Handheld Polyphonic Musical Wind Instrument
20210256944 · 2021-08-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10H2220/221
PHYSICS
G10H2230/211
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A handheld polyphonic free reed and electronic musical wind instrument that has ergonomic advantages over similar instruments. Multiple parallel rows of keys each an octave apart allow for sufficient range for most melodies and chord progressions while the hands remain stationary on the instrument and the fingers of both hands work in unison. The keyboard is separated into groups of keys intended for the left and right hands.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A musical instrument comprising a polyphonic keyboard wherein the keyboard has at least two parallel sequential rows of keys with the closest adjacent keys between the parallel sequential rows corresponding with musical notes one octave apart by pitch.
22. A musical instrument as in claim 21 wherein the musical instrument is a free reed wind instrument.
23. A musical instrument comprising a polyphonic keyboard wherein the keyboard has one sequential row of keys segmented into at least two groups of keys.
24. A musical instrument as in claim 23 wherein the musical instrument is a free reed wind instrument.
25. A musical instrument comprising a polyphonic keyboard wherein the keyboard has at least two parallel sequential rows of keys with the closest adjacent keys between the sequential parallel rows corresponding with musical notes one octave apart by pitch and the keyboard is segmented into at least two groups of keys.
26. A musical instrument as in claim 25 wherein the musical instrument is a free reed wind instrument.
27. A musical instrument as in claim 25 wherein any two of the adjacent groups of keys together span a musical alphabet including sharps and flats with one of the groups of keys spanning the first half of the musical alphabet starting on any letter, approximately, and the other group of keys spanning the remaining half of the musical alphabet, approximately.
28. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising additional redundant keys for Unproved fingering.
29. A musical instrument as in claim 25 wherein the groups of keys are positioned side-by-side.
30. A musical instrument as in claim 25 wherein there are two parallel rows of keys per group and the parallel sequential rows of keys within each group are mirror images of each other.
31. A musical instrument as in claim 25 wherein the keys that are for natural musical notes do not physically overlap the keys that are for sharp/flat musical notes.
32. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising a body that is sufficiently small so as to be handheld.
33. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising a mouthpiece.
34. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising a neck.
35. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising a hose.
36. A musical instrument as in claim 26 further comprising: an opening into which air is blown; a chamber wherein air blown into the opening results in pressurizing of the chamber; a plurality of free reeds that vibrate to produce sound; a plurality of channels through which air exits the chamber when the keys are pressed wherein the pressurized air sounds at least one of the plurality of free reeds corresponding to the keys pressed; at least one reed plate to which the plurality of free reeds are attached; a reed pan containing the channels and to which the chamber, the at least one reed plate, and the keys are attached.
37. A musical instrument as in claim 36 further comprising: an additional plurality of free reeds wherein individual additional free reeds sound when air is drawn out of the opening and the corresponding key is pressed; a plurality of flaps wherein individual flaps prevent air from traveling past free reeds in the unintended direction of air travel.
38. A musical instrument as in claim 26 further comprising at least one microphone for the purposes of amplifying the sound produced by the instrument.
39. A musical instrument as in claim 25 further comprising: an opening into which air is blown; at least one breath sensor for detecting the characteristics of air blown into the opening; a plurality of key sensors for detecting the pressing of keys; a system for gathering data from the at least one breath sensor and plurality of key sensors and outputting the resulting notes and intended sound characteristics.
40. A musical instrument as in claim 39 further comprising; a mouthpiece with at least two separate air channels, each of which leads to a breath sensor; a system that receives the breath sensors' outputs and, depending on their differences, determines the pitch of the notes to be sounded.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016]
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[0020]
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[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0025] The current invention is an ergonomic handheld polyphonic keyed musical wind instrument including a version that produces sound via free reeds and another that produces sound electronically. The term ergonomic in this context is used to state that the instrument is more comfortable and convenient to play certain musical pieces in certain situations than similar instruments that have preceded it. The term handheld in this context means that it can be played while being held in the hands, though it may also be played in other ways. The term polyphonic in this context means that multiple notes can be sounded simultaneously. The term keyed in this context means that keys, or buttons (a word used interchangeably with the word ‘keys’ throughout this patent), are used to determine which notes will be played. The term wind in this context means that the movement of air, mainly via breath though possibly other means, causes the reeds to sound. The term free reed in this context means thin strips of material fixed to a surface that produce sound through vibration, much the same as in harmonicas and accordions. The term electronic in this context means sound will be produced electronically rather than through the vibration of free reeds and the types of electronic instruments include digital, MIDI, synthesizer, and software emulated.
