willy
In the string section it could be either a Cellist or Bassist.
In the percussion section most everything except the Triangle rests on the floor.
a string being plucked on a stringed instrument
With its Hawaiian roots, the instrument is known for its bright stringed sounds and being easy to learn and play as well as being very portable.
guitar
An altissimo is the highest part of the register of a woodwind instrument, or a specific note being played in this register.
i didn't think it wounld.... percussion instuments work on vibration and usually have only 1 pitch. All instruments work on vibration so the piano does but the piano has many different notes and pitches so i don't see why it would be classified as 1.
a string being plucked on a stringed instrument
a string being plucked on a stringed instrument
With its Hawaiian roots, the instrument is known for its bright stringed sounds and being easy to learn and play as well as being very portable.
A few instruments that start with Z:Zhonghu- a traditional Chinese low-pitched string instrument.The Zither- a stringed folk instrument.Zil- Tiny Turkish cymbals used in Belly Dancing.ZamponaZurna
This question makes no sense. The Gamba is a baroque stringed instrument, not something that grows in a garden. If you mean plant as in being manufactured, their not, as it is an instrument that has limited apeal. You have to find a lighter that makes them from scratch.
CYMBAL.
The earliest stringed instruments were mostly plucked (e.g. the Greek lyre). Bowed instruments may have originated in the equestrian cultures of Central Asia, an example being the Mongolian instrument Morin huur:
a guitar
The instrument the "Ching-Chub" is named by the sound it makes while being played. The instrument is frequently played in Thai bands, and has been used at least once by Chris Martin of Cold Play.
Yes you can you adjust your stirrups whilst being on a horse
guitar
1620s, ultimately from Greek kithara "cithara," a stringed musical instrument related to the lyre, perhaps from Persian sihtar (see sitar); the name reached English several times, including early 14c. giterne, in reference to various stringed, guitar-like instruments; the modern word is directly from Spanish guittara, from Arabic qitar.