Overblowing

Overblowing is producing a different note in a wind instrument by forcing air harder. This can be a deliberate technique to get additional notes, or an inadvertent problem which results in notes other than those intended. In simple instruments, overblowing can cause a change into a different register. For example, in the Irish tin whistle, the player can play in the upper octave by using the same fingering as in the lower octave, but blowing harder. In most more developed instruments, this transition from lower to higher registers is aided by a "register hole" which encourages a vibration node at a particular point in the pipe, causing the vibration pattern to change, so overblowing is not so important.

Overblowing with bagpipes

Overblowing is a problem that arises when playing the bagpipes. A phenomenon perhaps unique to piping, it is the most common reason for unsteady tone. When a piper plays, a rhythm is set up between blowing into the blowstick and squeezing the bag. Often, a piper will oversqueeze the bag while still exhaling, causing the pipe to vary its tone. This problem can be fixed in a number of ways:
  1. Using a slightly harder reed, or modifying the existing one to take more air.
#Practicing with a manometer to increase steadiness.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
fred h. hale, sr.
separation barrier
worshipful company of vintners
saint tite, quebec
worshipful company of dyers
our lady of knock
try this
tie in novel
conservative grace brethren churches, international
american locomotive company
wolf prize
ham (disambiguation)
epistasis
curtin university of technology
rhodochrosite
muresk
wladislaus ii the exile of poland
cassin's finch
worshipful company of bakers
premier of quebec
congress system
argentine tango
midwest connection
adorunta
variation of the field
congressional research service
right to die
john f. reynolds
isoelectronic
primero
worshipful company of barbers
list of similarities between canada and new zealand
primo visto
the persistence of memory
bank of the united states
coffeehouse
something wicked this way comes
optical computer
ausbausprache
edward ord
abstandsprache
henry winter david
master and commander: the far side of the world
kansai gaidai university