due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
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Because of the way they are stringed, for example the bass guitar, it sounds lower.
bullhorn
The lyre is more like a small harp, while the ukulele is more like a small guitar. The only similarity is they are both stringed instruments.
due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
due to stringed instruments having a a tall neck, the higher you pluck the strings on the neck, the more louder it will be!
pick ups and an amp
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Stringed instruments are limited in their volume by the way they're constructed. The only way, would be to use a microphone to pick-u the sound of the sitar - and play it through an amplifier.
almost all to do with the body. A ukulele is quieter than a guitar because it has less mass to vibrate, but material is also responsible.
amplifiers
a guitar is a stringed instrument that makes a sound
Tightening the string.
Because of the way they are stringed, for example the bass guitar, it sounds lower.
A higher amplitude or greater energy in sound waves makes pitch louder. The intensity or volume of the sound wave determines its loudness.
Stringed instruments produce sound by vibrating strings that are stretched between two points. When a musician plucks, strums, or bows the strings, they create vibrations that travel through the instrument's body and are amplified, producing sound. The pitch of the sound is determined by the length, tension, and thickness of the strings.