Terms - H
H
habanera
habituel
Hail Columbia
Hail to the Chief
hair
hairpin
halb
Halbe
halbe Pause
Halbenote
half
half cadence
half close cadence
half note
half rest
half step
half-diminished seventh chord
half-pedal
Hallelujah
Hals
hammer
hammer dulcimer
Hammerclavier
hammond organ
hampe
hand
hand bell
Handäoline
Handel-Werke-Verzeichnis
Handharmonika
Harfe
harmonic
harmonic minor scale
harmonic series
harmonica
harmonica de verre
harmonics
harmonium
harmony
Harmony, Inc.
harp
harpe
harpe à pédales simples
harpsichord
hausse
haut
hautbois
hay
haye
Hb.
head
head arrangement
head chart
head voice
Headboard
heavy metal
heel
heftig
heitere Oper
Heldentenor
helicon
hemidemisemiquaver
hemidemisemiquaver rest
hemiola
heptachord
heptatonic scale
herald trumpet
hertz
Hesses
heterophonic
heterophony
hexachord
hexachordum durum
hexachordum molle
hexachordum naturale
hey
heye
hi-hat
hidden fifths
hidden octaves
High Mass
hillbilly music
hip-hop
Hirtenpfeife
His
Hisis
historical edition
Hoboe
hoboy
hocket
hold
Holzbläser
Holzblasinstrument
Holzblock
Holzblocktrommel
Holzklapper
homophonic
homophony
homorhythm
hopak
horn
Hornbostel, Erich Moritz von
Hornbostel-Sachs
hornpipe
house
Hp.
Hrp.
huitième de soupir
hum
hum note
humoresca
Humoreske
humoresque
Hundert und achtundzwanzigstel
Hundert und achtundzwanzigstelnote
Hundert und achtundzwanzigstelpause
Hungarian school
hurdy-gurdy
hustle
HWV
hymn
Hymne
Hymne
hyperaeolian
Hz
Hornbostel-Sachs
[German]
This is a system used to classify all musical instruments. This system was created by Erich Moritz von Hornbostel and Curt Sachs. The Hornbostel-Sachs system is based on how an instrument vibrates to produce sound. Even though the system has been criticized and revised over the years, it is the most widely accepted system of musical instrument classification used by organologists and ethnomusicologists.
The system was first published in 1914 with a revised English translation in 1961. Other classification systems date back to the 4th century B.C. The Chinese classified instruments by the material that they were constructed from (stone, wood, silk, etc.). The idea was originally conceived by the Hindus in the 1st century B.C. They created four main groups, vibrating strings, vibrating air columns, percussion instruments made of wood or metal and percussion instruments made with skin heads. Later, the Greeks used a similar system to classify their musical instruments. Organologists such as Martin Agricola then refined the system even further by dividing stringed instruments into the pluckedand bowed categories. In the late 19th century, Victor Mahillon, curator of the Brussels Conservatory musical instrument collection, adopted and refined this system. Although his system was limited to the serious instruments of Western music, he used the four groups of strings, winds, drums and other percussion. By expanding on Mahillon's system, Hornbostel-Sachs made it possible to classify any instrument from any culture.
The original Hornbostel-Sachs system classified instruments into four main categories. The fifth category is a later revision to include the latest technologies in music performance. Within each category are many subgroups with a formal structure based on the Dewey Decimal classification system. The basic categories of the system are listed below, and a more complete version of the system is found in the appendix. (Musical Instrument Classifications).
- 1 - Idiophones:
- Instruments which produce sound by vibrating themselves.
- 2 - Membranophones:
- Instruments which produce sound by a vibrating membrane.
- 3 - Chordophones:
- Instruments which produce sound by vibrating strings.
- 4 - Aerophones:
- Instruments which produce sound by vibrating columns of air.
- 5 - Electrophones:
- Instruments which produce sound electronically.
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Last Updated: 2013-05-01 17:30:28