Stringed instrument tunings Essays

  • Stranger in a Strange Land

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    The dark, black sky was covered with a million bright shining stars. The moon shimmered above a small town in the suburbs of London. The gentle wind swept past the bare trees and danced with the leaves below it, creating a colourful array of orange, yellow, red and brown. Across the street, a light was on in a small house where a tall, dark haired woman stood, talking to her two children Nicola and Erin. While she was tucking them in Erin asked, “Mummy, will you tell us a story please?”

  • My Experience with Music

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    My Experience with Music At the age of ten, my parents decided that I should learn how to play an instrument. In addition, they also chose which instrument I should learn, the guitar. I had no interest in learning the guitar, because all I wanted to spend my leisure time on was improvising my soccer skills. However, my parents believed soccer was a waste of my precious time, time which I should be using to focus on school and expanding my brain by taking on a difficult task, such as learning to

  • History of the Stringed Instrument

    1772 Words  | 4 Pages

    History of the Stringed Instrument Stringed instruments of one type or another are employed in musical activities worldwide. Despite some differences, they share many similarities in their mode of construction and manner of performance. The stringed instrument has a structural and playing adaptability that lends itself well to the rendition of the music of diverse cultures. The Harp Family of Instruments The harp is a stringed instrument in which the strings are plucked with the fingers

  • The History of the Guitar

    1906 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Guitar is a stringed musical instrument with six or twelve strings that is played by either plucking or strumming the strings. It is one of the most popular instruments in the world. If an individual were asked to identify a guitar most people would answer the question correctly more so than they would if they were asked about another instrument. When people think about famous guitarists, they more than likely think of famous rock and roll guitarists and do not think about the many other famous

  • Traditional Russian Folk Instruments

    1517 Words  | 4 Pages

    Traditional Russian Folk Instruments There are many instruments found in the Russian culture that we as Americans know nothing about. I know that before I wrote this paper I didn't even know some of the names that I came across. There are many different groups of instruments, not just in Russian culture, but in all cultures. There are the woodwinds, the brass, the percussive instruments and the stringed instruments. We are going to focus on the last, the stringed instruments, more specifically

  • Guitar Importance

    1875 Words  | 4 Pages

    Negri Final Research Essay The History of Guitar and Its Significance to Music December 1, 2017. The History of Guitar and Its Significance to Music The Guitar, a plucked stringed musical instrument originated in Spain early in the 16th century. It was derived from the guitarra latina, a late-medieval instrument with a waisted body and four strings. The guitar was first seen in the 1800-1900 B.C. The early guitar was identical to the vihuela played in Spain in place of the lute. The guitar

  • Physics of the Acoustic Guitar

    1810 Words  | 4 Pages

    Stringed instruments are most likely the oldest type of musical instruments. The acoustic guitar has been around since the 1500's, and is the most common stringed instrument used today. The guitar is one of the most versatile instruments in existence, being used in virtually every style of music. It can produce a wide range of sounds depending upon the style of the guitar and the type of strings used on it. The two main styles of acoustic guitars are the nylon-stringed and the steel-stringed. Nylon-stringed

  • Bajo Sexto Essay

    1791 Words  | 4 Pages

    The bajo sexto is a unique Mexican stringed instrument. The name bajo sexto translates to English as “sixth bass”. It is a combination of both a bass guitar and a regular guitar. No one really knows the origins of the instrument. It was in the 1800’s when the instrument first appeared, but has gained popularity since then. It is also to have been said it could be the ancestor to both the bass guitar and the twelve string guitar. Since it plays both bass and guitar it is used for folk music. It is

  • Physics of Music

    866 Words  | 2 Pages

    not purely a form of art. There is a great deal of science that goes behind the production of beautiful musical sounds. In order to understand how music is possible, one must have an understanding of physics. Physics allows us to create musical instruments with different tone qualities and the ability to be played in a certain way to produce a specific pitch or note. Music is sound, and sound is vibrations or waves that are at the right frequency to be perceived by the human ear. Audible vibrations

  • Pre-1600 Styles in European Art Music

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    favored. 5. The instrumentarium is restricted and standardized. On the other hand, the pre-1600 styles in European art music are based upon the following features: 1. Narrow-ranging, dynamically restrained modal melodies are played in a variety of tuning temperaments that generate an "illogical" modal harmonic succession. 2. An unrestricted range of multimeters, polymeters, and complex rhythms are used. 3. A texture of two or more independent and equally important melodies accompany one another (i

  • The Evolution of the Modern Guitar

    1581 Words  | 4 Pages

    acknowledged as one of the most influential and renown instruments in the world. The guitar recognized today has been around for hundreds of years and it is still leaving a legacy in the musical world. Some early iterations of the guitar dating back as far as 1400 BC have evolved into what is known as the modern guitar through design innovation. Before the use of synthetic materials in the development of guitars, a guitar was defined as being an instrument having “a long, fretted neck, flat wooden soundboard

