Lloyd Loar teaches musical acoustics in his Physics of Music class at Northwestern University.
Lloyd Loar explains how violin bridges work and how energy is sent to the soundboard.
Lloyd Loar taught a Physics of Music class on musical acoustics.
How violins, guitars, mandolins, and banjos produce sound.
Lloyd Loar explains how violin bridges work and how energy is sent to the soundboard.
Roger Siminoff

The Physics of Music, Lloyd Loar

Regular price $34.00 $0.00

The Physics of Music is a student's lab notebook from Professor Lloyd Loar's last class on musical acoustics at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois in the summer of 1943. The text and images have been faithfully reproduced. The notebook Includes 11 lectures on musical acoustics, vibrations of strings, resonance, "The Three Characteristics of Sound," ideals of tuned air chambers, and much more. The text is supported with supplementary notes by Roger Siminoff to help clarify certain terms and descriptions. The original illustrations were scanned to ensure that the drawings were as close as possible to what Loar may have chalked on the board. The notebook was given to Roger by Lloyd Loar's widow, Bertha Snyder Loar Westerberg.

Lloyd Loar (1886-1943) was a prominent musician and was the genius behind the development of Gibson's F5 mandolin, H5 mandola, L5 guitar, and the company's Mastertone banjo line. A wonderful treatise on the acoustics of acoustic string instruments. Spiral bound, 44 pages.

You may also enjoy reading The life and work of Lloyd Allayre Loar (available on this web site)