GarageBand 3 World Music Instrument Tips
GarageBand 3 World Music Instrument Tips
GarageBand 3 World Music Instrument Tips
Woodwinds, featuring a Celtic tin whistle, Chinese di zi and xiao flutes, Highlands
bagpipes, Indian bansuri flute and shehnai oboe, Japanese shakuhachi flute,
European medieval recorder, Native American flute, and Peruvian panpipes.
Drum Kits, featuring African, Asian, European, Indian and Middle Eastern, and Latin
percussion kits. Each kit contains a variety of instruments.
This document describes the software instruments included in World Music, lists
controller information for each instrument, and provides some performance tips for
using the instruments.
Bass
Every musical style based on harmony makes use of bass instruments to set the
harmonic as well as rhythmic foundation. World Music includes two bass instruments
from Latin America and one from Russia.
Latin Baby Bass
The Latin baby bass is an upright electric bass guitar with a compact body that has
become widely used in salsa bands around Latin America, particularly in Cuba. The
baby bass is played through an amplifier, but has a tone similar to an upright bass.
Afro-Cuban music makes frequent use of cross-rhythms, and the punchy sound of the
baby bass allows it to cut through as it interweaves with the drummers rhythms.
The baby bass is made of wood and metal, and uses metal strings tuned in the
standard E-A-D-G bass guitar tuning.
Mexican Guitarron
The guitarron (also called chitarrone) is used as the bass instrument in mariachi bands
in Mexico and throughout Central and South America. It is a large, fretless bass guitar
with very deep sides which create a large resonant chamber to amplify the sound. In
addition to its traditional role, the guitarron has been used by pop and rock groups.
The open strings are usually tuned to the notes A-D-G-C-E-A, with the high A string
tuned below the C string. This allows the bass line to be played in octaves, with the
players thumb picking the lower note and the index and middle fingers alternately
plucking the higher note. The three lowest strings are steel, while the higher strings are
nylon. The action is quite high, requiring great strength to play the instrument.
Russian Balalaika
The balalaika is a Russian folk instrument with a long history. In the 19th century, the
balalaika was expanded to include families of instruments in several sizes from soprano
(called prima) to bass, and music was created for balalaika ensembles using innovative
strumming and picking techniques. In 1888 the first balalaika orchestra debuted to
popular acclaim, and the balalaika became a favorite of both the court and the public.
Ensembles toured Europe and visited America in the early 20th century.
All balalaikas have a triangular body, with the top usually made of spruce or fir, and a
long neck across which three strings are stretched. Prima and alto instruments are
played with the fingers, while bass balalaikas are played with very thick leather picks.
The Russian Balalaika Software Instrument includes both a bass and a prima
instrument, enabling you to perform across the range of an entire balalaika orchestra.
Bass
Instrument
Controller Info
Mexican Guitarron
Russian Balalaika
Choir
World Music includes two instruments featuring the sounds of a South African choir:
one singing common syllables and the other performing voice effects.
South African Singers
South African Voice Effects
Music-making in Africa belongs to all people, and Africas many musical styles are all
folk styles that developed from local cultures. While its history is not recorded, the
sound of the South African choir is believed to have developed in migrant labor camps
in the early 20th century. It provided workers with one of the few means for both
communal recreation and personal recognition. The singers often perform intricately
choreographed dance steps along with the singing. In the past two decades, the sound
of the South African choir has become known to Western audiences through its use by
popular artists and in movie soundtracks.
Contemporary South African choral groups are usually divided into the standard four
voice-parts: soprano, alto, tenor, and bass. The South African Singers Software
Instrument features the voices singing four commonly used syllables; the South African
Voice Effects instrument features three additional syllables, one in both long and short
versions. In both instruments, the four parts are distributed and blended across the
keyboard range.
Choir
Instrument
Controller Info
Guitars
World Music includes a Chinese ruan moon guitar, a Hawaiian ukulele, an Irish
bouzouki, a Spanish flamenco guitar, and two Turkish lutes: the oud and the saz.
Chinese Ruan Moon Guitar
The ruan moon guitar (also called the yueqin) is a fretted stringed instrument that has
been a part of Chinese music for more than 2000 years. The instrument is named for a
fabled musician of the third century known as one of the Seven Sages of Bamboo
Grove, and has changed little since its ancient beginnings.
The ruan has a circular wooden body and a short neck that holds four strings. The neck
has 24 frets divided into semitones, similar to a European guitar. The strings are tuned
in fifths like those of a violin, commonly to the notes G-D-A-E or A-D-A-D. The ruan
produces a delicate, mellow tone, and is used both for accompanying singers and as a
solo instrument. In modern times, orchestras of ruan have been created with
instruments of different sizes and ranges.
Hawaiian Ukulele
The ukulele was developed on the islands of Hawaii in the late 19th century, based on
instruments brought to the islands by Portuguese immigrants. It quickly spread
throughout the islands, and became Hawaiis most popular instrument. The word
ukulele means jumping flea, and some believe the name comes from the islanders
first impression of the players hands flying across the fingerboard.
The shape of the ukulele is like a smaller version of a Spanish guitar, with a figure-eight
body and a round sound hole behind the strings. Ukuleles exist in many different sizes,
but the soprano and concert-sized ukuleles are the most common. Both are most often
tuned to the notes G-C-E-A. The soprano is sometimes tuned a whole step higher, and
other tunings, such as Bb-Eb-G-C, are sometimes used to enable the ukulele to
accompany singers in different keys.
