History of drums - The Tambourine

June 30th, 2008

The tambourine was invented many centuries ago and was traditionally a shallow drum made of a circle of wood with calfskin stretched across one side. The tambourine also has small jingles or metal discs set in the circle of wood. The tambourine produces sound when it is shaken, rubbed, or struck on the head with the knuckles. Early tambourines were played by Turkish army musicians known as “Janissaries,” and Mozart first used the tambourine in his orchestra in 1782.

Now days there are many different styles of tambourine that are used in conjunction with the drum kit to give a variety of sounds. These usually don’t have the skin or head on and are just the evolution of the circle with jingles idea! Traditional tambourines however are still very popular in Gospel music.

Old “traditional” style
Traditional Style Tambourine

Variation without skin
Variation without Skin Tambourine

An evolution without skin specifically for a drum kit
New Style Tambourine

Further evolution specifically for a drum kit
New Style Evolution Tambourine


History of the drums: the Steel or Pan Drum

June 4th, 2008

The year of 1938 is considered as the birth of the steel drum when Tamboo Bamboo bands were finally switching over to steel.
The first true steelpan used by musicians was an empty biscuit container. The next development was the discovery that when you hammered a paint pan out from the inside, different notes could be played on the pan. Soon the bent peace of steel gave way to the steeldrum that could produce simple melodies. The early steelpans made of paint tins or biscuit tins had only a handful of notes. They were one foot in diameter and two feet long. They were tuned to the highest upper pitch note the steelpan could produce.
Soon drummers discovered that bulges of different sizes in the bottom of a tin could produce sounds of various pitches. In 1939, a drummer named Winston “Spree” Simon began playing melodies on the first tuned tins. He is considered to be the inventor of the tuned tins. Spree later produced the first convex (dome- shaped) steelpan.
Originally, steelpans were convex; however, the pursuit of a wider range of notes produced the development of a concave instrument. In a steelband, the melodies are played on a tenor pan, which can play a complete low pitch scale. The bands also have double tenor pans, a pair of lower pitch drums in which a lower pitch scale is divided between the two drums. Treble and harmonic drums are also featured.
Pan music developed rapidly during the late 1930s, and by 1941 many steelbands playing in Trinidad became popular among U.S. soldiers based on the naval bases on the island. Although Carnival was banned for the entire duration of the Second World War, steelbands playing in lower class neighborhoods flourished in this period. First, the banning of playing during the war years gave people more time for acoustic experimentation with the emerging steel drum. Second, the oil industry and the US naval base made oil drums abundant in the island. These oil drums were cut and used as dustbins. The dustbins eventually replaced the biscuit tins as the raw material for pan making.
During this period, pan music was associated with criminals and the lower class. The constant clashes between bands and the frequent inter-band rivalry, which occasionally resulted in violence, helped to perpetuate this association. Raw materials to make steeldrums were scarce, and pan men generally had to steal materials from oil refineries and naval yards, all of which helped to seal the bad reputation of these drummers.
After the war, Carnival was reinstated, and with it the famous competitions between steel bands. In 1946, Ellie Manette created the first steeldrum in its concave form, made from a steel 55 gallon oil drum. By the 1950s, steel pan music had gained enough popularity to be sent to the United Kingdom as part of the Commonwealth celebration. As a result, the steelpan was strongly identified as an important element of Trinidarian culture. This also greatly enhanced the social “respectability” of the steeldrum. The music swept up the usually restrained British and helped to establish the international exposure and acceptability of the steeldrum.
During the 1960s, steeldrums came of age. Numerous steelpan festivals and competitions were introduced during this period and steelbands even performed for Queen Elizabeth when she visited Trinidad. Steelpans played an important role during Trinidad’s independence celebrations in 1962. Steelbands started to tour both the United States and the U.K.. On February 22, 1963, the first National Panorama competition was held in Trinidad.
Through the 50 years following the Second World War the steel pan has been further developed by pan makers through sophisticated experimentation. This development, still in progress, has produced new refined crafting techniques. Modern steel bands have ten different drums, from tenor to the Nine Bass drums, which produce a vast tonal range. This tonal range of modern steel bands includes several octaves that emulate those available in a grand piano.
Today, huge steel band orchestras are common in many Caribbean islands, but the Trinitarians are credited with having been the creators of the steel pan. As Charles de Ledesma and Simon Broughton comment in their essay about Trinidad:
“The Trinis put something cheap and abundant to extraordinary good use and created one of the few acoustic instruments to be invented this century.” (World Music Rough Guides. London 1994).
No longer the domain of the Trinitarians, steelpans symbolize the culture of the English speaking Caribbean islands. They are played on many islands outside of Trinidad and Tobago.


