Timbre

Timbre of a drum

Timbre of a drum

So, we now know that the timbre of a drum is the term that is used to describe the sonic differences between two drums that are tuned to the same frequencies and are played in the same way.

  1. Do drums have timbre?
  2. What is an example of timbre?
  3. What is the timbre of an instrument?

Do drums have timbre?

Timbre is the word in music that describes the kind of sound an instrument makes. ... Continuous steady beat patterns often work well on the bass drum, while more interesting mixed patterns can sound good on lots of different drums like snare drum, tom-toms or timbale.

What is an example of timbre?

Examples of timbre are the ways used to describe the sound, so words such as Light, Flat, Smooth, Smoky, Breathy, Rough, and so on are what you use to distinguish one sound from another.

What is the timbre of an instrument?

In music timbre is the characteristic tone colour of an instrument or voice, arising from reinforcement by individual singers or instruments of different harmonics, or overtones (q.v.), of a fundamental pitch.

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