Membranophone is the answer.
You shouldn't need answers because APEX Virtual School has the answers in the material.
Hoped I helped,
Hershey.
Membranophone is the answer.You shouldn't need answers because APEX Virtual School has the answers in the material.Hoped I helped,Hershey.
Membranophones such as drums, djembes, congas, and etc.
Yes it is. Because it creates sound through the vibration of its drum head/stretched membrane.
AnswerMembranophones use the vibration of a stretched membrane to produce sounds.The Snare Drum, The Timpani, The Tubular drums,...
The instruments that creates sounds from a string tremor stretched out in both ends is called Chordophones. The popular example of this category is guitar.
A drum.
A membranophone is a type of musical instrument that produces sound primarily through the vibration of a stretched membrane. This membrane can be made of materials like animal skin or synthetic materials, and it is usually struck, rubbed, or otherwise activated to create sound. Common examples of membranophones include drums, tambourines, and certain types of gongs. They are one of the main categories in the Hornbostel-Sachs system of musical instrument classification.
Wind instruments use air to create vibration which creates sound. Percussion instruments create sound through striking a Stretched membrane which produces sound or by the vibration of the instrument as a whole.
A drum
For Membranophones, It is a stretched membrane such as an animal skin that vibrates which produces sounds. Examples of membranophones are Drums,Timpani,etc. For Idiophones it is the vibration of the whole instrument as a whole which produces sound. Examples of idiophones are Shakers,Cowbells, Cymbals,etc.
A musical percussion instrument (drum); usually consists of a hollow cylinder with a membrane stretched across each end.
The cowbell falls under the category of idiophones, which are musical instruments that produce sound primarily through the vibration of the instrument itself, rather than through a string, membrane, or column of air.