Changing the vocal tract shape is one of the techniques which can be used by
the players of wind instruments to modify the quality of the sound. It has been
intensely studied in the case of reed instruments but has received only little
attention in the case of air-jet instruments. This paper presents a first study
focused on changes in the vocal tract shape in recorder playing techniques.
Measurements carried out with recorder players allow to identify techniques
involving changes of the mouth shape as well as consequences on the sound. A
second experiment performed in laboratory mimics the coupling with the vocal
tract on an artificial mouth. The phase of the transfer function between the
instrument and the mouth of the player is identified to be the relevant
parameter of the coupling. It is shown to have consequences on the spectral
content in terms of energy distribution among the even and odd harmonics, as
well as on the stability of the first two oscillating regimes. The results
gathered from the two experiments allow to develop a simplified model of sound
production including the effect of changing the vocal tract shape. It is based
on the modification of the jet instabilities due to the pulsating emerging jet.
Two kinds of instabilities, symmetric and anti-symmetric, with respect to the
stream axis, are controlled by the coupling with the vocal tract and the
acoustic oscillation within the pipe, respectively. The symmetry properties of
the flow are mapped on the temporal formulation of the source term, predicting
a change in the even / odd harmonics energy distribution. The predictions are
in qualitative agreement with the experimental observations