free-reed instrument
Noun: A musical instrument classified as a wind instrument that produces sound by means of a freely vibrating reed (a thin piece of material, often cane or metal) that is not pressed against a mouthpiece or other surface. The pitch is controlled by the player's breath and, in many instruments, by opening or closing finger holes or keys.
The term "free-reed instrument" is used to categorize a specific family of musical instruments based on their sound production mechanism. * The harmonica is a common example of a free-reed instrument. * Accordions and concertinas are also free-reed instruments.
- The term is primarily used in academic, organological (the study of musical instruments), or descriptive musical contexts to distinguish these instruments from those with beating reeds (like clarinets or saxophones) or lip-vibrated instruments (like trumpets).
- It can be used attributively as a compound adjective, e.g., "free-reed instrument family" or "free-reed mechanism."
- Free reed (noun phrase): The specific component—the vibrating tongue—that defines the instrument family.
- The sound is generated by a free reed.
- Reed instrument (noun phrase): A broader category that includes both free-reed instruments (e.g., harmonica) and single/double-reed instruments (e.g., oboe, clarinet).
- Reed instrument (though this is a broader hypernym).
- Wind instrument with a free reed (descriptive synonym).
The term "free-reed instrument" does not have significantly different meanings. Its meaning is specific to musical instrument classification. The core concept is always the presence of a reed that vibrates freely within a frame, as opposed to beating against another surface.
There are no common idioms or phrasal verbs specifically associated with the term "free-reed instrument." It is a technical, descriptive term.
- a wind instrument with a free reed