Sound production of musical instruments

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Excluding electronic tone synthesizers, which employ vacuum tubes or transistors to produce tones, musical instruments can be classified within three groups: (1) chordophones, or strings; (2) aerophones, or winds; and (3) idiophones and membranophones, nearly all of which are percussion instruments. Each category is further divisible into groups according to the way the vibrating medium is set into motion.

Chordophones

Three means of eliciting sounds determine three categories within the family of chordophones. They are bowing, plucking, and striking. Most common of the first category are the violin, viola, violoncello, and double bass of the orchestra, all of which use a horsehair bow for setting their strings into motion. Essentially a resonant box bearing strings of four different fundamental frequencies, members of this group have not changed appreciably in construction since the 17th century, except for the 20th-century advent of the electrified bass, which is in fact a close cousin of the amplified guitar.

Violins and the larger members of its group are sounded by plucking (pizzicato) on occasion, which provides a brittle tone of extremely brief duration. The harp is the best known orchestral instrument whose tone depends upon the noise components added by plucking. Other plucked instruments are the guitar, banjo, mandolin, ukelele, zither, lyre, lute, and the harpsichord. The latter differs from the piano in that its strings are actuated by the plucking action of a tiny plectrum.

The piano is most notable of the struck stringed instruments, employing a hammer mechanism linked with the keyboard for producing its wide range of sounds. Other instruments of this group are the clavichord and the dulcimer.

For all chordophones pitch is proportional to string tension and inversely proportional to length, thickness, and density. Since string length is the most readily altered of these factors, all chordophones provide a means for altering the resonating length of strings (as with the violin and guitar) or a set of many string lengths and masses (as with the piano and harp) for producing a variety of pitches.

shakuhachi (end-blown flute)
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Aerophones

This category covers everything from the piccolo to the pipe organ and is best understood by consistent reference to the nature of the air column employed in the various types of instruments, as well as the way this air column is set into motion.

Brass instruments consist of a long tube whose cross section is proportionately small. Coupled with a mouthpiece that, in response to vibrations of the performer’s lips, helps to create eddies of air pressure that set an enclosed air column into motion, these instruments produce a range of pitches corresponding to the overtone series. The bugle is a kind of brass instrument that is limited to only one overtone series, while the modern trumpet, cornet, French horn, trombone, tuba, flügelhorn, and various kinds of euphoniums utilize valves or a slide to lengthen the air column and thus provide up to seven different overtone series. Pitch on these instruments is primarily a function of tube length, the wavelength of the instrument’s fundamental pitch equal to twice the length of the tube, plus a so-called end correction that accommodates variations of bore. Timbre is a product of mouthpiece shape, bore (whether cylindrical or conical), and material, aside from the important role performed by the player himself in obtaining desired overtones.

Woodwinds prior to the 20th century were made for the most part of wood. In the 21st century the flutes and clarinets are classified in this group only because of this heritage, while the saxophones, always built of metal, share only the reed mouthpiece and similar fingering technique with the clarinet. All are nonetheless called woodwinds, and they consist of an air column set into motion by one of two means: (1) through high pressure eddies produced by the wind of the performer blown directly into the instrument (as with a recorder or whistle) or over it (as with the flute and piccolo), or (2) by means of a vibrating reed that is set into motion by air pressure from the performer. The clarinets and saxophones utilize a single reed fixed at one end, while the oboe, English horn, and bassoon use two thin reeds that are connected laterally and vibrate jointly. For all of these instruments, either keys or the fingers of the performer directly open holes, with the effect of shortening the enclosed air column of the instrument and thereby producing higher fundamental pitches. Through overblowing and various fingering procedures, the overtone series provides the wealth of pitches available on these instruments.

Free reed instruments utilize a single, freely vibrating reed, different in nature from that of a woodwind. The category includes the accordion, harmonica, and harmonium and their relatives. In these instruments the reed vibrates, causing periodic vibrations in the air; but the reed’s size, rather than the air enclosed by the instrument, determines the pitch.

Pipe organs are of the aerophone (wind) category, too, although their keyboard mechanism and literature link them closely with the piano and harpsichord. Like a grand synthesis of woodwinds and brasses, organs produce their tones by means of tuned air columns that are formed with pipes of varied length, cross section, and shape (called flue pipes) or by means of a vibrating brass reed actuated by forced air (called reed pipes). Flue pipes range in length from under an inch to 32 feet.

Idiophones and membranophones

Idiophones are instruments whose bodies vibrate to produce sound. The class contains most of the pitched percussion instruments. These include instruments made of wood or other organic material, such as xylophones. They also include pitched percussion instruments that are struck or plucked and are made of metal or other inorganic material (triangle, glockenspiel, vibraphone, celesta, tubular bell, gong, steel drum, cymbal, glass harmonica, etc.). Idiophones without pitch consist of such instruments as the percussion board, castanets, and rattles, all of which are made of wood or other organic material and are struck, scraped, rubbed, brushed, or shaken.

Membranophones produce sound by a vibrating membrane. The group consists most notably of the timpani, or kettledrums, which can be tuned by increasing or decreasing the tension of the membranes that form the heads of the enclosed cavities. Other membranophones consist of drums without fixed pitch, such as side drums, bongos, and various non-Western types of fixed and indefinite pitch. Tone quality and character are the result of the player’s skill in controlling intensity and overtone character of the sound.

William E. Thomson The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica