@@EchoBuildsThings The thinnest piano string you can find is basically the same as the thinnest guitar string (0.2mm or 0.008"). It's just a steel wire, after all
Metal suppliers will sell big rolls of spring steel wire in any gauge. And it's cheap. Sometimes it's called "music wire" because it's the same alloy they use for piano strings, and maybe also guitar.
@@prentrodgersthat's so sick. Apocryphal story from my engineering school. One time some students got into the maintenance tunnels. The campus is all hills so the buildings are anchored to uphill foundations with giant cables. They found the resonant mode of these cables and hit them with a sledgehammer in time. The geology department thought it was an earthquake!
Weights on a strings (where you tie them) completely mess up overtones but make crazy sounds) Piano string or double bass string would produce clean overtones being long enough, or just look for spring steel wire as already suggested in the comments. As a suggestion for more interesting sounds and a lot more overtones try using sitar-stile bridge (like piece of a metal tube with big diameter).
Bart Hopkin has a couple great videos about adding weights to strings to give them bell-like harmonics. Like you said, the guitar string loops were the reason for the messy overtones. I wonder what that first string would sound like with a bandpass filter, wah pedal, or other effects!
That was absolutely what my soul needed. Such an awesome feel to the sound that one has, what a cool build!!! Have ye experimented with winding your own strings ever? I’ve done a little experimenting with just a drill and swivels, and I plan to try more, but that’d be one way to handle an application like that. It’d take some serious work and patience for one of that size though!
Sounds like the dan bao effect gets stronger with more length from a slight vibrato in your last video to a serious wobble. The steel stick needs to get thicker as the forces of the string get bigger, or other ways of controlling the wobble. If you touch the string just slightly, and then pluck with the other hand, two notes are created? Never thought of this! Cool!
For strings I would contact newtone strings in the uk, they offer custom made strings and the prices are very reasonable, I've been using thier acoustic strings for about 15 years and they are very high quality. I'd expect they could help.
Some of these sounds near the end remind me of the Blaster Beam, though that was made with long tight springs instead of a wire. I bet you’d be able to build your own blaster beam pretty easily with all this experience! If you wanted to, of course.
I saw a band called Sleepytime Gorilla Museum that had a bass type thing like this back in the mid 2000's. I think they called it a 9 foot slide bass. Kinda a evil vaudeville vibe. They made a lot of their own instruments.
I was definitely reminded of increasing the coarse ratio in my FM synths at parts. The extra weights from tying strings together adds all these extra nodes to produce inharmonic overtones, a lot like the fine ratio setting or some bells. A fun thing is, that’s technically possible with all acoustic resonators if you tune the geometries just right! Some people have added extra weights along piano strings for a similar effect throughout the piano’s history. The work on additive and FM synthesis in the 70s was chasing those kinds of funky harmonics (as opposed to the very basic harmonic selection allowed by filters) after all. (But as you probably know they then pushed far beyond what’s physically possible!)
I've made a couple of flutes and modified a cheap guitar, but I've never made a string instrument from scratch, a monochord might be my first thing I'll try to make
Awesome sound sauce!!!! Would be awesome if you ran a couple more strings and turned it into an industrial Octobass!! Must admit it was the popcorn instrument that I first watched. Keep up the good work and sending out those awesome vibes.
My mistake - his name is Huxley and the Blasterbeam has been used in several films. Your instrument reminded me of some of its sounds. Thanks again Nic.
You beat me to it by 45 minutes! Love the blaster beam. I bet replacing the wire with a spring on this would yield even more similar results! (That crashing sound and long tail in a blaster beam is basically what happens in a spring reverb. I guess the blaster beam is basically a really long reverb tank…)
Great video as always. This is getting into the spirit of the blaster beam. (Very different design so not the same at all, but instrumental cousins). If you wanted to go deeper but shorter, you could try thicker wound wire, like bass strings, piano wire, or even wire meant for high tension physical (non musical) applications or even transition to metal springs. The problem you may run into as you go deeper is that the strength of the wood may not balance with the tension you will need to maintain on the strings if you do take this to it's all the way to it's amazingly absurdist destination you could try taking a page from the blaster beams design and create a metal frame.
Nicely explained. I built a lyre a couple of years ago with strings 2.4 meters (8 feet) long and i can get up to the 16th harmonic without any problems, playing with a bow. Two suggestions: one, use 7 strand stainless steel cable for strings- it's easily available, cheap, and sounds great. Two: it's more logical to regard the fundamental tone as the 1st harmonic, the octave as the second harmonic, and so forth. That way the math for the vibrating length and the frequencies works out correctly. Keep up the good work. Cheers from cloudy Halle an der Saale, Scott
hi dude! longtime fan. i've seen a few videos where the stringed instruments were several meters long. one was played with friction - player rosined their hands and pulled along the string. it was wild.
crazy sounds, from such simple construction. if you need very long strings you can get either plastic fishing line (instead of nylon) or piano wire, both are available in unlimited length and all different thickness.
J'utilise de la corde à piano pour ce genre d'instruments, on en trouve de tous les diamètres en magasin de pêche, de 0.1 à 1 mm en longueur de 5m (ou 10 je suis plus sûr)
I just recently discovered your videos and thoroughly enjoy your work. Also recently, the Car company Genesis released a commercial featuring Onuka and the song Zenit as the music bed of the commercial. I honestly thought it was one of your musical arrangements! It does remind me of your outro music to your videos. Keep up the great content. Thanks for the inspirations.
There are companies like Kalium (Canada) and Newtone (UK) that make very long guitar strings. However, for instruments like tambura and sitar, you can buy string by the spool that you cut yourself.
An alloy wire would work at any desired length. Steel/silver, or nickel. Brass mixes even. Alternatively you cold use synthetic material such as dacron, fishing line, etc.. but would need a piezo pickup for those to work.
I imagine you've probably heard of Ellen Fullman's long string instrument but it could be cool to do something like this on that scale! Also I reckon the nuts on the guitar strings are introducing their own harmonics that make the effects of the dan bau a lot less pronounced. I don't know where you'd be able to find strings that long, but maybe a pack of harp strings could help, chinese guzheng is pretty long compared to guitar, but I don't know if they're magnetic.
awesome! One time I want to create huge resonator with scale length more than 2 meter. And I Use stainless rope. When you use wire, because of widness you lose some high harmoniks (because of low flexybillyty) . And, when you use several strings linced tougether - you have multiple wibraiting system linked with ich other. Every linc become wibration center So, I think next step in your reserch will be another material of base (pine is not musician wood :) ), using steel rope, and maybe another toss rod. Maybe find someone, whom can quench this toss rod. ones more, thank you for this video!
Try piano string, a.k.a. music wire, a.k.a. spring steel. Easy to get, costs literally cents per metre, used outside of music industry more often than in it. Would definitely fit this channel and produce better sound at the same time.
Have you ever put fishing line weights on a string before? I know Bart Hopkin experiments with these weights alot... I think the two strings conjoined is functioning similarly? Really cool, I love this really long Dan bau idea
I think the idea of a really long wire works better as a distortion effect. The cup and string is an easy way to explain what I mean. You use the wire to transmit a signal/sound and then pluck the string to apply weird effects. It already exists in amps and as a module in the synth world but I highly doubt anyone's tried making a mega sized one yet.
T’arrêtes pas Nicolas même si je pige rien en musique j’adore tes folies ! ;) j’espère pouvoir un jour te commander une BO ! A bientôt en Guyane j’espère 😊 maxime
Track and field for the blind use very long metal wires for the blind to use as guide-wires while they're running. I remember plucking the wire and it sounded like a cheesy laser sound effect. It was really cool. Pew! Pew! You can find them at schools for the blind.
Délire !! ^^ ça fait penser à l'instru de cordes frappées utilisée en trad que j'ai vu dans les Cévennes par exemple.. Super pour faire du rythme bourdonnant transesque à souhait !
