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Instruments: From Carillons to Electric Guitars

Question: What provides the sound in a carillon?
Answer: A carillon is a musical instrument made up of 23 or more cast bronze bells, arranged by the notes they sound.
Question: Why was the electric guitar invented?
Answer: Until the amplified electric guitar was invented, the guitar was strictly a rhythm instrument. Amplification allowed it to compete with horns and drums.
Question: What is a tabla?
Answer: Tabla refers to a pair of small drums used in Hindustani music of northern India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. The higher-pitched of the two drums is played with the right hand.
Question: What are two of the oldest instruments?
Answer: The first known song dates back 4,000 years. Among the earliest instruments were rattles, drums, and flutes made from bone.
Question: Which of these is not a percussion instrument?
Answer: Percussion instruments make a sound when struck or shaken, either with the hand or an object such as a stick.
Question: Which of these is not usually a type of musical instrument?
Answer: Drums have a hard frame and one or two heads. Even an oil drum can be tuned and turned into a Caribbean instrument, the "steel drum." Drum brakes are found in cars.