Saboteur! Saboteur!
I do not know.
Will continually questioning myself in this fashion result in identity confusion that will eventually lead to the formation of a split personality?
Perhaps but maybe my new personality will have some answers.
Today, is my birthday
Everyone celebrates except for me
Days pass, and go away
Am I the only one to see
I’m getting older by the day
Before I know it, my hair will go grey
But one thing will always be the same
Other then me being really lame
Age can’t stop who we are
or all the miles, we came so far
Age, is just a number in a book
A book, that someone already took
And all the pages, taken away
The only ones left say
We met, we loved, we live on
Past the front lawn
Past these simple lives
Today is my birthday
Everyone celebrates except for me
Days pass, and go away
But I’ll remember what you say
Past these simple lives
My birthdays today
I'd like to make a trumpet.
A trumpet is horn-like, in which a person has to blow, but not air, into the mouthpiece. In the not air part, I mean that it's more a buzzing through lips than just blowing air. It is one big horn, with many different tubes connecting three valves and eventually the mouthpiece.
I think maybe trumpets use hollowness to produce sounds. Maybe I could use this to my advantage in thinking of ways to make one.
All I can really say about waves is that they are formed from blowing into the trumpet. Maybe the way they change is by changing the loudness and the high/low notes.
The instrument that I am interested in making would be either a violin or a small classical guitar.
A violin is played by rubbing a bow across a set of different strings and then placing your fingers across different sections of the violins strings to create a higher or lower pitched sound. A guitar is played in a similar way, except there is no bow, only the strumming against the guitar's strings with either a fingernail or picker.
You can change a note in a guitar and violin by either plucking/strumming a different string or by placing your fingers on different portions of the string to create a different sound.
A violin is shaped like a pear, it has a curvy top but an even curvier bottom and in the middle lies the plane of strings. Guitars are sometimes shaped like violins with a pear-like shape as well, however instead of having a just a long strip of strings, some guitars have small holes in the center which is unlike a violin.
The shape of these instruments makes me think that the way they are held could possibly affect the way that sound is created and transferred. I know that in order to play a violin you have to hold it upright and parallel to an outstretched arm on a shoulder, yet with a guitar you can be more relaxed. A cello and violin are shaped very similarly, however they both produce different sounds and are held different ways, so that makes me wonder if the shape or the way the instrument is held can make a big difference.
The connections that I see is that when you strum a guitar and a note is played, it isnt continuous because the sound waves/vibrations eventually stop and this is very similar to the lab we did in class with the slinkys because when I would push one side, there would be a wave that would go to the other side and then stop.
I used to play the violin for about two or three years when I was in elementary school so I am somewhat familiar with the way it works and how to achieve different sounds, however, I have never played a guitar before.
Some helpful youtube videos:
Violin Basics -> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_04rjPbZarE
How to hold a violin --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5dFjpdCdbXs&feature=relmfu
Simple Guitar Basics -->
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2RaXQKL-xbQ
--How is it played? What does the person have to do to produce sound?
Most woodwind instruments are tubes. The sound comes from a vibrating column of air inside the tube. The player makes this column of air vibrate in one of several ways:
By blowing across an edge, as in the flute, recorder, whistle, and root beer bottle
By blowing between a reed and a fixed surface, as in the clarinet and saxophone
By blowing between two reeds, as in the oboe, bassoon, sarusaphone and bagpipes
--How do you change a note? (you might have to watch very carefully to see this)
Woodwind pitch depends on the volume of air that is vibrating. A larger volume vibrates more slowly, for lower pitch; a smaller volume vibrates more quickly, for a higher pitch. For most woodwinds, the player changes pitch by opening and closing holes along the instrument's length. Without keys, there can only be as many holes as the player has fingers to cover them with. Adding keys allows the number and complexity of holes to be increased. Increasing the blowing pressure past a certain critical point (called the "break") causes the air column to resonate at a higher harmonic (see the harmonics section, below) and raises the pitch of many woodwinds by a large interval. In most cases this interval is an octave (e.g. middle C to high C), but in the clarinet it is a 12th (e.g. middle C to the G above high C). With minor variations this is the way woodwinds achieve large ranges.
--How is it shaped?
