Comment le facteur d'instruments du musique à anche équilibre-t-il la production et le rayonnement?
Jury
-* DALMONT, Jean-Pierre, Université du Maine, Rapporteur
-* SHARP, David, Open University, Rapporteur
-* CHABASSIER, Juliette, INRIA, Examinateur
-* HELIE, Thomas, IRCAM, Examinateur
-* POCHEAU, Alain, Aix-Marseille Université, Examinateur, Président du jury
-* GUILLEMAIN, Philippe, CNRS, LMA, Directeur de thèse
-* KERGOMARD, Jean, CNRS, LMA, Invité
-* JOUSSERAND, Michael, Buffet Crampon, Invité
Abstract
The research goal of this dissertation is to evaluate how the tonehole
lattice cutoff frequency affects the sound production and radiation of
woodwind instruments. Below the cutoff, waves entering the tonehole
lattice are evanescent, where as above cutoff waves can propagate
freely within the lattice. Therefore, the low frequency response of
the resonator that determines the playing frequency of a woodwind is
set by the length between the reed and the first open tonehole, while
the high frequency response is governed by the remaining open
toneholes downstream on the instrument. A study of the cutoff
frequency that separates these two bands is, in effect, a study of how
this 'unused' portion of the tonehole lattice may influence the sound
of the instrument. Following the work of Benade in the 1960s, studies
on this subject have been rare, despite its central importance to the
sound of woodwind instruments. This dissertation includes analytical,
numerical, and experimental advances on the subject of the cutoff
frequency, approached in three published studies. In the first,
cylindrical academic resonators are analytically designed to have
specific cutoffs while maintaining the same first resonance frequency.
They are then compared using digital synthesis based on a physical
model of the instrument. The cutoff is found to have a modest impact
on sound production, evaluated using the pressure and flow waveforms
within the mouthpiece, where the greatest effect is a randomization of
the relative amplitude of even and odd harmonics above the cutoff.
There is little evidence that the `ease of playing' of the resonators
is affected by the cutoff. In the second study, the academic
resonators are played by a musician using a clarinet mouthpiece
during/ //in situ/ measurements. The radiated sound demonstrates a
`region of reinforced spectra,' for which there is an amplitude
increase of both even and odd harmonics around the cutoff of each
resonator. The third study derives the cutoff theory for conical
resonators and introduces new quantitative descriptors to estimate the
cutoff of acoustically irregular lattices. An analysis of the
saxophone demonstrates that the cutoff varies considerably over the
first register of the instrument. The results also demonstrate ways in
which the theory of wave propagation in periodic media can succeed or
fail when applied to real instruments. Preliminary results for two
additional studies are presented. In the first, the methods developed
for the saxophone are applied to another conical instrument, the
bassoon. The results show that, compared with the saxophone, the
cutoff of the bassoon is homogeneous across different fingerings of
the first register. In the second, the effect of diffraction from a
simplified resonator is evaluated using a boundary element method. The
results are compared with a simplified analytical radiation model and
anechoic measurements, showing that the more efficient simple model is
generally sufficient. This dissertation demonstrates ways in which the
cutoff affects both internal waveforms and, more importantly, the
radiated soundfield of woodwind-type instruments. It also advances the
theoretical basis for incorporating the cutoff into a tonehole lattice
conception, which is of practical use for instrument manufacturers.