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Photo courtesy Gibson
Guitars
The Gibson J45
Rosewood is a classic acoustic
guitar.
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The guitar is
one of the most popular musical instruments
in use today, and it spans a huge range
of musical styles -- rock music, country
music and flamenco music all use the same
instrument to create wildly different
sounds. The guitar is an instrument that
has been around since the 1500s, but it
has undergone several big transformations
during its history. The development of
the electric guitar is the most obvious
recent mutation, and it had a huge effect
on the popularity of the guitar.
Whether you're
a musician or you simply enjoy listening
to music, have you ever stopped to think
about how a guitar works? What are frets
for? What does the big hole in the front
do? How does an electric guitar's pick-up
work? In this edition of HowStuffWorks,
we'll explore exactly how guitars make
music! You will also learn a good bit
about notes and scales in the process.
Guitar Parts
A guitar is a musical instrument
with a distinctive shape and a distinctive
sound. The best way to learn how a guitar
produces its sound is to start by understanding
all of the different parts that make
up the instrument. We'll start here
with the acoustic guitar and then look
at the electric guitar later in the
article.
A guitar
can be divided into three main parts:

Photo courtesy Gibson
Guitars
The body of a
Gibson SJ200 Vine acoustic guitar
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- The neck,
which holds the frets

Photo courtesy Gibson
Guitars
The neck of a
Gibson SJ200 Vine acoustic guitar
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- The head,
which contains the tuning pegs

Photo courtesy Gibson
Guitars
The head of a
Gibson SJ200 Vine acoustic guitar
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The most
important piece of the body is the soundboard.
This is the wooden piece mounted on
the front of the guitar's body, and
its job is to make the guitar's sound
loud enough for us to hear.

Photo courtesy Gibson
Guitars
The body of a
Gibson SJ200 Vine acoustic guitar
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In the soundboard
is a large hole called the sound
hole. The hole is normally round
and centered, but F-shaped pairs of
holes, as in a violin, are sometimes
seen. Attached to the soundboard is
a piece called the bridge, which
acts as the anchor for one end of the
six strings. The bridge has a thin,
hard piece embedded in it called the
saddle, which is the part that
the strings rest against.
When the
strings vibrate, the vibrations travel
through the saddle to the bridge to
the soundboard. The entire soundboard
is now vibrating. The body of the guitar
forms a hollow soundbox that amplifies
the vibrations of the soundboard. If
you touch a tuning fork to the
bridge of a guitar you can prove that
the vibrations of the soundboard are
what produce the sound in an acoustic
guitar. (The process in an electric
guitar is completely different, as described
later in this article.)
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Experiment
Are
you skeptical that the soundboard
is really amplifying the sound?
Try
this experiment:
- Tightly
seal a largish bowl with plastic
wrap as shown. (Tape the plastic
wrap to the sides of the bowl
to hold it in place if it is
not clinging very well.)
- Tape
a rubber band to the center
of the taut plastic wrap and
twang the rubber band.
- Compare
how loud the sound is to a plain
rubber band that is not taped
to plastic wrap.
It's
a big difference! The plastic wrap
greatly increases the amount of
surface area that is vibrating,
so the sound is much louder.
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The body
of most acoustic guitars has a "waist,"
or a narrowing. This narrowing happens
to make it easy to rest the guitar on
your knee. The two widenings are called
bouts. The upper bout
is where the neck connects, and the
lower bout is where the bridge
attaches.
The size
and shape of the body and the bouts
has a lot to do with the tone
that a given guitar produces. Two guitars
that have different body shapes and
sizes will sound a bit different. The
two bouts also affect the sound: If
you drop a pick into the body of a guitar
and rattle it back and forth in the
lower bout and then the upper bout,
you will be able to hear a difference.
The lower bout accentuates lower tones
and the upper bout accentuates higher
tones.
The face
of the neck, containing the frets, is
called the fingerboard. The frets
are metal pieces cut into the fingerboard
at specific intervals. By pressing a
string down onto a fret, you change
the length of the string and therefore
the tone it produces when it vibrates.
We'll talk a lot more about frets and
specific fret spacings later on.
Between the
neck and the head is a piece called
the nut, which is grooved to
accept the strings. From a musical standpoint,
the saddle and the nut act as the two
ends of the string. The distance between
these two points is called the scale
length of the guitar.
The strings
pass over the nut and attach to tuning
heads, which allow the player to
increase or decrease the tension on
the strings to tune them.
In almost
all tuning heads, a tuning knob turns
a worm
gear that turns a string post.
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