History of drums: Jazz history time line

April 29th, 2008

The Roots of Jazz
Before 1850
Though jazz and classic blues are really early twentieth-century black music innovations, certain characteristics found in jazz do have their roots in much earlier musical traditions. Call and response, improvisation, the appropriation and reinvention of elements from Western art music: black music in the twentieth-century has never held a monopoly on these musical practices. For instance, the era American historians call “antebellum” (roughly 1815-1861) holds much of interest to researchers looking for the deep roots of jazz.
There was one condition that had to be met for a black tradition unique to North America to develop. There had to be a creole population in place, i.e. a population of blacks born not in Africa but in America. Historically, and for various complicated reasons, slaves in the United States began reproducing their numbers after the closing of the African slave trade in 1808. The creole birthrate actually climbed in the United States, as opposed to most Latin and Caribbean American colonies. Unlike in Brazil or Cuba direct African infusions into black American culture were much less pronounced in the early and middle nineteenth-century. After 1808, blacks in North America began remembering–as well as forgetting–African musical traditions, reinventing them to fit their needs in an entirely different American context. This is an important thing to remember, especially if you hold with Amiri Baraka that “Blues People” have always been curiously American “Negroes.”
But the North American variation and reinvention of African tradition in the early nineteenth-century was not monolithic. That is to say, depending on the region and the demands of the musical audience–whether it be fellow slaves or plantation-owners–the music varied from place to place. Perhaps the difference between ‘downtown’ and ‘uptown’ black style even began during this era. On the one hand there were the plaintive call-and-response hollers and ’sperchils’ to be found in the tobacco fields, cotton plantations, and sugar marshes that stretched from Virginia to Texas. These instances of black music-making were largely produced by and for a black slave community that understood the significance of the music in ways that whites never could. Scholars have often noted the hidden meaning of field hollers and the significance of the drums to communication between various slave groups. The drums were even banned in the British Caribbean. Meanwhile, ‘uptown’, there were the slaves that played for planter functions. Think here of Solomon Northup, abducted from New York and sold into slavery in the New Orleans area. He would play his violin with other slaves to entertain plantation misters and mistresses at quadrilles and fancy balls. Others slave musicians would play at the so-called quadroon balls, New Orleans galas where light-skinned slave women were auctioned off to the highest bidder. There were striking similarities between these balls and the Storyville milieu where Jelly Roll Morton learned to entertain prostitutes and their patrons.
Despite the fact that the vast majority of blacks lived in the South, there were some freemen and women in the North. Indeed, they even had their own autonomous cultural venues, like the African Grove theater in New York City. But perhaps an even more important agent in spreading black musical style to the North during the first half of the nineteenth century was minstrelsy. The minstrel show was born in the same year as William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator, 1831, when Dan Rice-for the first time in American history-”blacked up” for a variety show in New York’s Bowery district. The show became increasingly formalized after the Christie Minstrels devised a much-imitated structure for it in the 1840s and 50s. Two ubiquitous components of this structure were the Stephen Foster songs and a generic instrumentation including banjoes, “bones” (jawbones scraped together for percussive effect), fiddle, and tambourine. Minstresly had of course a more spurious connection to black musical traditions than did, say, the spirituals. But it should be remembered that most Northern minstrels did go to great lengths to acknowledge the black stevedores or plantation slaves from whom they had stolen their material. This sort of Love and Theft, according to Eric Lott, set a precedent for a whole tradition of blackface in America where white performers would borrow lovingly, profitably, and heavily from black musical styles, from Dan Rice to Elvis.
Though the minstrel show declined in popularity during the 1860s, blackface has retained a unique place in American culture. When the Fisk Jubilee Singers–a black gospel group from the first all-black university–showed up in New York in the 1860s to try and raise money for their troubled institution some audience members were disappointed, expecting them to sing a bit more like the minstrels did. Indeed, blacks entering show business from the 1860s on often had no choice but to enter it as minstrels. As it turned out, white audiences after the Civil War preferred black minstrels–or blacks in blackface–considering them the “genuine” article. The irony is, of course, that blacks in blackface had to perform a stereotype of themselves contributing to the construction of pervasive stereotypes of black people based on apocryphal happy-go-lucky “Jim Crow” and “dandy” plantation types. Despite the more troubling aspects of minstrelsy, it was another place where European and African traditions met and mingled in a heady, racist, and decidedly American stew. It is also the place where many jazz performers including, for one, Bessie Smith got their start..
Some form of music shaped by the black experience in the United States had appeared in both the South and the North by the time of the Civil War. Likewise, New Orleans–being the center of the American slave trade–had already taken on special significance in the history of black music-making in America. The most interesting reference to antebellum black music is found in the abolitionist Benjamin Lundy’s diary. Near the New Orleans slave market, the hub of the interstate slave exchange, blacks continued to meet on or around Congo square, under the supervision of their masters to sell their wares, exchange information, and dance to drums that Lundy sketched in his diary and claimed were straight from Africa. Another white observer, Louis Moreau Gottschalk–Americas foremost composer, inter-American cultural diplomat, and piano virtuoso of the 1850s-claimed that he grew up in the shadow of Congo Square. In what is probably his most famous composition, Gottschalk sketches for us an interpretation of another African instrument retained and reinvented by blacks in America. He called this composition “The Banjo.”
Further reading: Leroy Jones, Solomon Northup, Benjamin Lundy, Dana what’s her name, Eric Lott, Joseph Roach. Levine. Dana Epstein.Paul Gilroy….etc…John Blassingame.
Info taken from “allaboutjazz.com