The way he describes it with nodes is accurate to a degree, but the main part which hopefully will help you is that strings actually vibrate along all those nodes simultaneously rather than only one at a time like in the animation. The harmonic series (which he showed the first few of in the animation) is present in all instruments, be it a piano, guitar, flute, etc - every resonating body will have those higher multiples of the frequency. Different geometries make various upper harmonics/overtones (it’s the same thing here) louder or quieter than others, and that determines an instrument’s timbre. The only thing separating a piano from a guitar from a violin is that harmonic ratio. The fundamental frequency is usually louder than its harmonics, so what is happening here and in the guitar demo at the start is actually the cancelling-out of the loudest frequencies to allow the upper harmonics to be more audible. That is also why they get quieter as they get higher pitched. It’s a lot like sending white light through blue glass, to block the red and make the blue and green components more apparent. A little more complicated than that but it’s a similar idea of removing one part to make another part more visible. This principle of harmonics applies to a lot more than just sound - it’s also part of why some white LEDs have “spiky” emissions rather than broad spectrum white light, or the audible interference on an old radio from a modern power supply, or the “echoes” in the wake of a boat which pile up behind the main one!
Wow le son est envoûtant ! Belle idée, comme d'habitude. Pour la corde tu peux demander à un fileur de corde. Philippe Carrère est très sympa. Je l'avais contacté quand j'avais le projet de faire une table de massage monocorde.
Someone has probably already said it, but harmonics are stronger closer to the bridge of a guitar. if you put your pickup beside the string rather than below it you could get it closer to the bridge, and get stronger clearer harmonics.
For anything up to 2 meters, I could imagine that an upright Bass string (or as mentioned, piano or harp) could work. I think a lot of the strange harmonics are due to your quick-n'-dirty splices giving weighted node points on the string. A clean string would provide a cleaner sound.
I *think* I've seen guitar strings for sale that are meters long and you cut them yourself. I've never purchased them myself because I don't go through strings that fast. That might change now with the guitars I'm building. Thanks for the inspiration!
Like you said! After the first extension it sounded... oddly bell like? Like large bells, having that resonant deep sound to them. Not what I expected! Fascinating noises it makes :V Ah... and and then the second and third extensions came in and it becomes the background music for a fever dream lol
sounds very muddled, would probably be better with one string as you suggested. where can you make a string? make your own. maybe at a machine shop they can help you?
Mattias Krantz, here on TH-cam, also needed long guitar strings for one of his instrument projects. I think he got them from a manufacturer eventually. Maybe he could help.
Kalium strings font des cordes de 37 pouces de longueur ;) autrement une corde de piano. Dernière solution, demander une corde sur mesure à un fabricant. Bonne continuation !
The part of Peter will be played by the violins, the Wolf will be played by French Horns, and as always, V'GER will be played by Nicolas Bras' three meter đàn bầu.
I would think your channel is big enough to get like an Ernie Ball/D'Addario sponsorship or something, where you can get spools of it? That's the direction I would go. Might make for good content, too.
Excellent travail de construction et de recherche sonore ! J'ai fait un montage similaire, mais sans micro avec un ressort en forme de bande qu'on trouve dans les mètres à ruban, utilisant comme résonateur un bidon de colle cylindrique, vide et nettoyé bien sur, de la taille d'une boîte de conserve d'1/2 litre. Pensez vous que sur ce ruban d'acier on peut sortir les harmoniques ?
@@hyperteleXii Originally they had gut strings but most people use nylon strings now as they are cheaper and last longer. But gut wouldn't work with a the pickup either as like nylon, it's not magnetic.
@@hyperteleXiiharp pickups are piezo contact mics in the bottom of the harp body rather than magnetic coil pickups like guitars use. You could totally get An Sound from designing this instrument like that, but it would be deadened by all the wood geometry whereas the magnetic pickup doesn’t really care.
Le son de cloche est sympa je dois dire. Me demande ce que ça donnerait avec un fil de fer plus fin ou plus épais. Aussi, à quel point la rigidité de l'ensemble influence le son. En tout cas, c'est fun ce machin :) (juste le micro qui doit se demander ce qu'il fiche ici :D)
regarde dans les vap shop et demande du fil clepton pour des resistance reconstructible. ça à le mérite d'être isnpiré des corde de guitare et tu le trouve en bobine. Il y a plusieurs diamètre possible avec un peu de chance ça peut marcher
Wouldn't piano strings work better? This is incredible.
I think they are such high tension that building a frame to support them would be a lot of work
@@EchoBuildsThings The thinnest piano string you can find is basically the same as the thinnest guitar string (0.2mm or 0.008"). It's just a steel wire, after all
Harp strings might also be an option.
was just thinking this .
Why not start with a piano and modify it into a multiple dan bau instrument?
