part is a string originally made from catgut.
skin is the vibrating object of tabla
The hole on the bottom part of the recorder.
A recorder works by using a mouthpiece to blow air into the instrument, which vibrates a reed or fipple. The vibrating air creates sound waves that travel through the recorder's body, producing music. The key components of a recorder include the mouthpiece, the body with finger holes, and the foot joint with keys for playing different notes.
recorder
Yes
The vocal folds.
Air column
part of ship
Mouthpeiece
There are strings that vibrate when they are hit by a hammer.