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CrowdScience

Can you play the guitar underwater?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 12 December 2025

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Smashing up guitars is a classic rock star activity, but how about drowning them? 7-year-old listener Cornelius has set CrowdScience a challenge: to find out what happens if you play a guitar underwater. Could this be the next avant-garde music sensation?

Host and amateur musician Caroline Steel tackles Cornelius’ question with the help of one increasingly soggy guitar. The UK’s National Physical Laboratory is our first port of call, with a guitar-sized water tank at the ready, and acoustic scientists Dr Freya Malcher and Ben Ford helping tackle our questions.

Since an acoustic guitar’s sound is amplified by its internal chamber, what happens as that chamber starts to fill with water? How about if the whole guitar - strings, body and all - is submerged? What difference does it make if our ears are listening above or below the water? And can special water-adapted microphones help us explore this unusual question, before our guitar disintegrates?

Our guitar then heads off on tour to Denmark, where the band Between Music have teased out questions just like these for their underwater music project, Aquasonic. We talk to violinist and Innovative Director Robert Karlsson, and singer Nanna Bech, who also plays a unique subaquatic instrument. With their help, we discover how to get the best out of a submerged guitar, and find out whether other instruments are better suited to the life aquatic. Presenter: Caroline Steel

Producers: Cathy Edwards and Florian Bohr

Editor: Ben Motley

National Physical Laboratory: Underwater Acoustics - https://www.npl.co.uk/research/underwater-acoustics

Between Music: Aquasonic - https://www.betweenmusic.dk/aquasonic

Photo – Caroline Steel and Nanna Bech in an Aquasonic aquarium playing a guitar. Copyright BBC.

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts.

0:07.0

My Christmas Mix is pure 90s festive nostalgia.

0:11.1

You know, the Christmas songs you listen to on repeat.

0:14.0

Ho!

0:14.3

Ho! Ho! No, no, no.

0:17.5

I'm all about the big hitting Christmas anthems.

0:20.4

Come on, guys. What about those tunes that really slay? It's Christmas kitchen disco season, surely.

0:26.4

Give me hip-hip-hop Christmas bangers every day. Those Christmas tracks that are straight out of lapland.

0:30.9

Get all kinds of Christmassy. Just search Christmas music on BBC Sounds.

0:38.1

Welcome to Crowd Science from the BBC World Service, where we're taking you into an underwater world.

0:46.8

Filled with odd sounds and bizarre inventions.

0:51.9

Such a strange experience.

0:56.2

We're the show that explores your weird and wonderful science questions,

1:00.8

and this time we have a question from seven-year-old Cornelius in Berlin, Germany.

1:06.5

He wants to know...

1:07.7

If it's possible to play guitar under water.

1:11.9

It's such a good question.

1:14.1

Can you remember what made you think of that question?

1:16.9

Because guitars vibrate and the hole helps it make louder,

1:22.3

so if water's in, I wasn't sure if the sound could go into the horn vibrate that well.

1:28.7

So you're wondering if without the air, when the guitar hole fills with water, whether it

1:34.0

will still make a sound?

...

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