Metal suppliers will sell big rolls of spring steel wire in any gauge. And it's cheap. Sometimes it's called "music wire" because it's the same alloy they use for piano strings, and maybe also guitar.
Back in 1975 I built a 300' electric guitar with 0.80" music wire between the balconies of a college dorm at U.C.S.D. It was awesome.
@@prentrodgersthat's so sick. Apocryphal story from my engineering school. One time some students got into the maintenance tunnels. The campus is all hills so the buildings are anchored to uphill foundations with giant cables. They found the resonant mode of these cables and hit them with a sledgehammer in time. The geology department thought it was an earthquake!
pfouuu ça sonne comme un modulateur en anneaux
Weights on a strings (where you tie them) completely mess up overtones but make crazy sounds) Piano string or double bass string would produce clean overtones being long enough, or just look for spring steel wire as already suggested in the comments. As a suggestion for more interesting sounds and a lot more overtones try using sitar-stile bridge (like piece of a metal tube with big diameter).
That must be why the first string sounded strange. The ball ends are basically weights in odd places.
One heck of a talented musician - such an exciting sound.
J'adore cette expérimentation, principe ultra simple, résultats déments ! Tes expériences sont toujours inspirantes
Bart Hopkin has a couple great videos about adding weights to strings to give them bell-like harmonics. Like you said, the guitar string loops were the reason for the messy overtones. I wonder what that first string would sound like with a bandpass filter, wah pedal, or other effects!
You should investigate the Tromba Marina - a 15th century monochord played using harmonics
That was absolutely what my soul needed. Such an awesome feel to the sound that one has, what a cool build!!! Have ye experimented with winding your own strings ever? I’ve done a little experimenting with just a drill and swivels, and I plan to try more, but that’d be one way to handle an application like that. It’d take some serious work and patience for one of that size though!
Sounds like the dan bao effect gets stronger with more length from a slight vibrato in your last video to a serious wobble. The steel stick needs to get thicker as the forces of the string get bigger, or other ways of controlling the wobble.
If you touch the string just slightly, and then pluck with the other hand, two notes are created? Never thought of this! Cool!
I know that bass strings tend to be longer than guitar strings, or you could possibly get some bass piano strings for 2m+ long instruments
You must have a blast building all of these cool instruments. Great videos on this channel.
For strings I would contact newtone strings in the uk, they offer custom made strings and the prices are very reasonable, I've been using thier acoustic strings for about 15 years and they are very high quality. I'd expect they could help.
Some of these sounds near the end remind me of the Blaster Beam, though that was made with long tight springs instead of a wire. I bet you’d be able to build your own blaster beam pretty easily with all this experience! If you wanted to, of course.
I don't remember the name of the musician but many years ago, a specially made piano string was stretched between opposite doors of a church.
I saw a band called Sleepytime Gorilla Museum that had a bass type thing like this back in the mid 2000's. I think they called it a 9 foot slide bass. Kinda a evil vaudeville vibe. They made a lot of their own instruments.
Dude! I instantly thought of them! The track "powerless" came to mind straight away. Good taste in music, btw :)
i didnt know 2-op fm synthesis was possible with a string (around ~4:00) :P
I was definitely reminded of increasing the coarse ratio in my FM synths at parts. The extra weights from tying strings together adds all these extra nodes to produce inharmonic overtones, a lot like the fine ratio setting or some bells.
A fun thing is, that’s technically possible with all acoustic resonators if you tune the geometries just right! Some people have added extra weights along piano strings for a similar effect throughout the piano’s history.
The work on additive and FM synthesis in the 70s was chasing those kinds of funky harmonics (as opposed to the very basic harmonic selection allowed by filters) after all. (But as you probably know they then pushed far beyond what’s physically possible!)
@@kaitlyn__L o thats cool :O
i wish i could learn more abt prepared piano...
Wild sounds!
As others suggested, try piano wire... also please try an overstrung piano wire used in lower notes (like found on a bass guitar)
Just the right kind of eerie. I love this
awesome as all of your projects
I've made a couple of flutes and modified a cheap guitar, but I've never made a string instrument from scratch, a monochord might be my first thing I'll try to make
Really interesting and thought-provoking as usual.I always love the final result and all the different ways you find to generate sound.
