Frame (musical instrument)
In various musical instruments, the frame or frame parts are those components of the body that form its side wall or side walls. Musical instruments that have ribs include
- various percussion instruments , such as many styles of drums as well
- String and plucked instruments , such as the families of violins and viols, as well as guitars . With these, the frames of cheaper instruments consist of veneer strips (about 1 mm to 3 mm thick), onto which the top and bottom of the body are glued. With higher-quality instruments, the frames are also made of solid wood. They have a different height depending on the type of instrument. The lower part is usually the lower floor and the upper part the upper floor . The neck is used in the latter . On string instruments and on most guitars with hollow bodies, the frame consists of many parts that are held together by corner blocks . If all frames are glued together, one speaks of a frame wreath . The ribs and possibly the sound post transmit the vibrations of the top to the back of the instrument.
- As a protective and decorative element, strips (as binding ) are placed on the frames (as well as on other edges) of musical instruments .
Individual evidence
- ^ Tony Bacon, Paul Day: The Ultimate Guitar Book. Edited by Nigel Osborne, Dorling Kindersley, London / New York / Stuttgart 1991; Reprint 1993, ISBN 0-86318-640-8 , p. 188.