A percussive instrument is any musical tool that makes sound when you hit it, shake it, or scrape it. Think of your body as a drum: when you clap your hands or stomp your feet, boom, you are playing percussion! These instruments create the rhythm and heartbeat of music by keeping the beat steady while other instruments sing or play melodies around them.
How They Make Sound
Percussion works because something vibrates quickly when touched. Imagine tapping a wooden table with your knuckles. The wood wobbles slightly, pushing air molecules away from it, which travel to your ears as a thud. This happens in real life all the time. When you drop a spoon into a metal bowl, the metal shakes so fast that it sings. You don’t need electricity or breath for percussion; you just need force and something solid to bounce back against.
Types of Hits
Musicians group these instruments by how they are played. Here is a simple breakdown:
| Type | How You Play It | Real Life Example |
|---|---|---|
| Struck | Hitting with hands or sticks | Drum kit at a rock concert |
| Shaken | Tilting so things rattle inside | Maracas in salsa music |
| Scraped | Rubbing a ridged surface | A washboard player's back |
Some percussion instruments, like the drum, have a tight skin stretched over a hollow box. When you hit that skin, it snaps back and forth, creating deep sounds. Others, like the cymbal, are flat metal discs that clatter loudly when crashed together. Even things without special designs count! If you tap a glass of water with a fork, ting, you have created a percussive note. They provide the pulse that makes your foot want to tap along during a song.
Examples
- Hit a drum with your hands to make it boom
- Shake maracas like dice in a cup
- Cymbals crash together when you hit them
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See also
- How Does Beat and Rhythm in Music Explained Work?
- How Does Art d'Ecco - I Feel Alive Work?
- What [almost] Everyone Gets Wrong About Timbre?
- What are resonance chambers?
- What are piano strings?