Awesome sound sauce!!!! Would be awesome if you ran a couple more strings and turned it into an industrial Octobass!! Must admit it was the popcorn instrument that I first watched. Keep up the good work and sending out those awesome vibes.
My mistake - his name is Huxley and the Blasterbeam has been used in several films. Your instrument reminded me of some of its sounds. Thanks again Nic.
You beat me to it by 45 minutes! Love the blaster beam. I bet replacing the wire with a spring on this would yield even more similar results! (That crashing sound and long tail in a blaster beam is basically what happens in a spring reverb. I guess the blaster beam is basically a really long reverb tank…)
Beautiful and strange sounds. Run it through some fuzz pedals, please!
Great video as always. This is getting into the spirit of the blaster beam. (Very different design so not the same at all, but instrumental cousins).
If you wanted to go deeper but shorter, you could try thicker wound wire, like bass strings, piano wire, or even wire meant for high tension physical (non musical) applications or even transition to metal springs. The problem you may run into as you go deeper is that the strength of the wood may not balance with the tension you will need to maintain on the strings if you do take this to it's all the way to it's amazingly absurdist destination you could try taking a page from the blaster beams design and create a metal frame.
This is so cool !
I love the sound.
Robert Fripp and Brian Eno would like this I think.
Nicely explained. I built a lyre a couple of years ago with strings 2.4 meters (8 feet) long and i can get up to the 16th harmonic without any problems, playing with a bow.
Two suggestions: one, use 7 strand stainless steel cable for strings- it's easily available, cheap, and sounds great. Two: it's more logical to regard the fundamental tone as the 1st harmonic, the octave as the second harmonic, and so forth. That way the math for the vibrating length and the frequencies works out correctly.
Keep up the good work. Cheers from cloudy Halle an der Saale, Scott
Very gothic and dark. Love it man, keep it up!
hi dude! longtime fan. i've seen a few videos where the stringed instruments were several meters long. one was played with friction - player rosined their hands and pulled along the string. it was wild.
crazy sounds, from such simple construction. if you need very long strings you can get either plastic fishing line (instead of nylon) or piano wire, both are available in unlimited length and all different thickness.
This is just incredible. I would like to build Gastons version of a harp after this video ( comic albums).
Le gaffophone 😍
Yes!
J'utilise de la corde à piano pour ce genre d'instruments, on en trouve de tous les diamètres en magasin de pêche, de 0.1 à 1 mm en longueur de 5m (ou 10 je suis plus sûr)
Very good explanations, i like your acoustic research. The sound is so amazing. I'm waiting for your following video. Hello from France.
Should ask “that1guy” what he uses. He’s got that big weird 1 stringed instrument that might have a comparable strong length.
I just recently discovered your videos and thoroughly enjoy your work. Also recently, the Car company Genesis released a commercial featuring Onuka and the song Zenit as the music bed of the commercial. I honestly thought it was one of your musical arrangements! It does remind me of your outro music to your videos. Keep up the great content. Thanks for the inspirations.
Everything is clear - the longer the string, the closer the musician is to becoming a necromancer.
There are companies like Kalium (Canada) and Newtone (UK) that make very long guitar strings. However, for instruments like tambura and sitar, you can buy string by the spool that you cut yourself.
Incredible sci-fi sounds from such a simple instrument.
Making a guitar string with kanthal wire allows you to choose your gauge, and a drill can be used to help wrap the wire.
An alloy wire would work at any desired length. Steel/silver, or nickel. Brass mixes even.
Alternatively you cold use synthetic material such as dacron, fishing line, etc.. but would need a piezo pickup for those to work.
I imagine you've probably heard of Ellen Fullman's long string instrument but it could be cool to do something like this on that scale! Also I reckon the nuts on the guitar strings are introducing their own harmonics that make the effects of the dan bau a lot less pronounced. I don't know where you'd be able to find strings that long, but maybe a pack of harp strings could help, chinese guzheng is pretty long compared to guitar, but I don't know if they're magnetic.
awesome!
One time I want to create huge resonator with scale length more than 2 meter. And I Use stainless rope. When you use wire, because of widness you lose some high harmoniks (because of low flexybillyty) .
