OT: Change in timbre 2010-04-12 07:08 am Long ago Bill wrote:QuoteAs to the harp - the timbre certainly doesn't change very much. But I do notice that the sound is purer when plucked in the center - near the center node, where you normally make artificial harmonics (to get back to the original topic) - than it is when plucked near either the bridge or the soundboard. Plucking near the ends of the string produces a dulling of the sound, which I have always attributed to a greater excitation of the higher harmonics and a corresponding drop in intensity of the fundamental, though I could be wrong. This is true, anyway, of the Celtic harp.At the time I wrote I didn't get a big change in the timbre.I just bought a new celtic harp.Beside now having to pass most of the time retuning it (both the frame and the gut strings are brand new!), I discovered it has a much more evident change in timbre if plucked P.D.L.T. (prés de la table) than my previous harp.Even the "regular" timbre is quite different from the one I had before.Not all instruments are made equal! Quote Selected
Re: OT: Change in timbre Reply #1 – 2010-04-17 03:03 am Quote from: Flurmy – 2010-04-12 07:08 amNot all instruments are made equal!That certainly is true. Even different harps from the same maker. They are, after all, largely a hand-made instrument. I have a very beautiful Dusty Strings harp that I seldom get a chance to play any more. I have a friend who bought the same make and model but found the sound was much duller than mine. After a few months she traded it in on a different Dusty Strings model, and it sounds better than mine. Maybe it's because I'm not practicing....but I think it is differences in the wood grain, especially in the soundboard but perhaps also in the post.Bill Quote Selected
Re: OT: Change in timbre Reply #2 – 2010-04-19 07:14 am Dusty Strings? You play it very rarely indeed! :-) Quote Selected
Re: OT: Change in timbre Reply #3 – 2010-04-20 04:29 am Yeah, well....it was a Dusty Strings when I did play it a lot. (Used to be in a Celtic band.) Anyway....Dusty Strings is a harp and hammered dulcimer maker in Seattle. Their website is here. The instrument is gorgeous. Kinda outshone my playing.Bill Quote Selected