A percussion instrument is the steel drums.
A percussion instrument is a musical instrument that is sounded by being struck or scraped by a beater (including attached or enclosed beaters or rattles); struck, scraped or rubbed by hand; or struck against another similar instrument.
No it is not but there are instruments which belong to the chordophone family but at the same time the percussion family as well. An example of this is the Piano.
It's called a triangle.
The answer is relatively simple. Noise. Noise is the sound with no set pattern and no definite pitch
tambourine
That is a bass drum.
No it is an unpitched percussion.
The chimes have the highest pitch in the percussion family.
Depends on the percussion instrument. What kind?
The same as the difference between a tuned and un-tuned wind instrument or string instrument.
Percussion instruments such as timpani, xylophones, marimbas, vibraphones, bells, or chimes which have a definite pitch.
Percussion instruments such as timpani, xylophones, marimbas, vibraphones, bells, or chimes which have a definite pitch.
An untuned percussion instrument is one that has no specific pitch. It includes the wood block, triangle, tambourine and cymbals.
Yes, that means they are considered as Pitched Percussion.
A pitched percussion instrument play numerous pitches (i.e. xylophone), while nonpitched percussion instruments play one pitch (i.e. snare drum).
Untuned, because it doesn't play a specific pitch.