And, when you use several strings linced tougether - you have multiple wibraiting system linked with ich other. Every linc become wibration center
So, I think next step in your reserch will be another material of base (pine is not musician wood :) ), using steel rope, and maybe another toss rod. Maybe find someone, whom can quench this toss rod.
ones more, thank you for this video!
find a broken piano, harvest lifetime supply
Try piano string, a.k.a. music wire, a.k.a. spring steel. Easy to get, costs literally cents per metre, used outside of music industry more often than in it. Would definitely fit this channel and produce better sound at the same time.
Have you ever put fishing line weights on a string before? I know Bart Hopkin experiments with these weights alot... I think the two strings conjoined is functioning similarly? Really cool, I love this really long Dan bau idea
I think the idea of a really long wire works better as a distortion effect. The cup and string is an easy way to explain what I mean. You use the wire to transmit a signal/sound and then pluck the string to apply weird effects. It already exists in amps and as a module in the synth world but I highly doubt anyone's tried making a mega sized one yet.
Horror music vibes... love it!
You could get natural gut lines in various widths (used for clock weight lines) up to about 12 feet.
T’arrêtes pas Nicolas même si je pige rien en musique j’adore tes folies ! ;) j’espère pouvoir un jour te commander une BO ! A bientôt en Guyane j’espère 😊 maxime
Track and field for the blind use very long metal wires for the blind to use as guide-wires while they're running. I remember plucking the wire and it sounded like a cheesy laser sound effect. It was really cool. Pew! Pew! You can find them at schools for the blind.
the projects are getting larger and larger x)
next step: the basement is the resonator
I can imagine an array of these with pedals that do the bending and finger pics. WhaWha Harp.
The piece of music at the end reminded me of the band Einstürzende Neubauten.
The man is crazy! But cool !! 😂
Right before you got to the slide part, i was like MAKE A SLIDE !!!!
I just found your channel. This is so cool!!
I love your musical innovations. Who said music has to fit inside the traditional musical scale box? Not me.
Une cloche qu'on peut pitch-bend, incroyable, comme d'hab!!
your junt always hits
Délire !! ^^ ça fait penser à l'instru de cordes frappées utilisée en trad que j'ai vu dans les Cévennes par exemple.. Super pour faire du rythme bourdonnant transesque à souhait !
Wonderful creativity and sounds. Has me wondering if something like that could be implemented for single strings on a Strat? 🤔
You rock bro
I don’t quite understand how it works but it would be great as a background track in a stressful scene
The way he describes it with nodes is accurate to a degree, but the main part which hopefully will help you is that strings actually vibrate along all those nodes simultaneously rather than only one at a time like in the animation.
The harmonic series (which he showed the first few of in the animation) is present in all instruments, be it a piano, guitar, flute, etc - every resonating body will have those higher multiples of the frequency. Different geometries make various upper harmonics/overtones (it’s the same thing here) louder or quieter than others, and that determines an instrument’s timbre. The only thing separating a piano from a guitar from a violin is that harmonic ratio.
The fundamental frequency is usually louder than its harmonics, so what is happening here and in the guitar demo at the start is actually the cancelling-out of the loudest frequencies to allow the upper harmonics to be more audible. That is also why they get quieter as they get higher pitched.
It’s a lot like sending white light through blue glass, to block the red and make the blue and green components more apparent. A little more complicated than that but it’s a similar idea of removing one part to make another part more visible.
This principle of harmonics applies to a lot more than just sound - it’s also part of why some white LEDs have “spiky” emissions rather than broad spectrum white light, or the audible interference on an old radio from a modern power supply, or the “echoes” in the wake of a boat which pile up behind the main one!
Wow le son est envoûtant ! Belle idée, comme d'habitude. Pour la corde tu peux demander à un fileur de corde. Philippe Carrère est très sympa. Je l'avais contacté quand j'avais le projet de faire une table de massage monocorde.
Music On A Long Thin Wire, Electric Boogaloo!
Someone has probably already said it, but harmonics are stronger closer to the bridge of a guitar. if you put your pickup beside the string rather than below it you could get it closer to the bridge, and get stronger clearer harmonics.
Very cool! Check out Ellen Fullman - Long String Instrument.
The Dokumentation is GREAT as always!!! If you want to watch this vid, reduce the Playback speed on 0.75! Its more compfortable to follow.....
