Acoustics of the saxophone |
Bb soprano saxophone |
F4 |
Fingering Acoustic schematic Non-specialist introduction
to acoustic impedance Notes are the written pitch. |
At frequencies below about 1 kHz, this curve looks rather like that for D#4 and E4, but raised in frequency. At higher frequencies, however, the situation is complicated by the cut-off frequency. Here, the 1 kHz cutoff is also weakening the third peak. The first peak can be reduced in magnitude and shifted in frequency using a register hole (operated by the octave key): see F5.
For general comments about the first register, see A#3. Compare with the impedance spectrum for a tenor sax on written F4: same fingering but sounding one octave lower.
Sound spectrum
of a Bb soprano saxophone
played using fingering for F4.
For more explanation, see
Introduction to saxophone acoustics.
Contact:
Joe Wolfe
/ J.Wolfe@unsw.edu.au |