Irish Bouzouki
Although the bouzouki (sometimes called the octave mandolin) is of Greek origin, it is
the modified Irish bouzouki that has become popular in the recent revival of Celtic
music. Bouzoukis were introduced to Irish traditional music in the 1970s, and have
become an important part of the contemporary Celtic sound. The bouzouki is often
used to give definition to the lines below the melody.
The Irish bouzouki is a long-necked instrument with a pear-shaped body and three or
four courses of metal strings. Bouzoukis are typically tuned to the notes G-D-A-E. The
lower courses are tuned in octaves, while the upper courses are tuned in unison. The
player frets notes with the left hand and plucks notes with a pick held in the right
hand. The tone of the Irish bouzouki is penetrating and metallic.
Medieval Lute
The European lute evolved from ancient Middle Eastern stringed instruments, and was
widely used during the Medieval and Renaissance periods to accompany singers and as
a solo instrument. The word lute derives from the same root as oud, an Arabic word
meaning wood.
The lute is a plucked stringed instrument with a deep, pear-shaped body and a flat top.
The top features a soundhole that is typically intricately carved in the shape of a knot
or vine. The neck is made of light wood, and necks became wider as the lute developed
to accommodate a greater number of strings. The strings are typically doubled, with
each pair tuned in unison. The upper strings could be tuned in fourths, similar to a
guitar, or could be tuned to the notes of a chord (for example, D-A-D-F). The lower
courses were tuned in steps, allowing the player to play bass lines without having to
fret each note.
The lute was originally played using a quill to pluck the strings. As European music
became more polyphonic, players began to perform using their fingers, allowing
greater freedom for playing counterpoint.
The passionate style of music and dance known as flamenco originated in Andalusia, at
the crossroads of Gitano (Gypsy), Moorish, and Jewish cultures. Originally, flamenco
consisted of unaccompanied singing, but soon the singers were accompanied by the
guitar, as well as hand clapping, foot stamping, and dance. Today, traditional flamenco
has absorbed influences from jazz, salsa, and popular music, leading to a new offshoot
called Nuevo Flamenco (New Flamenco).
The flamenco guitar shares the same lineage as the Spanish classical guitar. Both
evolved from earlier Arabian and Moorish instruments, and are made of wood, with a
figure-eight shape and a central sound hole. Both use six gut or nylon strings tuned to
the notes E-A-D-G-B-E.
However, the manner of performing flamenco is quite different from that of classical
music. Rather than re-creating music composed in advance, flamenco players have
room to improvise and express individual emotions. In order to express the heat of the
moment, flamenco guitarists use a variety of playing techniques, including:
Picado: Plucking the strings alternately with the index and middle fingers.
Pulgar: Plucking the strings with the thumb.
Rasgueado: Quickly strumming up or down the strings, sometimes with the index
finger, sometimes with the right-hand fingers moving one after the other.
Tirando: Free stroke with the first three fingers playing the upper strings and the
thumb playing the bass notes.
Harmonics: Stopping the string with one hand while plucking with the other to
produce a higher harmonic of the note.
The Spanish Flamenco Guitar instrument gives you the ability to use all these playing
techniques, accessed using different note velocities and the mod wheel.
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The saz is descended from earlier long-necked lutes which can be traced back to
Babylon and Sumeria. These instruments, including the kopuz and cogur, played a
historic role in Turkish music. Today, the saz is the most commonly found folk
instrument in Turkey, with distinct regional playing styles and techniques.
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The saz has a long, thin neck and a teardrop-shaped body. The neck is traditionally
made of fir and the body carved from a single piece of mulberry wood. Small
soundholes are carved into the top and also sometimes the sides of the body. The
strings are metal, usually steel or brass, and the player uses a long pick to pluck them.
There are several sizes of saz, ranging from the smallest, the cura (with three sets of
strings) to the medium-sized baglama (with six sets of strings) to the larger divan or
meydan (with nine strings).
Guitars
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Instrument
Controller Info
Hawaiian Ukulele
Irish Bouzouki
Medieval Lute
Mallets
World Music includes mallet instruments from the African continent, the islands of
Indonesia, and the mountainous nation of Tibet.
African Kalimba
The kalimba (also called the thumb piano) was invented by African slaves in the
Caribbean, using ingenuity to create an instrument from extremely limited resources.
It consists of a small wooden box with a central sound hole, with a row of metal bars
suspended above. The player presses the bars with either thumb to sound different
notes. The player can change the tone by changing the amount of pressure used to
press the bars. Kalimbas can be found in a variety of sizes and tunings.
African Marimba
The marimba is a large instrument consisting of a set wooden bars laid out like the
keys of a piano. Below each bar is a resonating tube that amplifies its sound. The player
strikes the bars using malletstypically wooden sticks with heads made of felt, rubber,
or other materials. The sound of the African marimba is richer and fuller than that of
the concert version of the instrument.
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The Indonesian islands are home to a unique form of ensemble music-making using
mallet percussion instruments. The gamelan has fascinated composers and listeners
since being brought to the West at the beginning of the 20th century.
Indonesian Gamelan
Gamelan is the name for the traditional music ensemble of Indonesia. Both Bali and
Java have both produced distinctive styles of gamelan playing with histories extending
over many centuries. The word gamelan means ensemble or orchestra.
The sound of a gamelan is produced by a combination of metallic percussion
instruments, including the xylophone-like gangsa and sets of suspended gongs called
reyong. Gangsa are struck with hammer-shaped mallets, while reyong are struck with
wooden sticks wound with rope. Both instruments can be muted by the players free
hand; with the Indonesian Gamelan Software Instrument, you can play ringing and
muted notes on both the gangsa and reyong using the mod wheel.
