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Re: OT: Chinese zither

From:Peter Bleackley <peter.bleackley@...>
Date:Friday, September 19, 2003, 8:31
Staving Isidora Zamora:
>At 10:13 AM 9/18/03 +0100, you wrote: >>Staving Isidora Zamora: >> >>>>End blown, side blown, with or without a block? >>> >>>What's a block? Side blown. >> >>A block is found in the English flute, or recorder. It seals one end of the >>tube, apart from a narrow channel through which the air is blown. Just >>after the block is the edge which generates the vibration. IIRC, the German >>for recorder is Blockflöte. > >No, no block flutes, as far as I know. Those are more difficult to make, >due to having to get that sharp lip in exactly the right place. I suppose >that they could make a block flute; they are good at decorative >woodcarving, so they have the precision necessary to get the edge in the >right place, and they have the animal-based glue neccessary to keep the >block in place. How do you hollow out a block flute made of wood? I've >seen it done on TV with Colonial-era drills to make a recorder, but I'm not >certain what sort of drills the Cwendaso have. The Trehelish (and >Nidirino), OTOH, do have a lot of hand-tool up to about Western 18th >century standards. (Though there are other things that Westerners had in >the 18th century, such as eyeglasses and telescopes, that they don't >have.) An idea that I just had was a large wooden blockflute with heavy >relief-carving over the entire (exterior) surface of it. (If it's >Cwendaso, they would almost certainly paint the relief carvings.) That >would be a neat-looking instrument. But I wonder how the carving would >affect the tone of the instrument?
Exterior carving should have little effect. I have a South American transverse flute, made of wood, with carving on the exterior. Mind you, that one's really difficult to get a note out of. Two friends of mine went round a market in South America searching for an instrument that would match my musical abilities. As for drilling a recorder, one thing to keep in mind is that it has a tapering bore (narrowest at the far end). This does affect the tone - I think it strengthens the second harmonic or something.
>What I'll probably do is go over my options for musical instruments and >then assign one to several instruments from each class to each of my three >concultures. (There are other cultures beyond them, but they don't figure >into the story, so are not currently being developed.) The playing or >singing of music is an important part of the story at many points, so I do >need to fully develop the ideas for musical instruments. > >> >>Here's an idea for you. Get an Aurochs horn, hollow it out, make a >>mouthpiece at the narrow end, and add finger holes in various places. You >>now have a form of serpent. > >Serpent? Is that some sort of horn? Any idea what the mouthpiece would be >made of? I would think that you could make a pretty impressive instrument >out of an aurochs horn (of course, the things have been extinct for several >centuries, but that doesn't stop me from having them in my little conworld.) >
http://www.serpentwebsite.com/ Pete