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Saturday, August 30, 2008

Overblowing

Overblowing is producing a different note in a wind instrument by forcing air harder. This can be a deliberate technique to get additional notes, or an inadvertant problem which results in notes other than those intended.

Overblowing with bagpipes

With bagpipes, overblowing is a problem that arises when playing the bagpipes. A phenomenon perhaps unique to piping, it is the most common reason for unsteady tone.

When a piper plays, a rhythm is set up between blowing into the blowstick and squeezing the bag. Often, a piper will oversqueeze the bag while still exhaling, causing the pipe to vary its tone. This problem can be fixed in a number of ways:

1) Using a slightly harder reed, or modifying the existing one to take more air.
2) Practicing with a manometer to increase steadiness.



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