The characteristic shimmering sound of the gamelan is produced by slight differences
in tuning between instruments playing interlocking patterns. Another technique of
gamelan performance involves playing the same melody at several different rates
simultaneously, creating intricate, interweaving patterns.
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Tibetan singing bowls (also called Himalayan bowls) have been used by monks as
part of Buddhist meditation for hundreds of years. The bowls, which are handmade of
metal and come in a variety of sizes, are played by striking the edge or rubbing (or
stirring) the inside surface. According to tradition, singing bowls produce no sound if
they are played incorrectly, but, when played correctly, produce a smooth, relaxing
sound that is beneficial to the chakras of both player and listeners.
Mallets
Instrument
Controller Info
African Kalimba
African Marimba
Indonesian Gamelan
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Cuban music has long been an intense melting pot of cultures and styles, mixing
Spanish and West African influences with those from France, Jamaica, the United States,
and other countries. In the 1940s, Chano Pozo and Dizzy Gillespie brought the AfroCuban sound into the world of jazz, and this potent combination has given birth to a
variety of new styles including salsa, merengue, songo, son, mambo, and cha cha.
The Afro-Cuban Upright Piano instrument provides a brighter, sharper sound than the
other pianos created for GarageBand, conjuring the sound of a well-worn piano heard
in a late-night club setting.
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Polka Accordion
Polka is a form of dance music that originated in Bohemia (now part of the Czech
Republic) in the 19th century. It quickly spread throughout Europe, Russia, and the
Americas. Several distinctive styles have evolved in North America, including the "Polish
style" with roots in Chicago, the Slovenian style associated with Cleveland, and the
Conjunto style of Texas and Northern Mexico (also called Norteno). In the 1980s and
1990s, adventurous bands combined polka with contemporary rock styles, producing
punk polka and alternative polka. Polkas can be played on many different
instruments, but the accordion is common to nearly all these polka styles.
The accordion (sometimes called the squeezebox) was invented in Austria in the 19th
century, and its use spread through Europe and the rest of the world along with the
spread of the polka. The accordion consists of a bellows that the player expands and
contracts to vibrate a set of metal reeds that produce the sound, and a keyboard that
triggers which reeds to set in motion. Some accordions also have buttons used to play
chords that accompany the melody. The instrument is held against the players body
with a strap, allowing the player to move freely while performing.
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Tango Accordion
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Instrument
Controller Info
Polka Accordion
Tango Accordion
Strings
Stringed instruments are common to all musical cultures, and both bowed and plucked
strings can be found in nearly every corner of the globe. Variations of the two types of
plucked instruments, the lute (with a neck projecting from the body that holds the
strings) and the zither (with a large trapezoidal body across which the strings are
stretched) likely came into being as different cultures traveled and intermingled.
Examples include the oud, the lute, and the bouzouki (all lute-like instruments), and the
guzheng, santoor, and hammered dulcimer (all zithers).
Celtic Hammered Dulcimer
The gentle sounds of the hammered dulcimer are familiar to fans of Celtic music and
the folk music of the British Isles. The name comes from a Latin phrase meaning sweet
sound. Its origin is uncertain, but it has been widely used as a folk instrument
throughout Europe for more than six centuries. Recent decades have seen a revival of
interest in both the building and playing of the instrument.
The hammered dulcimer consists of a trapezoidal sounding board made of wood, with
the strings stretched across bridges mounted on the top. The player strikes the strings
with hammers held in both hands. Hammered dulcimers exist in a variety of sizes,
which are distinguished by the number of strings that cross each bridge.
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Celtic Harp
The history of the Celtic harp extends back many centuries. Early forms of the harp
were widespread throughout Ireland, Scotland, and Wales as early as 1000 A.D., and
visitors to the area often commented on the natives skill in performance. The harp was
popular both in court and country villages, where virtuoso harpists were revered and
their instruments prized and highly decorated.
The tone of the Celtic harp is softer and brighter than that of a concert harp. It is
smaller but shares a similar triangular shape. The strings are made of wire, and are
stretched from the top to the bottom of the instrument. The player plucks them with
both hands, and can use the pad of one or both hands to mute strings as well. Each
harp is tuned to a particular key. Celtic harps do not use pedals, but contemporary
instruments have small knobs, used to retune the strings between songs, across the
top of the body.
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The erhu violin developed from earlier string instruments, including the huqin. Little is
known about its history before it was popularized in the early 20th century by the
musician Liu Tianhua, who composed many original pieces for it.
The erhu is a bowed instrument with two strings stretched over a long neck. The base
of the neck is attached to a resonator that consists of a hollow wooden box covered by
an animal skin (traditionally the skin of a python). The tip of the neck can be ornately
carved, sometimes in the shape of an animals head. The strings are tuned in fifths,
often to the notes D-A or C-G. The player never lifts the bow from the strings, but
instead passes it between them, producing a hypnotizing, voice-like sound. The
instruments playing technique includes bending notes up and down, and the Chinese
Erhu Violin Software Instrument gives you this playing style, accessed using the mod
wheel.
Chinese Guzheng Zither
The guzheng (sometimes called the zheng) is a traditional Chinese instrument dating
back to the Qin and Han dynasties. It was historically associated with the Qin state,
from which it migrated to many other parts of China. Ancient poems and stories relate
the instruments popularity and the pleasing effect its tone produced on audiences. It is
the parent instrument of the Japanese koto.
