Pitch and Tone

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Binu Thomas

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Jan 13, 2014, 10:41:25 PM1/13/14
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Hi All,

I found the following description of pitch and tone helpful, so I thought to share with the group.


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Sound is produced by vibrating objects. These include musical instruments, loudspeakers, and, of course, human vocal cords. The mechanical vibrations of these objects move the air which is immediately adjacent to them, alternately “pushing” and “pulling” the air from its resting state. Each back-and-forth vibration produces a corresponding pressure increase (compression) and pressure decrease (rarefaction) in the air. A complete pressure change, or cycle, occurs when the air pressure goes from rest, to maximum, to minimum, and back to rest again. These cyclic pressure changes travel outward from the vibrating object, forming a pattern called a sound wave.

A sound wave is a series of pressure changes (cycles) moving through the air. A simple sound wave can be described by its frequency and by its amplitude. The frequency of a sound wave is the rate at which the pressure changes occur. It is measured in Hertz (Hz), where 1 Hz is equal to 1 cycle-per second.

The range of frequencies audible to the human ear extends from a low of about 20 Hz to a high of about 20,000 Hz. In practice, a sound source such as a voice usually produces many frequencies simultaneously. In any such complex sound, the lowest frequency is called the fundamental and is responsible for the pitch of the sound. The higher frequencies are called harmonics and are responsible for the timbre or tone of the sound. Harmonics allow us to distinguish one source from another, such as a piano from a guitar, even when they are playing the same fundamental note.

Regards,
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Binu Thomas
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