No, it's a woodwind. You play it by blowing and vibrating the air.
john Lennon was good at singing, guitar, piano, harmonica, banjo, mellotron,6 string bass, percussion, recorder
woodwind, brass, strings, percussion
The closest answer is reed, but more accurately a woodwind, as recorders don't actually use reeds.
Brian Jones Guitar, harmonica, keyboards, Appalachian dulcimer, trumpet, bass, trombone, mellotron, sitar, tambura, recorder, saxophone, percussion, autoharp, marimba, slide guitar, French horn, oboe, banjo, clarinet, mandolin, steel-string acoustic guitar, xylophone, flute, accordion Ian Stewart Piano, organ, marimbas Mick Jagger harmonica, guitar, percussion, bass, keyboards Keith Richards Guitar, bass, keyboards, percussion Bill Wyman bass guitar, guitar, keyboards, percussion, autoharp Charlie Watts Drums, percussion
percussion in no strings and non percussion is with strings
Flute and percussion
I think it's from the percussion section.. I hope it can be helpful :)
It's percussion, but it's not tuned to a specific pitch.
They are classed as percussion instruments.
Percussion typically uses the percussion clef, also known as the "percussion staff" or "drum clef."
Chimes are percussion instruments.
The xylophone is an instrument which belongs to the percussion instrument.