Musical Instruments
Musical Instruments
Musical Instruments
~Membranophone~
A membranophone is any musical instrument which produces
sound primarily by way of a vibrating stretched membrane. It is
one of the four main divisions of instruments in the original
Hornbostel-Sachs scheme of musical instrument classification.
Most membranophones are drums.
Hornbostel-Sachs divides drums into three main types: struck
drums, where the skin is hit with a stick, the hand, or
something else; string drums, where a knotted string attached
to the skin is pulled, passing its vibrations onto the skin; and
friction drums, where some sort of rubbing motion causes the
skin to vibrate (a common type has a stick passing through a
hole in the skin which is pulled back and forth).
Drum
A percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder or
hemisphere with a membrane stretched tightly over one
or both ends, played by beating with the hands or sticks.
Mirliton
A pseudomusical instrument or device in which sound
waves produced by the players voice or by an instrument
vibrate a membrane, thereby imparting a buzzing quality
to the vocal or instrumental sound. A common mirliton is
the kazoo, in which the membrane is set in the wall of a
short tube into which the player vocalizes. Tissue paper
and a comb constitute a homemade mirliton.
Mirlitons are also set in the walls of some flutes
(e.g., the Chinese ti) and xylophone resonators to colour
the tone.
Kazoo
The kazoo is a musical instrument that adds a "buzzing"
timbral quality to a player's voice when the player
vocalizes into it. The kazoo is a type of mirliton, which is a
membranophone..
A kazoo player hums, rather than blows, into the
instrument. The oscillating air pressure of the hum makes
the kazoo's membrane vibrate. The resulting sound varies
in pitch and loudness with the player's humming. Players
can produce different sounds by singing specific syllables
such as doo, who, rrrrr or brrrr into the kazoo.
Friction Drum
A friction drum is a percussion instrument consisting
of a single membrane stretched over a sound box,
whose sound is produced by the player causing the
membrane to vibrate by friction. The sound box may
be a pot or jug or some open-ended hollow object. To
~Idiophone~
Kouxian
A kouxian is a general Chinese term for any variety of jaw
harp. The jaw harp is a plucked idiophone in which the
lamella is mounted in a small frame, and the player's open
mouth serves as a resonance chamber.
Chinese jaw harps may comprise multiple idiophones that
are lashed together at one end and spread in a fan
formation. They may be made from bamboo or a metal
alloy, such as brass. Modern kouxian with three or more
idiophones might be tuned to the first few tones of the
minor pentatonic scale.
Bell Plates
A bell plate is a percussion instrument consisting of a flat
and fairly thick sheet of metal, producing a sound similar to
a bell.
Bell plates come in many shapes and are made from many
different metals. Some are used as unpitched percussion
and others
tuned for use as pitched percussion
Most bell plates are suspended by cords passed through
two holes in the plate. An exception is the Burma Bell, a
Claves
Claves (Anglicized pronunciation: clah-vays, IPA:
[klves]) are a percussion instrument (idiophone),