Transcript
rjXZzB5bUAo • This Is the Oldest, Weirdest Instrument On Earth
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Kind: captions Language: en there is a limestone cave in Western Virginia where one of its giant Chambers has been turned into a musical instrument they call it an organ but it's like no other organ on the planet it relies on electromechanical mallets steel bolts electric guitar pickups and the main vibrating material Limestone it's more technically referred to as a lithophone the only one of its kind in the world but people around here just call it the organ so veritasium producer Peter went to check it out we're going on the ground let's go can you tell me a little bit about the history of this place uh lay Caverns discovered 1878 and in fact to your right is where they first came in oh no way on August 13th 1878 a group of hunters felt a cool breeze coming from a small hole in the ground putting down their rifles they began to dig making a hole big enough for the smallest of them to fit through Andrew and Quint had only a candle for light as they lowered themselves down into the hole they spent the next few months exploring they kept finding giant Caverns connected by narrow passageways the ceilings and Floors were covered in stalactites and stalagmites they even found an underground Lake the cave system they had accidentally stumbled upon turned out to be the largest in the eastern United States covering 26 hectares it's now known as the Laray caverns and it's visited by half a million tourists each year that's dream Lake how still that water is and the reflection is just really something else the Oregon is one of the lower areas okay uh it's in a room called the cathedral a very large room yeah that makes sense and they used to have uh dances down there balls they used to call it the ballroom before the organ was put in oh no way so in the 1920s people would go down here and have oh yeah bowls and dances and well it was no it was a great place because it's air conditioned basically naturally so yeah that makes sense oh my God are you kidding me no way oh this is so gorgeous and there's the control panel for the organ that's the organ you're actually inside the organ right now the organ covers 3 and 1/2 acres okay all the notes are scattered out around us of course this was started in 1954 first played in 1957 okay so it took three years to get from yes welcome to the beautiful caverns of Laray and Laray Virginia and particularly to the great stalacpipe organ which is located in this great Cathedral likee structure which is 260 ft below the surface this organ is so huge that you stand not before it but within it in 1954 while on a tour of the caverns for his son's birthday Leland sprinkle a mathematician who worked at the Pentagon had an idea see during the tour the guide walked around with a small Mallet he would occasionally hit a stalic Tite producing a musical tone this was the start of sprinkle's three-year project to turn the cave into a musical instrument since you asked for it we shall be most happy to show you how we make music from the agent stalactites around us what he did is he walked around these Caverns with a ladder and climbing equipment and little mallets and little tuning forks and he would hit on stalactites and then when there was one that was close enough to concert pitch that he wanted he'd take a disc grinder and grind off the stall Tite until it came to the pitch that he wanted so this one should be middle CA stalic TI form very slowly in this cave they grow at around 16 cubic cm every 120 years the rate is dependent on the amount of water that flows so some stalactites grow quickly While others don't really grow at all they form as slightly acidic water flows through the ground it dissolves the Limestone and then redeposits it when it comes in contact with the air as the water drips to the ground it can also deposit the Limestone on the floor leading to a stall Mite sometimes over thousands of years the stalactite and stall Mite can fuse together forming a column you don't need to be living 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sponsoring this part of the video and now back to the cave if you tap on a stalic Tite then like a tuning fork it vibrates at its resonant frequency that frequency depends on the size and shape of the stalactite bigger stalic ties make lower notes and it also depends on the elastic modulus of the material in this case it's all lime Stone so to adjust the resonant frequencies sprinkle shaved a bit off the end of some stall tis putting them into concert pitch the organ wasn't connected to the console when we visited so Peter didn't get a chance to play it but Rob Scallan who has a great YouTube channel made a video about it a couple years ago we asked him what it's like to play a cave it's hard to describe the feeling of playing a cave [Music] it's very like grounding very surreal very beautiful you know if I'm being romantic about it you can you can hear the eons and eons and eons of time that were needed to create this [Music] thing the cave is of course huge and all the notes are in different places so some are further away some are closer some are Amplified near you some aren't and I love Reverb and the amount of Reverb in this room is just so immense and the notes are so pure and beautiful and they're in different places so they like have different Reverb it's a very like hauntingly beautiful type of [Music] sound as you can see there's also the solenoid that is basically a mallet after the tuning has been completed we design a custombuilt bracket to which we attach an electrically operated plunger this plunger with its rubber tip strikes the stalactite causing it to vibrate since different musical stalactites are far away from each other and their volume variable sprinkle Amplified the vibrations he could have used microphones but in the 1950s those weren't particularly robust so instead he borrowed an idea from a piece of technology in Ed in the 1930s the electric guitar pickup a guitar pickup is a coil of wire wrapped around a magnet when a steel guitar string vibrates near it it interacts with the magnetic field which induces a current in the wire it doesn't work with non-metal guitar strings the thing that's vibrating needs to be ferromagnetic sprinkle added a steel bolt to each of his musical stall ties and then used a pickup to detect the vibrations these signals are Amplified mix and played back through speakers you also got to consider the weight of the bolt that goes in too oh right yeah but the guitar pickups created an unexpected Problem Radio interference I don't know exactly how it works but one of the keys was picking up a local radio station which actually turned it into a sampler it was a really fun part of the video and actually sounded pretty cool that happens with electronic instruments sometimes even caves [Music] what is that it happens every time I hit that [Music] key I'm like turning on the radio it is you're FM signal you oh my gosh that is what it is getting so the radio is here I thought like is that a human voice like is that that would be the AM radio AM station across the street if they were tuned in you know 1957 have they become longer and hands gone out of tune well he tried to pick stalactites that are inactive that aren't growing anymore is what he tried to do but but if he found stalactites that were growing because I'm seeing like a little bit of water right like there's a little bit of growth happening and you'll see that and that that comes and goes U but uh we've never had to retune one yet like I love the idea that there's an organ that could grow out it could because of how stalles grow I don't think it'll be in my lifetime but it could but if he if he chose one if he chose a bunch that weren't inactive right it would be Out Of Tune already oh yeah if they were completely active it would be that's so cool it's very mad scientists he definitely couldn't get away with it now like going into a place like this and then just starting to shave off the stalactites that took eons to be created by Nature thankfully it stays in tune cuz they can't continue shaving off the parts of this cave this is just such a strange and beautiful and kind of insane project to take this gorgeous Cavern and make it even more beautiful by turning into a musical instrument this structure has been being created drop by drop for an unfathomable amount of years and that's pretty all inspiring what [Music]