At one time, most woodwinds were made of wood; hence the name. The easiest way to characterize them now is as wind instruments (that is, you blow into them) which aren't played by buzzing your lips together.
--What does this make you think about how you can create and change sound?
i think that if you put your fingers on different holes it will kinda make it fun trying to play different notes because it is so easy to play the recorder.
--What connections (if any) do you think you can draw between what you are observing and you might already know about waves?
its like a vibrating sound that really makes the music from your fingers to your mouth with you blowing the air into the instrument.
1. How is sound produced by this instrument (now that you know more about sound, please try to refer specifically to the energy transfer and vibrations)?
The air vibrates over then under the fipple by the Bernoulli principal causing a vibration in the tube of air inside the recorder. The pitch is regulated by covering holes which in turn lengthen and shorten the length of vibrating air.
2. Based on your understanding, how are you changing the pitch? What physical characteristics are important in this instrument?
The recorder is distinguished from its cousin, the transverse flute, by the whistle mouthpiece built into the instrument. This mouthpiece channels the air stream through a "windway" and against an "edge" where the tone is produced, doing automatically what a flute player must learn to do through coordination of the lip muscles. The windway is an air channel carved into the "block" (of wood or plastic) which closes off the top of the instrument's tube. This block is also called a "fipple." The "window" is the rectangular opening on the front of the instrument where the edge and the bottom opening of the windway can be seen. you can really chang the pitch by the way you play the notes.
3. What materials will you actually be using for your instrument and why? How will you play your instrument? What is your plan for constructing the instrument?
- White pipe pice 69.5cm long
- I will drill the holes in and also one at the top i might have to turn it around a bit because of materials and turn it into a flute. so there will be one big whole at the top like a flute has to it can be played.
- Exactly the same posture needed for good singing, either standing or sitting, is needed for good recorder playing. The back should be straight but relaxed, and the shoulders, arms, hands and fingers should all be relaxed. Tension anywhere in the body can result in poor breath support, poor tone quality, problems with intonation, or fingers that are stiff and unresponsive. The second basic element of recorder playing includes breathing and breath control. The breathing that produces a focused, unforced, non-vibrato vocal sound for children is the breathing that produces a focused, unforced, non-vibrato recorder sound. A student who can sing in tune and control the breath sufficiently to shape phrases can transfer those skills directly to the recorder.
4. What outstanding questions do you still have?
How many holes are in a Recorder?
There are 7 holes in a recorder, plus a thumb hole on the back, which makes 8!
When will we start building these instruments?
Monday!
--How is it played? What does the person have to do to produce sound?
Most woodwind instruments are tubes. The sound comes from a vibrating column of air inside the tube. The player makes this column of air vibrate in one of several ways:
By blowing across an edge, as in the flute, recorder, whistle, and root beer bottle
By blowing between a reed and a fixed surface, as in the clarinet and saxophone
By blowing between two reeds, as in the oboe, bassoon, sarusaphone and bagpipes
--How do you change a note? (you might have to watch very carefully to see this)
Woodwind pitch depends on the volume of air that is vibrating. A larger volume vibrates more slowly, for lower pitch; a smaller volume vibrates more quickly, for a higher pitch. For most woodwinds, the player changes pitch by opening and closing holes along the instrument's length. Without keys, there can only be as many holes as the player has fingers to cover them with. Adding keys allows the number and complexity of holes to be increased. Increasing the blowing pressure past a certain critical point (called the "break") causes the air column to resonate at a higher harmonic (see the harmonics section, below) and raises the pitch of many woodwinds by a large interval. In most cases this interval is an octave (e.g. middle C to high C), but in the clarinet it is a 12th (e.g. middle C to the G above high C). With minor variations this is the way woodwinds achieve large ranges.
--How is it shaped?
At one time, most woodwinds were made of wood; hence the name. The easiest way to characterize them now is as wind instruments (that is, you blow into them) which aren't played by buzzing your lips together.
--What does this make you think about how you can create and change sound?
i think that if you put your fingers on different holes it will kinda make it fun trying to play different notes because it is so easy to play the recorder.
--What connections (if any) do you think you can draw between what you are observing and you might already know about waves?
its like a vibrating sound that really makes the music from your fingers to your mouth with you blowing the air into the instrument.