Sunday, July 29, 2012

The Hand Drum - A Hands-On perceive

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DRUM MACHINE :

In the digital and electronic age of the 21st century, we are surrounded by devices that can sometimes hide their true purposes below a veneer of hard plastic and shiny chrome. The Kitchenaid mixer, for example. When I was growing up, it was a plain white engine with a bowl. Today, it is available in what seems like hundreds of colors, some of them with names like "Gloss Cinnamon," "Sugar Plum" and my personal favorite, "Wasabi." It can use dozens of separate accessories, from can openers to ravioli makers. This counter appliance has come to be less of a cooking convenience and more of an embellishment for modern kitchen. Like so many human inventions, it has drifted so far from its traditional incarnation as to be approximately unrecognizable.

The Hand Drum - A Hands-On perceive

The same thing has happened in the music industry. Some of the flashy electric guitars of today are far cries from the original, and much more humble, wooden acoustic guitar. Similarly, the modern drum set, with its lustrous surfaces and artificial aura, is approximately unrecognizable as kin to the drums of old civilizations. However, and possibly fortunately, something about a basic hand drum is innately exciting to humans. This theory is supported by the fact that in spite of all the more modern versions available, many habitancy the world over still play hand drums.

A hand drum is naturally any type of drum played with the bare hand rather than a stick or other type of beater. There are many separate types of hand drums: they hale from Africa, the Americas, the Middle East, Asia and Europe. Internationally, the frame drum is the most tasteless style of hand drum. It consists of a shallow, cylindrical shell with a head at one of the open ends. This is the oldest type of skin drum and one of the most old types of musical instruments. Instances of it may be found in many separate cultures nearby the world. Examples comprise the tonbak of Persia, the tamborim of Brazil, the Bodhran of Ireland and the kanjira of India. The frame is usually made of bent wood that has been joined together, and the drum head is traditionally made of animal skin, although today artificial materials are also used.

Of course, some of the most famous hand drums are the congas and bongos used in the music of Latin America. Thanks to the popularity of music like salsa, these instruments have come to be known the world over. Both bongos and congas are essentially frame drums; traditionally made of wood and animal skin (although artificial materials such as fiberglass are often used in modern times), they have only a single head. However, while bongos are small in size, congas are tall and narrow, typically nearly three feet tall, manufacture them much larger than most frame drums. Also, the building of their bodies is like that of a barrel, with complicated strips of wood rather than a shell of a single piece.

In the study of old cultures, frame drums are held to have associations with both religion and entertainment. They various in size and sometimes had metal rings or plates incorporated into the design; a tambourine is an example of such a drum. It is worth noting that the names of some frame drums from various cultures strongly look like each other, manufacture it likely that the instrument was invented in a single location and spread out from that point.


Do You Ever Wish YOU Had The Ability To Make REAL Hit Music Like That?


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