a xylophone
The glockenspiel is an interesting instrument. The glockenspiel resembles a small xylophone, but it is made of steel bars. It wasn't discovered until the 1960s.
There's the glockenspiel, the guitar, and the gong.A glockenspiel (or glockinshpiel) is a thing that you scrape up and down with a wooden sort like drumstick.
It looks like a little piano. It has a keyboard, but it is only up to five or four octaves long on the keyboard. It sounds a lot like a glockenspiel with the only exception that it sounds more delicate than a glockenspiel. Its very small and has no pedals.
Play it. A glockenspiel is a musical instrument, similar to a xylophone.If you don't play the instrument yourself, what you think of when you hear the word "xylophone" might well actually be a glockenspiel: in a xylophone the bars are made of wood (the xylo- part comes from a Greek word meaning "wood"); in a glockenspiel they're metal plates or possibly tubes.The usual English word for a glockenspiel is "concert bells".A carillion (set of actual cup-shaped bells, such as would be found in a church bell tower) is also called a Glockenspiel in German (Glockenspiel literally means "set of bells").
The name of the person who discovered the glockenspiel is not known. This unique instrument rose to popularity in the 1960's.
a xylophone
The glockenspiel is an interesting instrument. The glockenspiel resembles a small xylophone, but it is made of steel bars. It wasn't discovered until the 1960s.
the glockenspiel was invented in 1700 A.D.
le glockenspiel
the glockenspiel was invented in 1700 A.D.
A glockenspiel is a percussion instrument.
A Glockenspiel is a small instrument similar to a Xylophone.
The glockenspiel was invented in Germany in the Middle Ages.
That is the correct spelling of the musical instrument "glockenspiel."
There's the glockenspiel, the guitar, and the gong.A glockenspiel (or glockinshpiel) is a thing that you scrape up and down with a wooden sort like drumstick.
A glockenspiel is a misical instrument that comes in the percussion family. They are sometimes used in marching bands. You use rubber mallets to hit the bars. It actually looks like a xylophone. To find a picture of a glockenspiel go to "Google" and click on images, then type in Glockenspiel. (Note: Whoops, somebody changed the question...It originally asked the difference between a vibraphone and a glockenspiel) No. They are both in the same family of musical instruments but the glockenspiel has no additional moving parts. The vibraphone has tubes below with spinning butterfly valves that cause the sound to warble.
Some sentences are: 1) I sincerely regret having never learned to play the glockenspiel. 2) Is that a real glockenspiel? 3) Why is there never a good glockenspiel tuner around when you need one?