Wah-wah
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article deals with wah-wah in brass and electronic music. For other uses, see Wah wah.
Wah-wah is an imitative word (or onomatopoeia) for the sound of altering the resonance of musical notes to extend expressiveness, sounding much like a human voice saying the syllable wah. The wah-wah effect is a spectral glide, a "modification of the vowel quality of a tone" (Erickson 1975, p.72). Although this effect is thought of almost exclusively as the electric guitar wah-wah pedal, it is also used in other contexts, listed here.
Contents |
[edit] Wah-wah in trumpet and trombone playing
Although perhaps best known from the electric guitar's wah-wah pedal, the sound is much older, having been significantly developed by trumpet and trombone players using mutes in the early days of jazz.
Joe "King" Oliver recorded "Wawawa" in the '20s. Bubber Miley, Cootie Williams, trumpeters, and Tricky Sam Nanton, trombonist, of the Duke Ellington Orchestra pioneered in using plunger mutes ("plumber's helper") to create wah-wah sounds. The effect was used in the '30s on "Sugar Blues" by commercial Dixieland trumpter Clyde McCoy, who built a long career around the sound, and even today has a popular wah pedal by VOX named after him. "The Fat Man" the first hit by Fats Domino features Fats singing vocal trumpet wah-wah. Another New Orleans singer, Chuck Carbo frequently performs vocal wah-wah.
Karlheinz Stockhausen notates the use of the wa-wa mute in his Punkte (1952/1962) in terms of transitions between open to close using open and closed circles connected by a line (Erickson 1975, p.73).
Perhaps the most familiar use of the wah-wah sound by trumpets today is the Peanuts cartoons. In the majority of cartoons, adults didn't speak, the sound they produced was a wah-wah sound. The most well known is Charlie Brown's teacher.
[edit] Wah-wah in electronic music
In electronic music, wah-wah effects are easy to produce by controlling any number of filter types with a modulation envelope.
Wah-wah effects can also be achieved by using a vocoder to modulate an instrument sound, and speaking "wah-wah" into the modulation control input of the vocoder. The vocoder then impresses the formants of the spoken sound into the musical sound.
[edit] Source
- Erickson, Robert (1975). Sound Structure in Music. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02376-5.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Ever wondered what a Kazoo sounds like through wah-wah?