Melodic percussion instrument

A melodic percussion instrument is a percussion instrument used to produce several different notes of different pitches.[1] Melodic percussion instruments are examples of pitched percussion and include mallet percussion and keyboard percussion.

Handbells set in performance
Anklung
Steel drums
Vibraphone and mallets
Asian traditional instrument

Melodic percussion instruments take one of three main forms:

  • Collections of individual pitched percussion instruments in different pitches, such as hand bells and the angklung.
  • Instruments that produce different pitches when struck in different places, such as the steel drum.[2]
  • Instruments that contain a collection of sounding objects tuned to different notes, such as the xylophone.

Many melodic percussion instruments have resonators, providing a second way of classifying them:

  • Some instruments such as the marimba have an individual resonator for each note.
  • Some instruments such as the hang have a resonator shared by several or all notes.
  • Some instruments such as the glockenspiel have no resonator.

List of percussion instruments that produce musical scales

See also

References

  1. Blades, James. Percussion Instruments and their History (London: Kahn & Averill, 2006) ISBN 978-0-933224-61-2
  2. http://www.musicaviva.com.au/vivazone/musicians/musician.asp?id=38 Archived 2012-12-30 at Archive.today retrieved 6 March 2012 the steel drum, a melodic percussion instrument from Trinidad and Tobago


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