A church organ
The flute can produce multiple octaves by changing the way air is blown into the instrument and by using different fingerings to change the length of the vibrating air column. This allows the player to produce higher or lower pitches across different octaves.
The harmonica is regarded as a wind instrument and free reed instrument. Free reed instruments produce sound as air flows past a vibrating reed, and other examples include pitch pipes and accordions.
Idiophones produce sound by vibrating themselves when struck, shaken, or scraped. They are unique because they do not require strings, membranes, or columns of air to produce sound like other instruments do. Instead, idiophones create sound directly from their own material.
A synonym for "manual" in the context of a musical instrument is "keyboard." This term typically refers to the set of keys that a musician interacts with to produce sound, particularly in instruments like pianos and organs.
The instrument you blow into to produce sound is called a "wind instrument."
An Aerophone does so primarily by causing a body of air to vibrate, without the use of strings or membranes, and without the vibration of the instrument itself adding considerably to the sound.
Sting instruments. Unless you're talking about a piano type instrument with vibrating strings.
The keys on a keyboard produce sound when pressed, as they activate mechanisms that create vibrations in the instrument's strings or produce electronic tones through a sound module.
The Clavenet is a keyboard instrument which is an electro mechanical instrument. This means that it requires amplification to produce sound at an acceptable level.
The frequency at which the instrument's sound making parts are vibrating. A guitar string vibrating at 440 times a second will produce a perfectly tuned A note.
There are several families of instrument: Chordophones, where the sound is generated by a vibrating string eg. a violin, piano or guitar. Membranophones, where the sound is generated by a vibrating skin eg. a drum. Aerophones, where an oscillating air column is used to produce a tone eg. a Flute or organ. Idiophones, where the actual body of the instrument provides the tone eg. a xylophone or castanets. Electrophones, where electric circuits male or amplify a tone eg. an electronic keyboard or theremin.
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Yes, a Flugelhorn is a brass instrument because it uses a mouthpiece and the player's vibrating lips to produce sound. The flugelhorn resembles a trumpet but has a wider, conical bore.
By vibrating
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.
The main vibrating part of a sitar is the strings. When plucked or strummed, the strings produce sound that resonates throughout the instrument and is amplified by the gourd resonator.
The recorder produces a lower pitch when holes are covered because covering holes shortens the effective length of the vibrating air column inside the instrument. When holes are covered, the air column becomes shorter, resulting in lower frequencies and, consequently, lower pitches. This principle is based on the relationship between the length of the air column and the pitch produced, as longer columns produce lower sounds and shorter columns produce higher sounds.