[0026] In the configuration of the invention that is most similar to a preceding instrument, the melodica, the main difference is that instead of a single sequential row of keys, there are two sequential rows of keys 1, 2, with each key in the first row 3 being for a note one octave apart by pitch as the note corresponding with adjacent key in the second row 4 as in
[0027] The benefit of having two parallel rows of keys one octave apart as opposed to a single row is that twice the pitch range is available in a single hand position, allowing for the playing of musical pieces requiring a greater pitch range without having to reposition the hands. And large chords require minimal reaching. Also beneficial is that the voicing of chords can be altered by simply moving a finger to the adjacent key in the parallel row. Furthermore, given hand position remains constant, the fingers of both hands can be utilized and they may also become specialized for playing specific notes, which may be advantageous for playing certain kinds of music.
[0028] The spacing between keys within a row for the current invention is similar to a conventional keyboard (though actually the same as some melodicas) such that the four fingers of one hand can reach approximately seven keys without the hand being repositioned. This number is useful because there are twelve keys per octave in the chromatic scale, plus one if the chromatic scale is to end on a note exactly one octave above the starting note, and so the fingers of both hands, when one hand is positioned immediately after the other, together can reach, without repositioning the hands, a full one octave chromatic scale with one key to spare (twice this when also considering the second parallel row of keys). More importantly, there are eight notes in a major or minor scale which is the same as the number of fingers, and it is convenient to be able to play a full scale with one finger per note without repositioning the hands.
[0029] If more range is required for a musical piece, the hand(s) can still be repositioned further along the instrument keyboard (
[0030] One drawback of the invention as described thus far is that the large number of densely spaced keys can be challenging to become familiar with. One solution covered in this patent is the separation of keys into groups. A gap may be left between groups of keys intended for the left and right hands 5, 6 and groups may be placed end-to-end or side-by-side (
[0031] Groups of keys intended for the left hand consist of keys for half of a musical alphabet of notes including sharps and flats, approximately, while groups of keys intended for the right hand consist of keys for the remaining half of the same musical alphabet of notes including sharps and flats, approximately. For example, using the Latin musical alphabet system, groups of keys for the left hand may consist of the note letters A, B, C and D and sharps and flats while groups of keys for the right hand consist of note letters E, F, G, and A including sharps and flats. The repeated A is added to the groups for the right hand so that the eight fingers can play a complete eight note scale with each finger responsible for one note. Adjacent keys between parallel rows within groups are of the same note letter, just pitched an octave apart. In addition to the Latin musical alphabet system, any other musical alphabet system may be used.
[0032] The pitch of the keys within groups may either descend or ascend from pinky finger to ring finger, and the direction may differ between groups intended for the left and right hands to suit the familiarities of a piano or wind instrument musician (
[0033] The instrument may be built in various musical keys and voice ranges. For example, a tenor C version with two parallel rows of keys in each group and an overall range of two octaves (
[0034] The keys for the right hand 11 would then be G3, A3, B3, C4 and sharps/flats on the first row and G4, A4, B4, C5 and sharps/flats for the second row.
[0035] Adjacent keys between parallel rows may be mirror images of each other, either back-to-back or front-to-front. Back-to-back may be preferable (contact regions of white keys are closer to the mirror plane than the contact regions of the black keys) for ease of playing (
[0036] White keys (naturals) on a piano overlap the black keys (sharps/flats), creating a larger white key surface for the fingers to strike. This makes sense given white keys are played more commonly and at earlier stages in musical education. The keys of a melodica are arranged similarly. The downside to this overlapping is that the fingers need to stretch further to reach the black keys. This is fine for a single sequential row of keys as on a piano or melodica where the hand is regularly repositioned relative to the instrument. But for two or more parallel sequential rows and without regular repositioning of the hands, as is intended in the current invention, the additional necessity to reach with the fingers is problematic. Hence, in one configuration of the current invention, the white keys do not overlap the black keys (
[0037] There are three configurations for the connection of the mouthpiece in the current invention (
[0038] The invention may be supported in various ways (
[0039] In the version of the invention that employs vibrating reeds to produce sound, air enters a mouthpiece and passes into a chamber 15 formed by the chamber body 25 and bottom of the reed pan 26, pressuring the chamber (
[0040] In the configuration where the invention takes the form of an electronic, digital, synthesizer, MIDI, and/or software emulated instrument, the note being played is determined by sensing what button (the word button is used interchangeably with key here) is pressed. The volume and other characteristics of the notes are determined from the characteristics of the key-strike and/or via a breath pressure sensor. Both in and out breath can be detected so as to allow the musician to continue playing whether breathing in or out.
[0041] In addition to existing functions, inputs, and outputs on electronic/digital/synthesizer/MIDI/software instruments, the current invention also may have transpose buttons that can transpose notes played by one octave increments (applied to buttons for either hand or both hands), allowing the musician to switch between bass, tenor, alto, soprano, and other versions of the instrument quickly. These buttons 27 may be conveniently located for the thumbs to reach (
[0042] The electronic version of the invention may take a modular form (
[0043] The electronic version of the invention may also incorporate a novel breath control sensor (