History of drums: the Djembe

April 6th, 2008

Here’s a drum that is just as popular with today’s percussionists as it was back when it was first created over a thousand years ago.

Original Djembe

The djembe is a West African drum that is believed to have come from the Malinke people in the Northeast of Guinea. The djembe migrated to the Mali empire in the 9th Century and is now found in Senegal and Ivory Coast. Covered in goat skin, the djembe’s sharp bright sound and dynamic range of colours made it an ideal drum for healers, and storytellers, as well as accompanying dance, or for communicating between villages. The djembe has become the most popular African drum to be played outside of Africa, yet it is a very demanding instrument and there are few musicians who play it well.

Regardless of whether or not they play it well this drum is a favourite among WFD’ers to demonstrate their bare hand speed.

Years ago they were made with hand carved wood and animal skin, now days manufactured using fibreglass and plastics. How times have changed!

Modern Djembe


History of Drums…. The Cajon

March 9th, 2008

Throughout history things have been invented from scratch, evolved from previous inventions, or simply happened by accident. The Cajon is one of the latter. Originally a codfish box used on board Spanish boats sailing to America, one day someone decided to “play” it as a drum like instrument. It then became popular and was used a lot in Peru and then became a very popular instrument in a Flamenco ensemble. To play you simply sit on the box and hit it! Technique has been developed over the years so people now use hands, fingers and feet to create different and interesting sounds. Many things have been added and changed to create further different sounds and effects. Some of the new ones include loose bits of wood, thicker sides and thinner sides as well as snares to give a “rattly” sound. Here’s a picture of an old and new Cajon so you can see how they’ve evolved.

Cajon

Old Box!

Cajon

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Modern Cajon with an American white ash front plate with an adjustable snare built in!

So the next time you go “wacking” around on random surfaces, just think…. It could become an “official” instrument of choice one day!


History of Drums - Part 4

February 9th, 2008

Aboriginal drums and percussion instruments:

The earliest drums may have been found in Africa, but cultures from around the world used them, along with other percussive instruments to create music. Here’s a bit more history from Australia for you.

