Technically any "motion" that involves striking the percussion instrument will produce some form of sound. However, the technique to produce the best sound varies from instrument to instruments. For example, a triangle is hit with a metal triangle beater while a marimba can be played with yarn, rubber, latex, or plastic marimba mallets. The "motion" involved in playing percussion instruments also changes, depending on the type of instrument as well as the preferred technique. One example is on snare drum. Some people use a stroke that generates from the lower back muscles while other individuals isolate the wrist when striking the drum.
It is in the Percussion Family because you should hit it to be able to create a sound or music.
Gongs are percussion instruments. In Mahillon's classification system, they are idiophones ("self-sounding") since the entire instrument vibrates to create the sound.
A piano is both a percussion instrument and a string instrument. Inside a piano, tiny hammers strike strings to make pitches. It is a string instrument in that the strings are what vibrate to make the sound, but it is a percussion instrument in that it has a keyboard and strikes to make sound.
To play percussion, simply hit something to make noise.
Any instrument that requires striking to produce a sound is considered a percussion instrument; therefore, since a guitar requires striking by a pick or the finger, this would classify it as a percussion instrument. A string instrument produces a sound through vibrating the strings in a strumming motion with a bow (i.e. cello, violin, bass). A string instrument can be used as a percussion if the musician changes the format from strumming with a bow to striking or plucking. This has been seen commonly when an upright bass is used in jazz or when a violinist plucks the strings. A Guitar is classified as a stringed instrument, not a percussion instrument. It can be plucked to strummed as well as bowed and other methods related to a stringed instrument. A piano is classified as a percussion instrument because the only way to play a piano is to strike it with a mallet which is operated by keys.
It is in the Percussion Family because you should hit it to be able to create a sound or music.
No, they are two different families of musical instruments. Brass instrument produce sound by the vibration of air though a mouthpiece created by the vibration of the player's lips. A percussion instrument produces sound by being struck, scraped, or rubbed by the player's hand or against another instrument to create sound.
A maraca creates sound when the percussion instrument is shaken, causing the beads or seeds inside to hit the walls of the hollow container. This shaking motion produces vibrations that result in the distinctive rattling sound associated with maracas.
The term is "percussion instrument" (makes sound when struck).
Cymbals are percussion instruments that are played by clashing two metal discs together to create a loud, ringing sound.
Gongs are percussion instruments. In Mahillon's classification system, they are idiophones ("self-sounding") since the entire instrument vibrates to create the sound.
A piano is both a percussion instrument and a string instrument. Inside a piano, tiny hammers strike strings to make pitches. It is a string instrument in that the strings are what vibrate to make the sound, but it is a percussion instrument in that it has a keyboard and strikes to make sound.
Because it makes it's sound by being shaken or struck. That is the definition of a percussion instrument.
The piano is a percussion instrument because it has hammers inside it which strike the strings. A percussion instrument is one where something is hit to make a sound.
The piano is a percussion instrument because it has hammers inside it which strike the strings. A percussion instrument is one where something is hit to make a sound.
Any instrument that involves striking, hitting, or scraping to produce sound is a percussion instrument, so yes.
Some percussion instruments that do not produce definite pitches include the snare drum, bass drum, and tambourine. These instruments create sound through the vibration of the instrument itself or the impact of a material on the instrument, resulting in a non-pitched or indeterminate sound.