Here's a video of ray brown plucking the strings.YouTube.com/watch?v=y7qIqlk8MOI
It's not great but you get the idea.
the double bass is played either with a bow (arco) or by plucking the strings (pizzicato).
There are a few examples of what this would sound like on Youtube.
Harp. Violin, viola, cello, double bass do not have frets and they can be played as pizz (plucked)
There are two options: If you are talking about bass drum. . .Two bass drums with a pedal attached to eachA single bass drum with a double bass pedalIf you are talking about upright double bass, it can be plucked with the fingers, or bowed.
harp
Bass, Double Bass, Violin, Harp, Viola, Cello. The harp is an instrument with strings, which are plucked, but it is not normally considered one of the 'strings' sections.
It is a plucked, fretted, stringed electrophone. In other words, it has strings which are plucked; the strings are pressed down behind metal frets to determine pitch, and the instrument's sound is amplified electrically. Less technically, it is most closely related to the electric guitar, with some input from the orchestral double-bass, and it has acoustic ancestors including the Mando-bass, the Bass Banjo and the Contrabass Balalaika. The actual Acoustic Bass Guitar, however is a recent invention, dating from no earlier than the late 1960s.
With a bow, or plucked.
The bass.
Harp. Violin, viola, cello, double bass do not have frets and they can be played as pizz (plucked)
There are two options: If you are talking about bass drum. . .Two bass drums with a pedal attached to eachA single bass drum with a double bass pedalIf you are talking about upright double bass, it can be plucked with the fingers, or bowed.
harp
Bass, Double Bass, Violin, Harp, Viola, Cello. The harp is an instrument with strings, which are plucked, but it is not normally considered one of the 'strings' sections.
Behind the drivers side kick panel.
It is a plucked, fretted, stringed electrophone. In other words, it has strings which are plucked; the strings are pressed down behind metal frets to determine pitch, and the instrument's sound is amplified electrically. Less technically, it is most closely related to the electric guitar, with some input from the orchestral double-bass, and it has acoustic ancestors including the Mando-bass, the Bass Banjo and the Contrabass Balalaika. The actual Acoustic Bass Guitar, however is a recent invention, dating from no earlier than the late 1960s.
With a bow, or plucked.
When bacterium get into it. At prime conditions (warm and mooist) they doouble their number every 20 minutes
its a string instrument more specifically a chordophone sounded with a bow or plucked. it is not in the same family as the violin viola cello because the shoulders are sloped more
short string plucked hard