obviously that's why it's an instrament monica h. :)
Yes. The notes on a Marimba are very similar, if not the same as, the notes on a piano. The bottom notes are naturals while the top ones are flats and sharps.
marimba music and piano music and mereunge music too!!
Same as the notes on the piano.
With a piano, the hammers strike the strings as a mallet would strike a marimba or drum. The piano is considered a percussion instrument.
Marimba
Piano is a percussion instrument as every thing about it is percussive. It is non contact (you dont actually touch the strings in conventional piano playing which are the source of the sound) and the strings are hit with hammers which are like mallets to the marimba or vibes. People may think it is a string intrument because the sound is from a string and it would be if the string were plucked or bowed. The piano sounds more like a percusion instrument as well if you compare it to a marimba/vibes/xylophone... and then to a cello or violin,
Justin Bieber's grandmother played was the Marimba..
Well, I'm no expert in piano playing ism but you can play with your:FingersThumbsToesNoseTongueBeaterBut, if you mean instrumentwise:PianoGrand PianoKeyboardGlockenspiel?Xylophone?Marimba?Hope this helps but nine times out of ten, it won't
marimba music and piano music and mereunge music too!!
Same as the notes on the piano.
piano xylophone marimba organ dont forget Flute
With a piano, the hammers strike the strings as a mallet would strike a marimba or drum. The piano is considered a percussion instrument.
marimba music, piano music, and mereunge music too.
piano xylophone marimba organ dont forget flute
Marimba
Marimba, xylophones, vibraphones, and other mallet percussion instruments are often referred to as "keyboards". However, in reality, a marimba is NOT the same thing as an electronic piano (keyboard)...or a computer keyboard for that matter! Mallet percussion instruments are called "keyboards" since they are set up similar to a piano. They have the same standard "white keys" and "black keys" (naturals and accidentals) as keyboards have. Furthermore, marimba music is often written on the grand staff (both treble and bass clef) and is played with four mallets.
I would probably say marimba and xylophone are the two most alike. They both are part of the percussion family, both have wooden bars, both stuck with mallets by the instrumentalist.
There are more than three. Marimba, Xylophone, Chimes, Timpani, Bells, and Piano are just a couple examples.