For anything up to 2 meters, I could imagine that an upright Bass string (or as mentioned, piano or harp) could work. I think a lot of the strange harmonics are due to your quick-n'-dirty splices giving weighted node points on the string. A clean string would provide a cleaner sound.
OMG, nice idea!
I've already used a string on a construction site as an instrument. You had to put your ear to it though
I *think* I've seen guitar strings for sale that are meters long and you cut them yourself. I've never purchased them myself because I don't go through strings that fast.
That might change now with the guitars I'm building. Thanks for the inspiration!
There’s an instrument called a slapperoo which uses a steel strap instead of a string. Wonderful long bass notes.
Like you said! After the first extension it sounded... oddly bell like? Like large bells, having that resonant deep sound to them. Not what I expected! Fascinating noises it makes :V
Ah... and and then the second and third extensions came in and it becomes the background music for a fever dream lol
sounds very muddled, would probably be better with one string as you suggested. where can you make a string? make your own. maybe at a machine shop they can help you?
Mais quel boss!
I love that
Mattias Krantz, here on TH-cam, also needed long guitar strings for one of his instrument projects. I think he got them from a manufacturer eventually. Maybe he could help.
I think you can get piano wire in long spools.
Maybe the guys at Kalium Strings could help you out? They do unusual string gauges and I think lengths, too. I think it's worth checking out^^
GENIUS
Kalium strings font des cordes de 37 pouces de longueur ;) autrement une corde de piano. Dernière solution, demander une corde sur mesure à un fabricant. Bonne continuation !
Ha si j'ai vu des gens faire leurs cordes eux-mêmes, il ya des vidéos sur YT
The part of Peter will be played by the violins, the Wolf will be played by French Horns, and as always, V'GER will be played by Nicolas Bras' three meter đàn bầu.
Interestingly the 'joined up' guitar strings sounded quite piano-like esp. at the longer lengths.
I would think your channel is big enough to get like an Ernie Ball/D'Addario sponsorship or something, where you can get spools of it? That's the direction I would go. Might make for good content, too.
Try playing it with a bottleneck and a bow!
As mentioned before, piano strings may be an option. Or, crazy idea, Theorbo strings? Though I don't know if there are metal strings for it.
Excellent travail de construction et de recherche sonore !
J'ai fait un montage similaire, mais sans micro avec un ressort en forme de bande qu'on trouve dans les mètres à ruban, utilisant comme résonateur un bidon de colle cylindrique, vide et nettoyé bien sur, de la taille d'une boîte de conserve d'1/2 litre. Pensez vous que sur ce ruban d'acier on peut sortir les harmoniques ?
Hello Nicolas, I was thinking, what about the drones from a Theorbo?
Basically how the star wars laser blaster sound was invented
Tu peux utiliser des lignes de canne à pèche en métal, les plus épaisses font le diamètre d'une corde de guitare.
Harp strings might work too!
I'm pretty sure they are nylon, so they wouldn't work with the pickup.
@@stonemanguitars The harp is much older tech than nylon, though. Surely there still exist metal strings for it.
@@hyperteleXii Originally they had gut strings but most people use nylon strings now as they are cheaper and last longer. But gut wouldn't work with a the pickup either as like nylon, it's not magnetic.
@@hyperteleXiiharp pickups are piezo contact mics in the bottom of the harp body rather than magnetic coil pickups like guitars use. You could totally get An Sound from designing this instrument like that, but it would be deadened by all the wood geometry whereas the magnetic pickup doesn’t really care.
Piano strings or double bass strings and even gauge wires will work I think
Le son de cloche est sympa je dois dire.
Me demande ce que ça donnerait avec un fil de fer plus fin ou plus épais. Aussi, à quel point la rigidité de l'ensemble influence le son. En tout cas, c'est fun ce machin :) (juste le micro qui doit se demander ce qu'il fiche ici :D)
regarde dans les vap shop et demande du fil clepton pour des resistance reconstructible. ça à le mérite d'être isnpiré des corde de guitare et tu le trouve en bobine.
Il y a plusieurs diamètre possible avec un peu de chance ça peut marcher
I can't get these notes on a ukulele. Is there something about the timing between plucking and letting go of the string?
How do you do it?
Dulcimer strings are sold in spools.
New sound track for Noita confirmed xD
with even more work this could be the soundtrack of dune 2 xD