A kettledrum (or timpani) is a type of percussion instrument called a membranophone, because it sounds by a vibrating membrane. Clarinets and oboes are woodwinds, and sound by vibrating reeds.
That leaves three choices:
String instruments.
Hybrid instruments (piano, organ)
Electronic instruments, the synthesizer being the most typical example.
All the instruments that are percussion instruments, string instruments, and woodwind instruments are not part of the brass family.
That would be everything besides trumpets, cornets, flugelhorns, bugles, F horns, alto horns, trombones (all sizes), baritones, euphoniums, and tubas.
* Voice.
* Electronic instruments.
Brass, string, percussion,
No, trombones are a part of the Brasswind family.
The woodwind family. This family includes the saxophone and the flute as well. The recorder was popular in medieval times through the baroque era, but declined in the 18th century in favour of orchestral woodwind instruments, such as the flute , oboe, and clarinet.
All reed instruments are part of the woodwind instrument family, but there are some other woodwinds also that are not reed instruments - mainly the flute.
The trombone is considered to be part of the BRASS instrument family.
The bagpipe is a woodwind instrument. The melody part of the bagpipe (the chanter) has a double reed, so it could go under the sub-heading "double reed woodwind instrument" - but this depends on the source ethnicity of the instrument in question (the Scottish Highland Bagpipe has a double reed, whereas a Swedish bagpipe may not). :) Peace out!
Yes, it is part of the woodwind family and uses a double reed.
No, trombones are a part of the Brasswind family.
The woodwind family. This family includes the saxophone and the flute as well. The recorder was popular in medieval times through the baroque era, but declined in the 18th century in favour of orchestral woodwind instruments, such as the flute , oboe, and clarinet.
All reed instruments are part of the woodwind instrument family, but there are some other woodwinds also that are not reed instruments - mainly the flute.
The trombone is considered to be part of the BRASS instrument family.
A Saxophone is classified as being part of the woodwind family. It was originally created to be in the middle of the woodwind and brass family and it still is considered to be in a way part of both, but technically it's a woodwind instrument because of it's wooden reed that it uses.It is a woodwind.
The bagpipe is a woodwind instrument. The melody part of the bagpipe (the chanter) has a double reed, so it could go under the sub-heading "double reed woodwind instrument" - but this depends on the source ethnicity of the instrument in question (the Scottish Highland Bagpipe has a double reed, whereas a Swedish bagpipe may not). :) Peace out!
The saxophone is a reed instrument, and as such is part of the woodwind family.
reed
The bagpipe is part of the woodwind family. This is because it has reeds and you blow into it.
Yes, violin is a musical instrument. It is part of the String family, which is a group of instruments that use strings. Violins rock! And by the way they are not horrible screechy things. Well they are when you start but when you get better they sound fabulous!
Yes! The flute is part of the woodwind instrument family.In the Renaissance Period, flutes actually had a small reed in them (much like an oboe reed). This is why they were originally classified as a woodwind instrument, and it has stuck since.Yes a flute is a woodwind, even if it is made of metal.