Instruments such as a drum
Yes. They all vibrate, even just the slightest bit.
Some instruments with vibrating membranes include drums, tambourines, and banjos. These instruments produce sound by causing the membrane or skin to vibrate when struck or plucked.
aerophone
String instruments vibrate by when you pluck the strings the noise from them is bounced around the hallow in side of the instrument you are playing.
Brass instruments tend to be made out of brass or other metals/alloys. Woodwind instruments have reeds, which makes a different sound to the brass instrument (in simple terms you have to blow raspberries into to make a sound- it is a little more complecated than that, but its hard to explain).
Instruments like clarinets, saxophones, and oboes have reeds. These reeds are thin pieces of cane that vibrate when air is blown over them, creating sound.
vibration i think Yes, when the strings are plucked or bowed they vibrate and this is how the sound is created.
In the context of musical instruments, the "vibrate" part of the instrument triangle refers to the component that produces sound through vibrations. This typically involves the strings of stringed instruments, the air column in wind instruments, or the membrane in percussion instruments. The vibrations create sound waves that resonate through the instrument and into the surrounding air, ultimately producing the music we hear. Each type of instrument has its own unique mechanism for generating these vibrations.
Yes, brass instruments produce a lower pitch than woodwind instruments. Woodwind instruments use a reed to vibrate the air to produce sound, whereas brass instruments produce sound from the player's lips vibrating in a mouthpiece.
Most percussion and string instruments operate of vibrations to produce sound. Drum heads, xylophone bars, strings and reeds all vibrate on instruments that use them to produce sound.
All instruments make music by causing the air to vibrate at different frequencies.