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The guzheng has a semi-circular wooden base over which a set of strings is stretched. It
has twelve or thirteen strings, which are commonly tuned to the notes of the
pentatonic scale, covering a range of four octaves. Players pluck the strings with picks
attached to their right-hand fingers while touching the strings with their left hand.
Playing techniques include bending notes and strumming the strings; the Chinese
Guzheng Zither Software Instrument includes both techniques, accessed using velocity
and the mod wheel.
Indian Sitar
The sitar is one of the most familiar instruments in Indian classical music. It developed
from earlier Indian and Persian instruments in the 18th century. Its singing tone made it
ideal for the Hindu style of playing extended, improvised melodies known as raga.
The word raga literally indicates the scale being used, but can also imply a piece with a
particular mood, intended for a particular purpose, or even meant to be played at a
specific time of day.
The sitar consists of a deep curved body, usually made from a gourd, and a long neck.
It has two sets of strings, one for playing melodies and one that vibrates in sympathy
with the played notes. Players pluck the melody strings with their right hand while
pressing them against the raised frets with their left hand. The sympathetic strings
below the frets resonate with different notes, giving the sitar its characteristic lush
sound. An instrument can have six or seven melody strings and twelve sympathetic
strings, and has a range of three octaves. The tuning of the melody strings can vary, but
usually consists of fifths, fourths, and octaves, for example: C#-G#-C#-F#-G#-C#. The
sympathetic strings are tuned to fit the notes of each raga.
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Irish Fiddle
The fiddle has long been one of the chief instruments of traditional Irish folk music. It is
ideally suited to playing the long, lilting melodies characteristic of the style, and to the
reels, jigs, and other lively dance pieces played throughout the British Isles. Over the
centuries a rich tradition of fiddle-playing developed, with recognizably different styles
in different regions of the country. Today, those regional styles have merged together
into the modern Celtic style of playing.
The Irish fiddle is identical in construction to a concert violin, but is played using a
slightly different bowing technique that produces a louder, harder sound. The strings
are tuned to the standard G-D-A-E concert tuning. The playing style includes a wide
variety of trills and ornaments; the Irish Fiddle Software Instrument gives you both
upper and lower trills, accessed using the mod wheel.
Japanese Koto
The koto came to Japan from China, and is likely descended from the Chinese guzheng.
It was originally played exclusively in the royal court, but in the 17th century was
popularized by a virtuoso who played both original compositions and popular
melodies on it.
The koto has a long, hollow wooden body. The strings, traditionally made of silk, are
stretched over bridges that the player moves to produce different notes. The koto
typically has thirteen strings that are tuned to the notes of the particular song, and that
the players pluck using picks attached to their fingers.
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The playing technique for the koto includes the tsuki style, in which the string is
plucked, pressed, and then released, causing the note to first bend up then return to its
original pitch. Another common technique uses double-struck notes, with the string
forcibly plucked in alternate directions. The Japanese Koto Software Instrument
includes both these playing styles, with the tsuki style produced at the highest note
velocity level and double-struck notes played using the mod wheel.
Persian Santoor
The santoor (the name comes from a Sanskrit phrase meaning 100-stringed lute) is a
classical music instrument of Persia and Arabia, and was also played in India by Sufi
sects founded by the poet Rumi. Many musical cultures have similar instruments,
including the santour in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey, and the santoori in Greece.
The wooden body is trapezoidal, with narrow sides and a wide soundboard. The strings
are stretched across wooden bridges that sit on top of the soundboard. On the right
side of the instrument are tuning pins which the player uses to retune the strings. In
the instruments upper and middle range there are three strings for each note; all three
are always struck together. In the lower range each note has two strings, and the
lowest notes have only a single string. The strings are struck with angled mallets held in
both hands. The notes are allowed to ring and are not muted.
The playing technique of the santoor includes a tremolo attack, in which the mallet is
bounced across the strings producing quick repetitions of the note, adding intensity,
and also includes a longer tremolo that is often played softly. The Persian Santoor
Instrument gives you both of these styles, accessed using the mod wheel.
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Strings
Instrument
Controller Info
Celtic Harp
Indian Sitar
Irish Fiddle
Mod wheel at lower mid setting adds upper trill; at upper mid
setting adds trill down; at high setting plays vibrato.
Velocity adds attack and volume.
Notes sustain with change of bow direction.
Japanese Koto
Persian Santoor
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Woodwinds
Producing musical tones by blowing into a reed or tube is one of the oldest forms of
music-making and is found in nearly every culture. At first each tube yielded only a
single note (as on the panpipes), but then holes were cut so the player could produce
different notes, and the first flutes and whistles came into being. As wind instruments
developed, some had their mouthpiece on the end (such as the tin whistle, the
recorder, and the Chinese xiao); on others the mouthpiece was along the side of the
instrument (such as the Indian bansuri and the Chinese di zi). End-blown and sideblown flutes produce somewhat different kinds of tone, and also involve different
playing techniques.
Celtic Tin Whistle
The tin whistle (also called the pennywhistle) is a small whistle often made of tin,
brass, or another inexpensive material. It typically has six finger holes and a metal or
plastic mouthpiece. The tin whistle is widely used as a melody instrument in Irish
traditional music. The holes in the sides of the tin whistle produce the notes of a
diatonic scale, but a player can produce accidentals by half covering them. Tin whistles
exist in a variety of sizes and keys, the most common key being D (above middle C).
