The head of the drum vibrates. If you get some dry rice grains and put them on the drum head, they will move around.
The skin of the drum vibrates to produce sound.
When you hit the top of the drum (also known as the head), the sound vibrates down through the drum and out through the hollow hole at the bottom. This is why professional drummers hold the drum between there knees so that the sound is clear and doesn't drown out.
it depends what kind of drum. some drums have a simple elastic band that vibrates, and a snare drum, has some metal snares, that's why its called that.
The "electronic" of the keyboard which is hit by the keys touching it.
The ropes are very tightly on the drum so that a system of metal rings bring the skin over the drum shell. Also the drum is hollow so that there would be sound when you hit it and vibrates with the air inside the drum.
A drum makes a beat sound, a percussive sound. The tone and duration depends on the type of drum: steel drums make ringing tones that last longer than snares or bass drums.
The tightly stretched surface (membrane) of a drum vibrates.
In a drum, mechanical energy from hitting or playing the drumstick against the drumhead is converted into sound energy as the drum vibrates and produces sound waves.
The head of the drum, the part that is struck by drum sticks, vibrates.
a drum set works through a musical percussion that vibrates tickling the drum chin therefore forcing a solid vibration sending a noise unit to the left creating sound and a drum. a drum set works through a musical percussion that vibrates tickling the drum chin therefore forcing a solid vibration sending a noise unit to the left creating sound and a drum.
when you hear things, its really sound waves. the sound waves enter your ear, then it vibrates the ear drum.
They both have stretched membrane or a drumhead which is hit and the one that vibrates to produce that sound of the drum.