Perry Winkle • Jul 11, 2011 12:11 am
This is awesome:
[YOUTUBE]YnkjCTpeza4[/YOUTUBE]
[YOUTUBE]YnkjCTpeza4[/YOUTUBE]
Sundae;744223 wrote:Maybe it's my ear, but I couldn't discern much of a diff in words.
Too foreign for my ear, I guess.
That's a man who would keep you warm at night though.
Perry Winkle;744197 wrote:I can't really imagine it integrating very well with a bunch of other instruments. I guess that's why I'm not a musician or composer.
I've got a ~130ish Hay Budden anvil showing up sometime today, so I'm going to give this a try.
Griff;744292 wrote:Is that a pretty big anvil in the world o' metal working?
I don't perceive much of "notes" here either. I would imagine you would need multiple anvils tuned to different relative pitches--relative because most percussion idophones (such as drumset cymbals) do not have a true pitch, but a sort of general swell in the harmonics which the ear hears in a general scale in relation to other idiophones. The anvil does appear to sound different "notes" when struck in different places (such as a ride cymbal's "bell" sound), but the dominant overtones really wash out most of these differences. They might be more apparent if the anvil were "choked" between notes, but I imagine it's not as easy as stopping a few pounds of b20 bronze from vibrating.jimhelm;744192 wrote:maybe it's my ear, but I couldn't discern much of a diff in tones. too high for my ear, I guess.