Fingerings are often referred to in relation to the D instrument. Although a simple
instrument, in the hands of a skilled player the tin whistle can play trills,
fluttertonguing, and highly ornamented melodies.
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Chinese Di Zi Flute
The Chinese di zi (also sometimes called ti-tzu or hengdi) is a transverse flute, like
the Western classical flute. It has been used in both court and folk music, and is prized
for its simplicity, small size, and beauty of sound. Di zi are commonly made of bamboo,
but can also be made using other types of wood and even stone, including jade.
Di zi typically have a range of two and a half octaves. Each instrument is tuned and
played in a specific key, so a player may have several instruments in order to play
different songs. In addition to the finger holes used to play notes, the di zi has a special
hole called Muo kong, over which a very thin piece of bamboo is stretched, creating
its characteristic penetrating tone. The Muo kong adds to the brightness and loudness
of the instrument, and also adds harmonics which make the sound more nasal.
Playing techniques for the di zi include vibrato and non-vibrato playing,
fluttertonguing, and a rapid unpitched trill used as an ornament at the beginning of
notes. The Chinese Di Zi Flute Instrument gives you all of these playing styles, accessed
using the mod wheel.
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The xiao (also called Di xiao or Dong xiao) has been used in Chinese music for over
2000 years both as a solo instrument and in small chamber ensembles. Some historians
believe the xiao was the predecessor to the Japanese shakuhachi flute.
The xiao is an end-blown flute made of bamboo, with six finger holes pitched to the
notes of the pentatonic scale. Its tone is softer and lower than the di zi, and is suited to
expressing peaceful or melancholy moods.
Highlands Bagpipes
The bagpipe has a long and varied history. It is thought to have originated in ancient
Mesopotamia and traveled to early Greece and Rome as well as east to Persia and India.
It is part of the musical heritage of many European countries, including Spain and
Croatia, but is primarily associated with Scotland and Ireland.
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The bagpipe is a a single or double reed instrument that uses a bag, traditionally made
from animal skin, to hold the air used to vibrate the reeds. Players press the bag with
their arm, sending the air through a reed or reeds on a fingered pipe called a chanter
to produce the notes.
The bagpipe can also produce a drone, usually a bass note two octaves below the
chanters keynote, which provides a harmonic background for the melody. Some
bagpipes can produces multiple drones in octaves, fourths, or fifths; a few even include
keyed pipes (called regulators) by which the player can sound a countermelody or
accompanying chords.
Indian Bansuri Flute
The flute is one of the oldest instruments in the Hindu tradition, and the god Krishna is
often shown playing a side-blown flute. The bansuri was originally a folk instrument,
but later joined the sitar as one of the main melody instruments used in North Indian
classical music.
The bansuri is a side-blown flute made of bamboo or reed, with six or seven finger
holes tuned to the notes of the diatonic scale. Each bansuri has a range of slightly over
an octave. The Indian Bansuri Flute Software Instrument includes samples of several
instruments of different sizes, allowing it to be playable over the entire keyboard range.
Playing techniques for the bansuri include both vibrato and non-vibrato playing,
fluttertonguing, and a short unpitched trill used as an ornament at the beginning of
notes. The Indian Bansuri Flute Software Instrument gives you all of these playing
styles, accessed using the mod wheel.
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The shehnai is descended from the nay, found in ancient Persia and Egypt. In India it
was historically used in royal music ensembles. The shehnai is believed to bring good
luck, and so is widely used in North India today for weddings and festivals, as well as in
Hindu temples.
The shehnai is a double-reed instrument (similar to a Western oboe) with a wooden
body and a brass bell. The reeds are attached to a brass tube which is wrapped with
string. The instrument can have from six to nine finger holes, some of which can be
stopped with wax. Like the oboe, the tone can be varied by controlling the players
breath.
Japanese Shakuhachi Flute
The shakuhachi is historically associated with Zen Buddhist monks (called komuso)
who used it for meditation and spiritual development. When the komuso were
granted special travel privileges by the shogun (the Emperor), their skill in playing
the shakuhachi was often used as a test of a monks authenticity. As a result, they
developed a high degree of technical excellence and created many virtuoso pieces
for the instrument.
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The shakuhachi is a bamboo end-blown flute (the name refers to the size of the
instrument, although now instruments can be different sizes). The finger holes are
pitched to the notes of the pentatonic scale, but skillful players can bend notes and
partially cover the holes to produce additional notes and extend the instruments
range, and can blow into the mouthpiece at an angle to add inflection to notes.
Medieval Recorder
The recorder (called Blockflte in Germany, flte bec in France, and flauto dolce in
Italy) is believed to have developed in the Medieval period from whistles and other
simple flutes. In the Renaissance, recorders of many different sizes were made and
played together in recorder ensembles as well as with other instruments. Further
developments in the Baroque period led to virtuoso players and a large repertoire of
solo music for the instrument.
The recorder is an end-blown flute with a range of around two octaves. Traditionally,
recorders are carved from wood, but today they can also be molded of plastic. There
are seven finger holes on the front of the instrument, and one hole on the back
stopped by the players thumb. Each instrument is pitched in a particular key, the most
common keys being C and F.
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Native American tradition holds that music was given to people as a way of
communicating with the supernatural, and Native American folk music was mainly
used to convey a spiritual meaning, to pray for good luck, and to relate stories of
heroes. The origins of the Native American flute are unknown, but some believe it was
developed by the ancient Pueblo peoples who used it for meditation, courtship, and
religious rituals. The instrument saw a revival in the 1960s, and has since been widely
used in New Age and ambient music styles.
