Answer:
A drum kit is commonly described by the number of pieces it consists of. To work out how many ‘piece’ drum kit you have simply add up all the drums, ignoring cymbals and other hardware. Another method is to count the toms and then add 2 (for the snare and bass drum). So if your drum kit has 5 toms then it’s likely to be a 7 piece kit (assuming it has one snare drum and one bass drum). If a kit has one bass drum, one snare drum and one tom then it’s a 3 piece kit. The most common configuration is a 5 piece kit consisting of a bass drum, snare drum and 3 toms (high, mid and low) – and then of course you also have the hi-hats, cymbals etc. but these don’t count towards the number of ‘pieces’. You could have a 5 piece kit with 100 cymbals – it’s still a 5 piece kit.
Explanation:
Answer:
Seurat believed colors looked stronger when used along with their complementary color. ... But instead of moving the image, he used many dots of pure color. The dots are too small to tell apart from afar. Georges Seurat (1859-1891), The Circus, 1890-91.
He gets a sword and a shield with a red lion on it
Answer:
The answer is option A - the cymbals.
This is because :
*it has two parts
*it can be struck by hand or sticks
*the bigger it is, the lower sound it makes
Please mark me brainliest
There are multiple answers that you could argue, but my best guess is that in these years he was influenced by jazz, the "music on the street", since this is when he wrote music for the Theatre suite.