Different tribes used various instruments including boomerangs, clubs, sticks, hollow logs, drums, seed rattles and of course the didgeridoo. Hand clapping and lap/thigh slapping were common. Decorated drums were made from hollow logs and some covered with reptile skins. Large conch shells were used in the northern coastal areas. The best known of all Aboriginal musical instruments was the didgeridoo and we explore this instrument in depth in another section.
Over a large area of Australia, Aboriginal music has consisted (in many places still consists), a group singing accompanied by different kinds of idiophonic percussion. In north Queensland accompaniments may consist of hand clapping only; for songs of intrusive types, such as ‘island style’ songs, a skin drum may be added.
On Bathurst and Melville Islands, songs types of different kinds are accompanied by hand clapping, buttocks-slapping, or by paired sticks. In a small area of Western Australia one type of non-dance song (Djabi or Taabi) is accompanied by a scraped idiophone, or rasp. North of the Northern Territory, where is considerable diversity in song types and sound instruments, some songs are accompanied only by stick percussion (either paired hand sticks or paired boomerang clapsticks, depending on content and ceremonial association), others are performed by voice, sticks and didjeridu.

According to information obtained from written sources and available audio-recordings, there are about thirty Australian sound instruments, or agents for producing different sounds. No attempt has been made as yet to reconstruct a relative chronology for Australian Aboriginal sound instruments; nor for the song types with which particular instruments are formally integrated.

Patterns of geographical distribution at least offer a starting point. Didjeridu-accompanied songs stand out clearly against a background of songs accompanied only by percussion; and the musical participation of a aerophone, within an ensemble where voice and percussion are paramount, would seem to be evidence enough for its ’superimposition’, or intrusion into an older musical situation already widely established.
DISTRIBUTION OF ABORIGINAL SOUND INSTRUMENTS
* Bark or skin bundle beaten, or struck on ground (women)
* Bone or reed whistle
* Boomerang clapsticks
* Didgeridoo and sticks (beaten by singer)
* Folded leaf whistle
* hand clapping
* Hollow log struck with small stick
* Llpirra or Central Australian “trumpet”
* Lap slapping (women)
* rasp or friction
* Seed rattles
* single head skin drum (struck with open palm or stick)
* Stick beaten on ground
* Sticks only
* thigh slapping (men) 


History of drums: Origin of Cymbals

February 2nd, 2008

I was unaware of the facts below, and thought that it might interest some of you to know a bit about cymbals! I know this is the history of “drums”, but we use cymbals on a modern set up so I thought I’d include them too!

The origins of cymbals can be traced back to prehistoric times. The ancient Egyptian cymbals closely resembled our own. The British Museum possesses two pairs, thirteen centimetres in diameter, one of which was found in the coffin of the mummy of Ankhhape, a sacred musician. Those used by the Assyrians were both plate- and cup-shaped, those of the Ancient Persians large-sized plates, made of brass, known as Sanj. The Greek cymbals were cup- or bell-shaped, and may be seen in the hands of innumerable fauns and satyrs in sculptures and on painted vases. The word cymbal is derived from the Latin cymbalum, which itself derives from the Greek word kumbalom, meaning a small bowl.

So there you go, hope you learned something!


History of drums - Part two The Claves

January 24th, 2008

Along with the invention of the early drum came things called “The Claves”… these were cylindrical wooden blocks that you’d hold, one in each hand, and bang together. They would be made from very strong, heavy wood, and would emit a pretty high pitched and loud sound that could be heard over the sound of the drums. They’d play certain patterns to go with certain drum beats, some of which we refer to as “Clave” today.


History of drums - Part one

January 13th, 2008

Did you know that the drum is the oldest instrument next to the voice? Well if you didn’t I’m going to be exploring the history of the drum and the drum kit and giving you the info in little chunks over the coming year. Some of the things you discover MAY even be interesting!

The first drums were made out of old clay pots covered with animal skin (normally goat or sheep skin (which is why I call drum heads “skins”)) which was stretched across the opening of the pot and tied on with a root or shreds of bark. I’m lead to believe that the first drums of this nature originated from African tribes.

In most African cultures, drums were very important in the use of rituals and religious ceremonies. The people of different African tribes relied on the use of drums to express themselves and when the slave trade began, the drums made the journey across the ocean as well.

 http://www.wwdrums.com/african-drums-c-53.html