Firstly they are in the frequency range that the human ear can hear. Then they are generally pure sinusoidal vibrations to be pleasant to listen to, not scratchy jagged waveforms. Music itself has certain rules about combinations of frequencies to make chords, but that depends on the musical style being used.
Your perception. All sound is the result of a medium being compressed at different levels. Speakers can produce noise, static and music all with the same action.
Sound of the same frequency and the same amplitude may differ in sound color or timbre.
they differ because waves are sound waves and water waves are waves in the water.
In a musical sound, consonance would be an agreeable or pleasant sound, and dissonance would be an unpleasant one. Literally 'one that agrees with' (or not as the case may be.)
to make the sound louder
frequency
Your perception. All sound is the result of a medium being compressed at different levels. Speakers can produce noise, static and music all with the same action.
musical instruments differ in the part of the instrument that vibrates and in the way that the vibrations are made
did the sound produced by the objects differ
did the sound produced by the objects differ
Sounds differ by amplitude, frequency and number of frequencies contained in a sound.
The tambourine is a musical sound. It begins with the letter t.
A musical instrument makes sound and thats how it is related to sound.
The 2009 Best Sound Design of a Musical Tony went to Paul Arditti. He received the award for his sound design for Billy Elliot, the Musical.
These terms include:legatomarcatostaccatotenutoand a few other terms.
There is no musical note that is the sound of a flushing toilet. It's only a sound effect, it doesn't have any tone to it.
sound devices