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The Tympani are definitely drums. The Marimba is a member of the percussion family (because you play it by beating it with mallets) but it is not a drum because it doesn't have a vibrating membrane: it has vibrating bars of wood.) "Bass" could be string bass, which is not a drum, or Bass Drum, which is. So the answer to the question is "you can't answer this question without more information."
it is the snare drum, the bass drum and the bass bum :)
There are several types of mallets, stretching from Bell kit plastic mallets, to yarn Marimba mallets, to Timpani Mallets, and all the way to Bass Drum Mallets. Marimba mallets come in different sizes so you can have a different echo and tone when you are playing. Bell Kit mallets are hard so the sound rings out, same with Timpani mallets, except they have soft ends that vibrate the heads of the Timpani, causing the echo all percussionists appreciate, and bass drum mallets have soft but firm ends so that when they strike the head of the drum, it delivers the BOOM all band directors love.
bass drum and timpani
Timpani, snare, and bass drum. A set of timpani will have 2-5 drums.
The Tympani are definitely drums. The Marimba is a member of the percussion family (because you play it by beating it with mallets) but it is not a drum because it doesn't have a vibrating membrane: it has vibrating bars of wood.) "Bass" could be string bass, which is not a drum, or Bass Drum, which is. So the answer to the question is "you can't answer this question without more information."
A brass is not a type of drum.
it is the snare drum, the bass drum and the bass bum :)
There are several types of mallets, stretching from Bell kit plastic mallets, to yarn Marimba mallets, to Timpani Mallets, and all the way to Bass Drum Mallets. Marimba mallets come in different sizes so you can have a different echo and tone when you are playing. Bell Kit mallets are hard so the sound rings out, same with Timpani mallets, except they have soft ends that vibrate the heads of the Timpani, causing the echo all percussionists appreciate, and bass drum mallets have soft but firm ends so that when they strike the head of the drum, it delivers the BOOM all band directors love.
bass drum and timpani
The drumset? No not typically. Snare Drum, Timpani and Bass Drum on their lonesome? Probably.
Timpani, snare, and bass drum. A set of timpani will have 2-5 drums.
Brass French Horn Trombone Trumpet Tuba Keyboard Celesta Harpsichord Organ Piano Percussion Bass Drum Chimes Cymbals Drum Gong Kettle Drum Marimba Snare Drum Tambourine Timpani Triangle Xylophone String Cello Double Bass Harp Viola Violin Woodwind Bassoon Clarinet Contrabassoon English Horn Flute Oboe Piccolo
The timpani is more popularly known as the kettledrum, and is a percussion instrument used to play loud bass notes in orchestral performances. It is also used by experimental percussion artists.
There are many percussion instruments that can be used in the symphony orchestra, but the most common are timpani, bass drum and cymbals, also the triangle.
For the most part if they have keys like the piano or bells then yes. Timpani are also tuned to certain notes before they are played. Drums though, like snare and bass, do not play different pitches.
Common membranophones include: snare drum, bass drum, tom-toms, timpani, congas, bongos, tabla, etc.