How is music produced in wind instruments?
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- Woodwind instruments manufacture sound once the player blows air against a pointy edge or through a skinny piece of wood known as a reed, inflicting a column of air to vibrate.
- The instrument itself doesn't vibrate.
- Wind musical instruments created musical sounds by the vibration of air columns within them.
- In a wind instrument, a column of air self-enclosed in an exceedingly picket tube on a metal tube vibrates and produces a musical sound.
- Air is blown across the reed connected to the mouthpiece of the instrument, vibratory the air down the tube of the instrument to supply sounds.
- Different notes are created by ever-changing the strain of the strings or the scale of the instrument box.
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Answer:
1. Wind musical instruments produced musical sounds by the vibration of air columns inside them.
2. The instrument itself does not vibrate.
3. In a wind musical instrument a column of air enclosed in a wooden tube on metal tube vibrates and produces musical sound.
4. Woodwind instruments produce sound when the player blows air against a sharp edge or through a thin piece of wood called reed, causing a column of air to vibrate.
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