The Native American flute is the only flute with two air chambers. A wall inside the
flute separates the top and bottom chambers; the finger holes are on the bottom. The
top chamber acts as a second resonator and gives the flute its distinctive sound. A
carved bird is tied to the top of the flute, forming a thin, flat airstream for the whistle
hole. Native American flutes can have either five or six finger holes, pitched to the
notes of the pentatonic scale, often to the keys A or D. Modern Native American flutes
typically span a range of 3 1/2 octaves.
32
Peruvian Panpipes
The panpipe (also called panflute or syrinx) is an ancient musical instrument, found
in Europe, Asia, and South America. Its name reflects its association with the god Pan
by the ancient Greeks, for whom the panpipe was a popular folk instrument. Panpipes
have long been a part of the music of Peru and other Andean cultures, and have seen
renewed interest in the world music and New Age movements.
The panpipe consists of a series of reeds of increasing length which are tied together in
a row. Each pipe sounds a single note; players move the instrument across their mouth,
placing the pipe for the desired note in front of their lips. Panpipes come in variety of
sizes, usually with ten or more pipes.
Woodwinds
Instrument
Controller Info
Chinese Di Zi Flute
Highland Bagpipes
Medieval Recorder
33
Instrument
Controller Info
Peruvian Panpipes
Drum Kits
World Music includes African, Asian, Indian and Middle Eastern, European, and Latin
drum kits. Each drum kit contains a selection of percussion sounds, with each note on
the keyboard producing a different sound, featuring both common and exotic
instruments for each region.
34
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
C-1
FronTonFrom
Blanket
C#-1
FronTonFrom
Open Bass
D-1
FronTonFrom
Open
D#-1
FronTonFrom
Open Hand
E-1
FronTonFrom
Stick Mute
F-1
FronTonFrom
Stick
F#-1
FronTonFrom
G-1
FronTonFrom
G#-1
Low Djembe
Open
A-1
Low Djembe
Closed
A#-1
Hi Djembe
Open
B-1
Hi Djembe
Closed
C0
Berkete
Open
C#0
Berkete
Closed
D0
Sabar
Bass (Processed)
D#0
Sabar
Bass
E0
Sabar
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
F0
Low Djembe
F#0
Low Djembe
Closed Slap
G0
Low Djembe
Open Left
G#0
Afro Conga
Open Hand
A0
Hi Djembe
Open Right
A#0
Afro Conga
Slap
B0
Hi Djembe
C1
Hi Djembe
C#1
Hi Djembe
Closed
D1
Hi Djembe
Open Right
D#1
E1
Hi Djembe
Slap + Grace
F1
Talking Drum
Low
F#1
Y-Rattle
G1
Talking Drum
Medium
G#1
Y-Rattle
Roll A
A1
Talking Drum
Medium High
A#1
Y-Rattle
Roll B
B1
Talking Drum
High A
C2
Talking Drum
High B
C#2
D2
Talking Drum
High C
D#2
Oghene 2
Open
E2
Roll
F2
Oghene 2
Mute
F#2
G2
Alo 2
G#2
Gankoqui 2
Open
A2
Alo 2
Sidestick
A#2
Gankoqui 2
Mute
B2
Alo 1
Open
C3
African Bongo
High
C#3
African Bongo
Low
D3
Slap
D#3
Open Slap
E3
Open Left
35
36
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
F3
Sakara High
Open
F#3
Sakara Low
Open
G3
Gankoqui High
Open
G#3
Gankoqui Low
Open
A3
Shekere 1
A#3
Shekere 2
B3
Oghene 3
FX
C4
Oghene 1
FX
C#4
Ekpiri
Roll A
D4
Ekpiri
Roll B
D#4
Sabar
Stick Closed
E4
Sabar
Open Hand
F4
Sabar
Stick Open
F#4
Talking Drum
Bend Down
G4
Talking Drum
Bend Up
G#4
Oghene 2
Mute
A4
Oghene 2
Open
A#4
B4
Udu
Slap Left
C5
Udu
Slap Left
C#5
Udu
Open 1
D5
Udu
Open 2
D#5
African Bombshell
E5
Log Drum
Low
F5
Log Drum
Hi A
F#5
Log Drum
Hi A
G5
Log Drum
Hi B
G#5
Log Drum
Hi B
A5
Log Drum
Hi C
A#5
Log Drum
Hi C
B5
Log Drum
Hi C
C6
Log Drum
Hi C
C#6A6
Log Drum
Hi C
Asian Kit
The Asian Kit includes a variety of percussion instruments found throughout the Far
East, including several sizes of taiko drum, Chinese cymbals, and Chinese and
Indonesian gongs.
