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Which Instruments Make Those Spooky Sounds?

Get ready for Halloween with musical instruments that make those spooky sounds.

With Halloween just around the corner, you have likely been nibbled by the scary soundtracks in horror movies and want to play similar spooky sounds for the terrifying holidays.

No matter if you enjoy watching horror movies or going to ghostly houses at Halloween, spooky sounds and music will play an important role in every thrilling experience. Scary sounds at Halloween are as crucial as those spooky costumes.

Think about the last horror movie you watched! What made the movie so scary? Perhaps, the sounds accentuated the scenes in the movie, making it eerie, so much so that the hairs on your arms rose, and your body shivered.

So, how do you emulate those frightening sounds to create mysterious scenes at Halloween? Or you might just be wondering as to which instruments make those spooky sounds that you hear in Halloween audios.

Well, it all comes down to the instruments used to make spooky sounds. Here are the instruments used to make those spooky Halloween sounds.

Waterphone

Waterphone has been used to create spooky sounds in many of the best horror movies. Image credit: Hangklang

Used to create spooky sounds in many of the best horror movies to date, the waterphone creates sounds like those of dolphins and whales. In fact, this instrument was used to call Orcas off Canada’s western coast in 1979, and it accomplished the task successfully. 

This instrument uses water to generate spooky sounds, but that’s not why it is called waterphone. Waterphone gets its name from its creator Richard Waters. This instrument is a combination of a water drum and Mbira, which is a thumb piano originating from Africa. 

Richard Waters had patented the instrument and built each waterphone by hand, except the knockoffs. Today, Brooks Hubbard builds the waterphones. Waters made him his successor for manufacturing the waterphone. The sounds are as spooky and original today as they were at the time of Waters.  

The waterphone can be played with mallets. You can even use a bow to generate extended, spine-chilling, and unrelenting sounds with it. Waterphone is a perfect companion to push your Halloween experience to the next level.

Theremin

The sounds of theremin are so creepy that it makes people quiver. Image credit: Hutschi

Originated in Russia, Theremin is an early electronic instrument the wounds of which you can consider using this Halloween to make people quiver. Playing this instrument is as eerie as the sounds it creates. The weird fact about theremin is that it is played without any physical contact with the instrument.

Mostly, the theremin is used in movies that involve scenes of aliens. At a time when radio was the main media, Leon Theremin patented the theremin in 1928. Alexandra Stepanoff was the first person who was an expert in playing the theremin. She would skillfully control the note with one hand and the volume with the other.

With the theremin, you just move your hands, and the antenna catches the signal and then reacts by generating sounds. One of your hands will pick the note, whereas you can use the other to give the sounds some fast or slow turns. You can even create a vibrato effect with the theremin.

Meanwhile, many bands and orchestras are still using the theremin when its time to create some creepy sounds. However, it is still famous primarily for making spooky sounds in horror movies.

Pipe Organ

Pipe organ’s sound is naturally haunting. Image © Jorge Royan / http://www.royan.com.ar / 

CC BY-SA 3.0

When it comes to Halloween, the pipe organ is yet another classical instrument that creates some of the spookiest sounds enough to raise your hair and shiver your body.

This ancient keyboard instrument’s sound is inherently haunting, and it is widely used in churches. Its history dates back to the time of Ancient Greece. It has been used to create sounds for many movies, including Pirates of the Caribbean.

To generate sounds with this instrument, you must pass pressurized air through the organ pipes that are designated with the help of the keys. Since each pipe generates one pitch, the pipes are arranged in groups called ranks. Each rank has a joint resonance and volume.

Blaster Beam

You might not have seen it, but if you have watched a horror movie, chances are you have already heard the spooky sounds of the Blaster Beam. This instrument is also responsible for many of the scary sounds that you might have heard in Halloween audios.

The Blaster Beam is a huge stringed, electric musical instrument, measuring around 12-18 feet in length and made up of about 24 piano strings and portable pick-ups. What makes its sounds so creepy and frightening is the exclusive bass tone.

First designed by John Lazelle in the 1970s, the Blaster Beam was taken mainstream by Francisco Lupica. Lupica built many Beams using iron bars and even launched an album called “The Cosmic Beam Experience.”

Ondes Martenot

Used to create spooky sounds in Ghostbusters and There Will Be Blood, Ondes Martenot is an old electronic musical instrument that originated during the First World War.  It generates some of the haunting sounds that you might have heard in Halloween audios and horror movies.

It gets its name from its inventor Maurice Martenot. This instrument takes inspiration from the theremin and organ. It uses oscillators to generate those scary sounds. You can play it with a keyboard or by driving a ring along a wire.

Apprehension Engine

The Apprehension Engine is a musical instrument made exclusively for generating spooky sounds that would put you at the edge of your seat when watching a horror movie.

Designed by Tony Duggan-Smith, this new machine is made of bowed metal rulers, a string, with an enclosed ebow, a spring reverb, and a few long metallic bars and magnets.

This instrument is now widely used to create spooky Halloween sounds.

Final Thoughts

There is a lot of variation when it comes to the instruments used to make those creepy Halloween sounds. However, in most cases, the instruments explained above are used to create those haunting sounds. Much of the eeriness of the sounds depends on how these instruments are played.  

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