Another Musical Instruments Quiz
- Question: Which is Korea’s national instrument?
- Answer: The kayagŭm, Korea’s national instrument, is heard in both folk and classical Korean music and dance. It is a rectangular board zither measuring about 5 feet (1.5 metres) in length and having 12 silk strings, movable bridges, and a convex upper surface.
- Question: Which of these musical instruments is also called the whistle flute?
- Answer: The fipple flute is also called the whistle flute. Either name is used for any of several end-blown flutes having a plug (“block” or “fipple”) inside the pipe below the mouth hole. This plug forms a duct or windway that directs the player’s breath alternately above and below the sharp edge of a lateral hole, which causes the enclosed air column to vibrate.
- Question: Who invented the clarinet?
- Answer: Johann Christoph Denner, German maker of musical instruments, invented the clarinet sometime between 1690 and 1700.
- Question: What is the name of an African musical instrument that resembles a xylophone but is made with animal horns, skins, and wood?
- Answer: The balafon resembles a xylophone but is constructed with animal horns, skins, and wood. It originated in central Africa.
- Question: Who was the most important force in reestablishing the guitar as a concert instrument in the 20th century?
- Answer: Spanish musician Andrés Segovia was acclaimed as the foremost guitarist of his time. He was the most important force in reestablishing the guitar as a concert instrument in the 20th century, chiefly through demonstrating its expressive and technical potential.
- Question: In a Japanese hayashi ensemble, percussion instruments are played in combination with which instrument?
- Answer: Hayashi, in Japanese music, is any of various combinations of flute and percussion instruments. Folk hayashi, for example, often combines a bamboo flute with stick-beaten drums and a small hand gong. There is a great variety of combinations.
- Question: Which percussion instrument symbolizes prosperity and marks social status in China?
- Answer: In China gongs symbolize prosperity and mark social status. In general, gongs function as accompaniment to dance, theatre, and song and are used to transmit messages.
Save your scores! Login before you play.
© RUNSTUDIO/Photodisc/Getty Images
© RUNSTUDIO/Photodisc/Getty Images