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
B0
Open
C1
Large Taiko
Open
C#1
Large Taiko
Shell Stick
D1
Shimi Daiko
Rim Stick
D#1
Ensemble Claps 1
High 1
E1
Ensemble Claps 2
Low 1
F1
Open
F#1
Stick Closed
G1
Open
G#1
Open Stick
A1
Open
A#1
Open Stick
B1
Open
C2
Open
C#2
Soft/Medium/Hard
D2
Open
D#2
Medium Gong
Stick Open A
E2
Medium Gong
Mallet Open
F2
Medium Gong
Stick Open B
F#2
Chang Chang
Open
G2
Chinese Gong
Open Brush/Stick
G#2
Mallet
A2
Marching Strike
A#2
Chinese Tam-Tams
Brush Roll
B2
Chinese Gong
Open Mallet/Stick
C3
KenDang Small
Closed
C#3
KenDang Small
Flam
D3
KenDang Large
Slap
D#3
KenDang Large
Edge Hit
E3
KenDang Large
Open
F3
KenDang Small
Edge Hit
F#3
KenDang Small
Open
37
38
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
G3
Mute Stick
G#3
Mute Stick
A3
Closed/Open
A#3
Closed/Open
B3
Open
C4
Closed
C#4
Scrape/Hit
D4
Scrape/Hit
D#4
Scrape/Hit
E4
Stick
F4
Stick
F#4
G4
G#4
Stick
A4
Stick
A#4
Chang Chang
Closed
B4
Brush Open
C5
Chinese Tam-Tams
C#5
Chinese Tam-Tams
Open
D5
KenDang Large
Flam
D#5
Chinese Tam-Tams
Mallet Open
E5
Shimi Daiko
Stick Mute
F5
KenDang Large
Closed
F#5
KenDang Large
Bass Tone
G5
KenDang Small 2
Open
G#5
KenDang Small 2
Slap Mute
A5
Chang Chang
Ruff
A#5
Chinese Tam-Tams
Roll Long/Short
B5
Shimi Daiko
Open
C6
Ensemble Snaps 1
Open
Instrument
Playing method
E-1
Waterphone
Bowed
F-1
Waterphone
Bowed
F#-1
Waterphone
Bowed
G-1
Waterphone
Bowed
G#-1
Waterphone
Bowed
A-1
Waterphone
Bowed
A#-1
Waterphone
Bowed
B-1
Open
C0
Open
C#0
Side Stick
D0
Open
D#0
Open
E0
F0
Timpani
E Open
F#0
Power Toms
Open 1
G0
Timpani
A Open
G#0
Power Toms
Open 2
A0
Timpani
G Open
A#0
Timpani
C Open
B0
Bodhran
Open
C1
Tapan
Open
C#1
Bendir
Bass Mute
D1
Mediterranean Tambourine
Open
D#1
German Tambourine
Open
E1
Mediterranean Tambourine
Finger
F1
Open
F#1
Concert Cymbal
Stick Closed
G1
Open
G#1
Concert Cymbal
Extended Stick
A1
Open
A#1
Concert Cymbal
Open
B1
Open
39
40
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
C2
Open
C#2
Open
D2
Open
D#2
Stick Ride
E2
Thunder Sheet
Side Hit
F2
Stick Bell
F#2
Darbuka Large
Shell Hit
G2
Concert Cymbal
Closed/Open/Mute
G#2
Wah
A2
Egg Shakers
Long Roll 2
A#2
Tambourine
Shake Roll
B2
Stick/Jclaw
C3
Darbuka Small
Small/Finger
C#3
Darbuka Small
Open
D3
Darbuka Large
Finger
D#3
Darbuka Large
Mute
E3
Darbuka Large
Bass Tone
F3
Bendir
Finger
F#3
Bendir
Open
G3
Brake Drum
Edge
G#3
Brake Drum
Open
A3
Shake
A#3
Shake
B3
Ratchet
Short
C4
Racket
Long
C#4
Sus
D4
Sus
D#4
Bones
Open
E4
Boom Wacker Hi
Open
F4
Open
F#4
Italian Tambourine
Mute
G4
Italian Tambourine
Open
G#4
Air Tank 1
Open
A4
Air Tank 2
Open
A#4
Egg Shakers
Roll
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
B4
Sleigh Bells 1
Shake
C5
Sleigh Bells 2
Shake
C#5
Thunder Sheet
D5
Mute
D#5
Thunder Sheet
Bowed
E5
Tapan
Stick
F5
Finger Mute
F#5
Finger
G5
Bodhran
Mute
G#5
Bodhran
High Mute
A5
Italian Tambourine
Slap
A#5
Wind Chimes
Up/Down
B5
Open
C6
Mediterranean Tambourine
Mute
C#6
Wind Singer 1
Wurl
D6
Wind Singer 2
Wurl
Instrument
Playing method
C0
Tar
Finger
C#0
Tar
Harmonic Mute
D0
Tar
Edge Mute
D#0
Tar
Slap Mute
E0
Tar
Edge
F0
Tar
Harmonic Open
F#0
Tabla Large
Finger Mute
G0
Tabla Large
Slide 2
G#0
Tabla Small
Tet
A0
Tabla Large
Ka
A#0
Tabla Small
Na
B0
Tonbek
C1
Udu
C#1
Tonbek
Extended Technique
41
42
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
D1
Gaval
Slap
D#1
Daf
Side Hit
E1
Gaval
Edge
F1
Tabla Large
Slide
F#1
Tala Large
Closed
G1
Tabla Large
Ga
G#1
Tala Small
Closed
A1
Tablas
Dhin
A#1
Tala Large
Open
B1
Tablas
Dha
C2
Tabla Small
Tun
C#2
Shake
D2
Tabla Small
Tin
D#2
Elephant Bell
Open
E2
Daf
Side Hit 2
F2
Elephant Bell 2
Open
F#2
Riq
Jingle
G2
Daf
Quick Shake
G#2
Riq
Bass Tone
A2
Riq
Slap Mute
A#2
Riq Small
Jingle/Open
B2
Riq
Side Hit
C3
Kanjira Small
Mute
C#3
Kanjira Medium
Mute
D3
Kanjira Small
Open Mute
D#3
Kanjira Medium
Open
E3
Kanjira Small
Open
F3
Daf
Finger Edge
F#3
Daf
Bass Tone
G3
Riq Small
Finger Edge
G#3
Riq
Finger Edge
A3
Shake
A#3
Shake
B3
Riq Small
Edge Jingle
C4
Riq Small
Jingle Open
C#4
Riq Small
Mute Ruff
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
D4
Dumbek
Ruff
D#4
Dumbek
Slap Mute
E4
Dumbek
F4
Dumbek
F#4
Dumbek
Finger Mute
G4
Dumbek
Finger Edge
G#4
Tala
Closed
A4
Tala
Open
A#4
Riq Small
Jingle Mute
B4
Gaval
Edge Hand
C5
Elephant Bell
Open
C#5
Tar
Open
D5
Pakawaj
Din
D#5
Pakawaj
Open Tone
E5
Udu
Slap Mute
F5
Udu
F#5
Pakawaj
Tin
G5
Pakawaj
Closed
G#5
Pakawaj
Tak
A5
Tar
Harmonic Slide
A#5
Long Shake
B5
Gaval
Open
C6
Rig
Jingle Mute
43
Latin Kit
The Latin Kit includes a variety of percussion instruments from both Spain and Latin
America, including the surdo, bongos, timbales, agogo, guiro, Brazilian whistles, and
large and small berimbau.
