there is a lever. pull or push to change it
It sounds like you're trying to answer a question for school. I can tell you that there is no way to give this question a short answer. You'll need to present a good discussion of the music in terms of melody, rhythm, timbre, and dynamics. I'd like to lead you in a couple different directions. Melody: Does the melody repeat or change? How does it make you feel? How many melodies are there? Is there a main melody with countermelodies? Is there a melody at all? Does the melody go high and low or stay relatively static? Rhythm: Is rhythm used to create a groovy dance-feel? Is it repetitive or does it change often? Is it complex and sporadic, or can you tap your foot to it? If you can determine the time signature, what is it, and does it change? Timbre (the "color" or "tone" of the sound): What different timbres do you hear (what different instruments are there)? Does the timbre change during melodies or stay the same? What about the accompaniments? Does the timbre of certain instruments make them stick out more or fade into the background? Dynamics (different degrees of loudness): Are there contrasting dynamics? How loud does the music go? How soft does it go? Does the piece or performance demonstrate a full range of dynamics? If you would like my opinions and ideas on this topic, send me an e-mail at tyler.p.kundinger@lawrence.edu Hope this gets you thinking in the right direction!
The plural of drum is drums.
Me.
The talking drum is a musical instrument from West Africa, which is hourglass-shaped. It was invented in Oyo, Nigeria by Alaafin Ajiboye.
Travis Barker
Timbre is the word in music that describes the kind of sound an instrument makes. It describes all of the aspects of a musical sound that do not have anything to do with the sound's pitch, loudness, or length. Each type of drum will have a different timbre.
Indentations are made in each drum. These are the notes. You can use rubber mallets for a mellow timbre or wood or acrylic for a brighter timbre.
The Double Bass is the largest string instrument not a guitar in this answer. Timbre- dark, dull, rich, low, jazzy
Timbre is the word in music that describes the kind of sound an instrument makes. It describes all of the aspects of a musical sound that do not have anything to do with the sound's pitch, loudness, or length. Each type of drum will have a different timbre.
Timbre is what allows you to tell a piano from a trumpet, or a person's voice from a drum. It's tone color. It is independent from pitch, which is the frequency at which an object vibrates to create sound.
The most common African drum known to westerners is the hand drum, or Djembe. Gina =]
by the pitch
Timbre is the part of the sound the drum responds best. When tuning a drum through it's range, you can hit the same notes several times. Usually only one of those times will the note sound it's highest quality. Drummers that know how to tune are looking for this timbre and pitch.
It could be any color. And the material is either some kind of metal or wood.
you put a mute on the strings inside of the piano.
timbre - Actor Paul Robeson is famous for the rich timbre of his voice.; Main Entry : tim·bre ; Variant(s) : also tim·ber \ˈtam-bər, ˈtim-; ˈtam(brə)\ ; Function : noun ; Etymology : French, from Middle French, bell struck by a hammer, from Old French, drum, from Middle Greek tymbanon kettledrum, from Greek tympanon - more at tympanum ; Date : 1845 : the quality given to a sound by its overtones: as a: the resonance by which the ear recognizes and identifies a voiced speech sound b: the quality of tone distinctive of a particular singing voice or musical instrumenthttp://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/timbre
Timbre is pronounced TAM-BAR