The Cambodian metal finger cymbals are called "ching" (sometimes spelled as "chhing").
Cymbals can be made of brass or bronze.
U have your high-hat (that's the two cymbals with a foot pedal), then there is the crash cymbal, normally they're around 16 to 20 inches, then the large ride cymbal (used for a lot of metal and jazz drumming), there are also china cymbals and splash cymbals. China cymbals are a harsh sounding effect cymbal that basically look like they are inside out and splash cymbals are a very small sized cymbal used for effects as well.Hope this helped.
when sewing = thimble
Yes. Who ever heard of plastic cymbals!
The natural resource in cambodia have: - metal - petroleum - forestry
Typically, for metal you want louder, heavier cymbals, and often a dryer sound with a quicker decay. Most brands offer a wide variety of cymbals ranging from thinner, brighter cymbals to heavier metal type cymbals. You can usually find out in the description of a cymbal (if you're ordering them) what kind of sound they produce. Alot of sabian cymbals say in the name what they're for. I know they make a ride cymbal that says metal ride (really short, piercing sound). If you wanna know what a full-setup needs, metal drummers are known for having huge setups with tons of cymbals. Mostly, this is for show and you really don't need that many. You, for sure, need a hi-hat (bigger rather than smaller), a ride, and for metal I would say two crashes, no smaller than 16", maybe a 16 and an 18, or an 18 and a 20. If you wanna go bigger, you can start adding more crashes, china crashes, splashes, any kind of effects cymbal you can imagine, stacked cymbals, piggy-back cymbals. The possibilities are endless.
All Drum head and Cymbal brands are good like: Remo Drumheads Evan Drumheads Zildjian Cymbals Meinl Cymbals Sabian Cymbals Paiste Cymbals and many more But If you want good sounding cymbals and drum heads search for their professional series or high end series and Pick what kind of Cymbal suites you and your needs.
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.
Bells, triangles, cymbals, n stuff =)
Sure! I recommend plastic though, not metal, as this can damage the strings.
For a good breakdown in metal, I recommend a 14" or 16" Wuhan China cymbals, they are amazing China's and are such great value for money.
The first Zildjian cymbals were created by Avedis Zildjian in 1618. Zildjian, an alchemist, was seeking a way to turn base metal into gold when he created a sheet of metal--made from an alloy of tin, copper and silver--that could make musical sounds without shattering.