The Cymbals
No, cymbals are a metal percussion instrument that can be used by being clashed together or hit like a drum. A violin is a string instrument played with a bow.
Cymbals are percussion instruments that are played by clashing two metal discs together to create a loud, ringing sound.
Because it makes it's sound by being shaken or struck. That is the definition of a percussion instrument.
Percussion means striking or hitting. In firearms, a percussion cap is one which is fired by being struck or hit. In music, a percussion instrument is one which is played by striking or hitting it, like a drum or xylophone. In medicine, body percussion is obtaining information about body cavities by striking the body surface.
A piccolo is a woodwind instrument - it is operated by being blown into the mouthpiece. Percussion instruments ar operated by physically being beaten.
It is believed that the percussion triangle was invented in the 19th century by John C. A. Standish, a London instrument maker. The triangle is a simple percussion instrument consisting of a steel rod bent into a triangle shape.
Piano is from the Percussion Family. Other instruments in that family are:oCelesta oHarp oTimpani oSnare oSymbols oGlockenspiel The Percussion Family is more international than any other section in the orchestra. Just look at the variety of instruments! With most instruments in the Percussion Family people don't know who invented them or when. In ancient drawings it shows a timpani or African drums being played. But still, no one really knows.
The cymbal makes a sound by simply being clashed together with another cymbal.
woodwind please disregard the above answer, it is a type of percussion instrument.
No, a chordophone is not a percussion instrument. Chordophones produce sound by vibrating strings that are stretched between two points, such as a guitar or violin. Percussion instruments produce sound by being struck, shaken, or scraped.
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.