K
KingstonRock
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The other day my math teacher, in introducing trigonometry, started talking about sine waves in music. He was saying how different instruments sound different because the sine waves they create are each distorted in a different way (as in mishaped). But I *know* thats not true, because last year I did a research report on sine waves in music and read all about how the the lowest string on a guitar when hit is not only an E, but all of its other 31 audible harmonics. Later, I realized maybe he wasnt wrong because I've zoomed in on a track in sonar, and individual instruments are only represented as one wave, though they originally resonated at many frequencies. If you zoom in enough, I understand you can see evidence of the sampling rate in the steps of the wave, but it still doesnt look like it was a true sign wave, even before a/d conversion.
Here's where the real confusion begins. If you have 10 different guitars, you can play 10 different E's, but they certaintly won't sound the same. If we were to assume that the wood of the guitar, its shape, weight and overall design influenced the expression of those 31 audible harmonics to change the sound from guitar to guitar, than how are those 32 sin waves summed in a recording? It kind of makes sense that a natural summing would occur as the overall effect of all the waves would cause a single osscilating electrical signal within the electronics, as they interacted with the pickups; this would also make sense as it probably occurs at the vibrating membrane of a microphone. This also brings up another question, I've heard a good distortion musically excites the upper harmonics, how is this? It makes sense that it might naturally limit the more predominant lower harmonics, therefore bringing out the upper ones, but an electrical signal is only one wave, its no longer those 32 different notes.
There is a lot of stuff up there, but I guess it really comes down to, How are multiple frequencies respresented in a single wave?
Also, now i see why bouncing to tracks digitally isn't preferrable, because the transistion from maybe 16 different waves to 2 has to be done by math, which always seems to mean rounding , and therefore innacuracies.
I actually have some more questions, but I'll probably be able to answer them myself if I understand this first.
Eric
Here's where the real confusion begins. If you have 10 different guitars, you can play 10 different E's, but they certaintly won't sound the same. If we were to assume that the wood of the guitar, its shape, weight and overall design influenced the expression of those 31 audible harmonics to change the sound from guitar to guitar, than how are those 32 sin waves summed in a recording? It kind of makes sense that a natural summing would occur as the overall effect of all the waves would cause a single osscilating electrical signal within the electronics, as they interacted with the pickups; this would also make sense as it probably occurs at the vibrating membrane of a microphone. This also brings up another question, I've heard a good distortion musically excites the upper harmonics, how is this? It makes sense that it might naturally limit the more predominant lower harmonics, therefore bringing out the upper ones, but an electrical signal is only one wave, its no longer those 32 different notes.
There is a lot of stuff up there, but I guess it really comes down to, How are multiple frequencies respresented in a single wave?
Also, now i see why bouncing to tracks digitally isn't preferrable, because the transistion from maybe 16 different waves to 2 has to be done by math, which always seems to mean rounding , and therefore innacuracies.
I actually have some more questions, but I'll probably be able to answer them myself if I understand this first.
Eric