In orchestra, very. In rock bands, not so much.
No, they are not. Timpani are tuned drums, but snare drums cannot be tuned. They are also made of different metals and have different shapes to the bottom of the instrument. And then there's the snares - timpani don't have them.
Timpani are also known as kettle drums and are, well... drums. They don't have reeds of any kind.
Timpani, snare, and bass drum. A set of timpani will have 2-5 drums.
A kettle drum is called a timpani
it is called the timpani which is the other name for the kettledrum
No, they are not. Timpani are tuned drums, but snare drums cannot be tuned. They are also made of different metals and have different shapes to the bottom of the instrument. And then there's the snares - timpani don't have them.
Timpani, snare, and bass drum. A set of timpani will have 2-5 drums.
Timpani are also known as kettle drums and are, well... drums. They don't have reeds of any kind.
A kettle drum is called a timpani
it is called the timpani which is the other name for the kettledrum
Timpani.
drums....like a drum set...or bells....timpani....stuff like that...basically drums.
No, they are different instruments
Timpani
The timpani are usually made up off four drums. They are the ones that are very big and are arranged around you.
You may be thinking of timpani. Timpani is a class of drum most commonly called kettle drums.
bass drum and timpani