Vocal tract resonances and the sound of the Australian didjeridu (yidaki). III. Determinants of playing quality.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Traditional didjeridus have a broad range of bore geometries with many details not immediately apparent to a player, and are therefore suitable for examining the relationship between perceived quality and physical properties. Seven experienced players assessed the overall playing quality of 38 didjeridus that spanned a wide range of quality, pitch, and geometry, as well as 11 plastic cylindrical pipes. The ranking of these instruments was correlated with detailed measurements of their acoustic input impedance spectra. Most significantly, the ranked quality of a didjeridu was found to be negatively correlated with the magnitude of its acoustic input impedance, particularly in the frequency range from 1 to 2 kHz. This is in accord with the fact that maxima in the impedance of the player's vocal tract can inhibit acoustic flow, and consequently sound production, once the magnitude of these impedance maxima becomes comparable with or greater than those of the instrument. This produces the varying spectral peaks or formants in the sound envelope that characterize this instrument. Thus an instrument with low impedance and relatively weak impedance maxima in this frequency range would allow players greater control of the formants in the output sound and thus lead to a higher perceived playing quality.
منابع مشابه
Vocal tract resonances and the sound of the Australian didjeridu (yidaki) I. experiment.
The didjeridu, or yidaki, is a simple tube about 1.5 m long, played with the lips, as in a tuba, but mostly producing just a tonal, rhythmic drone sound. The acoustic impedance spectra of performers' vocal tracts were measured while they played and compared with the radiated sound spectra. When the tongue is close to the hard palate, the vocal tract impedance has several maxima in the range 1-3...
متن کاملVocal tract resonances and the sound of the Australian didjeridu (yidaki) II. Theory.
The didjeridu (didgeridoo) or yidaki of the Australian Aboriginal people consists of the narrow trunk of a small Eucalypt tree that has been hollowed out by the action of termites, cut to a length of about 1.5 m, smoothed, and decorated. It is lip-blown like a trumpet and produces a simple drone in the frequency range 55 to 80 Hz. Interest arises from the fact that a skilled player can make a v...
متن کاملThe Didjeridu and the Vocal Tract
The Australian didjeridu is a deceptively simple instrument acoustically but, because it is closely coupled to the playerÕs vocal tract without an intervening mouthpiece, a skilled player can produce a wide variety of striking musical effects. Measurements and supporting theory elucidate the roles of passive instrument acoustics, lip motion, controllable vocal tract resonances, and active vocal...
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In wind instruments, reeds (including lip reeds) interact with the acoustic impedances of the instrument's bore, Zb and the player's vocal tract, Z t. The bore is usually narrow and has high Q resonances whose maxima in Z b are large and determine the playing regime to first order. The tract has resonances with lower Q which act on a small area of the reed. So how do the weak maxima in Zt affec...
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The different vowel sounds in normal speech are produced by adjusting the position of tongue, lips and teeth so that the vocal tract resonates at certain specific frequencies. In voiced speech, these resonances interact with the harmonics of the lower frequency signal from the vibrating vocal folds to produce associated peaks, or formants, in the output spectrum. Singers sometimes use these res...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
دوره 121 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2007