44
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
C0
Repique De Mao
Mute
C#0
Repique De Mao
High Edge
D0
Repique De Mao
Open
D#0
Repinique
E0
Repinique
Stick Open
F0
Repinique
Open Hand
F#0
Zabumba
Stick
G0
Zabumba
Mute
G#0
Zabumba
Open
A0
Small Surdo
Open
A#0
Small Surdo
Mute
B0
Snare Cajon
Bass Mute
C1
Snare Cajon
Bass Open
C#1
Repique De Mao
Shell
D1
Snare Cajon
Slap + Grace
D#1
Repinique
Rim Open
E1
Snare Cajon
Mute Slap
F1
F#1
Up
G1
G#1
Accent
A1
A#1
Accent
B1
C2
C#2
Open A
D2
D#2
Flextone
Up
E2
Pandeiro
Roll
F2
Flextone
Up
F#2
Tambourine
G2
Flextone
Down
Note range
Instrument
G#2
Cowbell
Playing method
A2
A#2
Vibraslap
B2
Open Vibrato
C3
Bongo
High
C#3
Bongo
Low
D3
Low Conga
D#3
Low Conga
Open High
E3
Afro Conga
Open
F3
Timbale
Open High
Open Vibrato
F#3
Timbale
G3
Agogo
High
G#3
Agogo
Low
A3
Cabasa
A#3
Maracas
B3
Brazilian Hi Whistle
Short
C4
Long
C#4
Guiro
Short
D4
Lo Guiro
Long
D#4
Claves
E4
Afro-Latin Woodblock
High
F4
Afro-Latin Woodblock
Low
F#4
Cuica
High
G4
Cuica
Low
G#4
Triangle
Mute
A4
Triangle
Open
A#4
Caxixi
Medium
B4
Pandeiro
Heel
C5
Pandeiro
Open
C#5
Pandeiro
Slap
D5
Large Surdo
Mute
D#5
Large Surdo
Open
E5
Rebolo
Open
F5
Rebolo
F#5
Rebolo
Mute
G5
Large Cajon
Bass Mute
45
Note range
Instrument
Playing method
G#5
Large Cajon
Mute Slap
A5
Small Berimbau
Buzz Strike
A#5
Large Berimbau
Buzz Strike
B5
Large Berimbau
High Open
C6
Large Berimbau
C#6
Small Berimbau
High Open
D6
Small Berimbau
Low Open
D#6
Small Berimbau
c0
c1
c2
c3
c4
c5
Note: On most smaller music keyboards, you can access higher and lower octaves
using the keyboards octave up and octave down controls. See the instructions that
came with your keyboard.
Performance Tips
The Software Instruments and Apple Loops in World Music represent the state of the
art in sample-based digital audio technology. They are designed to provide an
extremely high level of sound quality while using your computers processor, memory,
and hard disk resources as efficiently as possible. By their nature, however, high-quality
samples like the ones in World Music require a certain level of processor power,
available memory, and hard disk speed for optimal performance.
This document provides tips on how to get the most out of the World Music
instruments and loops, and tells you what aspects of your computer setup might
produce the greatest effects on performance, depending on how you use World Music.
46
Add Memory
In general, Real Instrument loops (blue) are extremely efficient and require the least
amount of resources from your computer. The Software Instruments and Software
Instrument loops (green) in World Music require more processing power, as the sound
is being processed in real time. This is why Software Instruments and Software
Instrument loops require a computer with at least a G4 processor, and why Apple
recommends you have at least 1 GB of RAM to use World Music.
The simplest way to increase performancethat is, to be able to play songs with more
tracks and with more Software Instrumentsis to install more RAM in your computer.
For GarageBand and Logic users, adding RAM is an affordable investment that will
improve the performance of the high-quality instruments in World Music.
Lock Tracks
When you lock a Software Instrument track, the track is rendered to your computer's
hard disk. Playing the rendered track requires less processing power and less memory
than playing the Software Instrument track. By locking tracks, you trade processor
usage for hard disk usage. This can provide an increase in performance (especially on
computers with slower processors, or when you are using many instruments or effects,
which consume processing power), but locking many tracks can have an impact on
performance, especially on laptops or other computers with slower hard disk speeds
(or on computers with nearly full hard disks).