Plan flute: Greece musical instrument
The plan flute also known as pan pipe is an old musical instrument based on the basic assumption of the closed tube, having about five or ...
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The plan flute also known as pan pipe
is an old musical instrument based on the basic assumption of the closed tube,
having about five or more pipes of the simultaneously increasing length. The
pan flute has long been known as a folk musical instrument and is considered by
many to be the first mouth organ. Pan flute as a name is given to this musical
instrument because of its association with the Greek god “Pan”. The pipes of
the flute are particularly made from bamboo tree or giant cane, although other
materials such as wood, plastic metal and ivory can also be used in the
production of this musical instrument.
source of picture: pan-flute.com
According to the Greek mythology, on
the story of Pan, another name given to this instrument is “syrinx” and the
plural is “syringes”. Other people call it mouth organ, Pandean pipe and the
Latin fistula panis.
The pan flute’s tube is closed at one
end at which the wave is redirected giving a note an active lower that that
produced by a non-closed pipe of equal length. In the traditional South
American style, by placing corn kernels on the bottom of the pipe, the pipe can
be given an appropriate pitch that will be suitable to the player. In the one
end-blown flute, sound is manufactured by the vibration of an air-stream
blowing across an open hole at the end of a resounding tube. The length of the
tube can go a long way in determining the frequency of the sound coming out of
the instrument.
The pan flute is played by blowing
horizontally across the open end against the sharp inner edge of the pipes.
Each pipe is tuned to a timbre called the basic frequency. When overblowing,
pitched musical instrument are often based on an approximate harmonic
oscillator such as a string or a column of air, which oscillates at numerous
frequencies simultaneously, near a 12th in the cylindrical tubes may
be produced. With a special technique of both sloping the pipes and the jaw
movement, this musical instrument can also be played, thus reducing the size of
the pipe’s opening and producing a change in the pitch. Although any advanced
player can play any scale in any key.
Gheorghe Zamfir, a Romanian musician
who toured extensively and recorded many albums of pan flute music in the 1970s
popularized the curved-style pan flute, also several other artists who began
recording at the same time with him.