  • Guitar Physics

    1520 Words  | 4 Pages

    within human culture. Of all instruments that contribute, the guitar is one of the most complex and most widely used across all genres of music. There are records that suggest that the guitar has even been played since the time of the Babylonians (Findlay 3). With that said, the guitar is also one of the most elaborate instruments to build, with the most factors and variables involved in construction. The most important variable is the materials chosen to create the instrument. Contrary to popular belief

  • Personal Narrative: Playing Guitar

    742 Words  | 2 Pages

    guitar. From the time I was a mere child. My grandpa bought me a toy guitar with a white palomino horse on it - I believe there's a picture of it on my website. I asked him "how do I play it" and he mimiced the sound of a "tres" a doubled-three-stringed guitar that is used in traditional Cuban music. I couldn't figure it out but I tired. Years and years later, I decided I'd learn guitar. Fell in love with a guy in college, or so I thought I was in love; what I "loved" was that he played guitar

  • Biography of Composer John Dowland

    809 Words  | 2 Pages

    evolution in lute playing. It had been played in an ensemble setting with a plectrum, a tool used to pluck or strum a stringed instrument. This technique limited the player to single line melodies. The technique evolved into strings being plucked with the player’s fingers, thus, making it possible for the lutenist to play intricate polyphony and turning the lute into a solo instrument playing two, three or even four lines of music at once. Out of this development the lute was transformed into a self-contain

  • The Acoustic Guitar: The Physics Of Music In Music

    1772 Words  | 4 Pages

    The acoustic guitar is the the most played instrument in the music world. Though, the guitar looks like a simple instrument to play there are a lot of physics regarding sound behind the creation of it, from the strings to the air inside, the anatomy, and the sound spectrum. Acoustic guitars are subtle and melodious but what makes it sound irresistibly good are the physics behind the instrument itself. Physics plays a huge part in acoustic guitars in many ways, including the structure of the guitar

  • Music of China & Indonesia

    2277 Words  | 5 Pages

    two, one suitable for a rigorous and rhythmic loud-playing style and one for a more subtle and refined soft-playing style. Conclusion Both the big countries, China and Indonesia, have rich musical heritage. They play different complex musical instruments. The soft kind of music is common between both the countries. References China Seeks Managers' Advice.; By: KOVSKAYA, MAYA., Billboard, 11/18/2000, Vol. 112 Issue 47, p10, 1/3p Music.; By: I.C.., Mother Jones, Sep/Oct98, Vol. 23 Issue 5, p84,

  • The Physics of Acoustic Guitar

    823 Words  | 2 Pages

    universe involves some type of physics. Even the universe itself does, but have you ever wondered about the physics of simpler items? Physics is vital for all musical instruments, if it wasn’t; they probably wouldn’t produce the beautiful sounds that they do. One of these instruments is acoustic guitar. By looking at the instrument, it doesn’t look very complicated, but if you delve deeper into its composition, you’ll find that it’s very complicated. Physics takes part in the making of acoustic guitars

  • BOOK 1: THE PIANO HANDBOOK In this book McCombie explains how Bartolomeo Cristofori changed a Harpsichord in to a piano

    1350 Words  | 3 Pages

    lot of illustrations to describe the mechanisms within a Harpsichord and a piano. In the next chapter talks about buying a piano. He suggests that the majority of music teachers have little or no experience in judging pianos. McCombie says that a tuning technician is the best-equipped person to talk to about buying a piano. He also recommends that buying by name is no longer a good idea as some well known makers have been taken over by other manufacturers. I think that this is articulately

  • How A Harp Makes Sounds

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    which causes the air particles surrounding the object to vibrate- they... ... middle of paper ... ...dals (such as the orchestra harp- has 7 pedals) to alter the pitch. The pedals control other mechanisms inside the neck of the harp and make the tuning discs rotate- tightening the strings and hence produces a higher pitch- these pedals provide the harp with a range of alterable pitches. The smaller sized harps have sharping levers to tighten the strings a half step tighter. Amplification for the

  • The Growth Of Portuguese Music

    1823 Words  | 4 Pages

    music, there are a wide variety of instruments. Some of the most common include bagpipes, harmonicas, accordions, flutes, drums (adufes, bombos, caixas, pandeiros, sarroncas), and numerous percussion instruments (ferrinhos, genebres, reco-reco, trancanholas). However, Portugal is most well-known for its string instruments: violins, twelve-stringed "Portuguese guitar", and six variations of "viola-guitars" unkown to other European countries. Design, character, and tuning are unique to each one of the viola-guitars