Drum Notes

wordpress plugins and themes automotive,business,crime,health,life,politics,science,technology,travel
This entry was written by one of our contributers and submitted to our resource section. The author's views below are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of Virtual Drums



How To Tune Drums

So many times I hear students tell me that they need a new snare drum or that  their toms are terrible. Sometimes it might be true but before they raid their  parent's bank accounts I always offer to check out their existing drums. Often  it's a simple case of a poorly tuned drum.

HEADS

If anything does need replacing, it is generally the drum head rather than  the drum. Heads reach a point where they are impossible to tune and this will  happen more quickly if you're a hard hitter.

When selecting heads, there are many on offer but discussing this in detail  is for another article. As a general rule, the thinner heads resonate more  freely and therefore offer more tone. These are better for recording purposes  and include the likes of Evans G1, Remo Diplomat or Remo Ambassador.

Thicker heads offer more durability so if you're practising at home, or doing  rock gigs and can't afford to keep replacing your split Ambassadors, these are  worth checking out. For recording purposes they are less useful as they lack the  tone and vibrancy of their thinner counterparts. Such options include the Evans  G2, Evans EC2, Remo Emporer, and Remo pinstripe.

The bottom head is known as the resonant head. So to allow it to resonate, it  is much thinner. Remo Diplomats and the like are great for toms. With the snare  drum, some drummers use batter heads on the bottom but many will use the purpose  made resonant heads offered by all the top brands.

TUNING

Before putting the new head on, make sure you have cleaned the debris and  dust from the inside of the shell and around the bearing edges. Check that the  bearing edges are in good condition as any imperfections will result in  impossible tuning. If they are damaged, find a music shop that will recut  them.

1. Place the head on your drum, place the rim on the head and slot the  tension rods down into the lugs. Some people lubricate the tension rods with  Vaseline.

2. Tighten each tension rod with your fingers. Always move across the drum  and never to the tension rod next to where you started. If you begin at the 12  o'clock position, the next tension rod to be tuned is the one at 6 o'clock (see  diagram above). Next you do the one at 1 o'clock, then 7 o'clock, etc. This  allows the tension to be spread evenly around the drum.

3. Now, using the drum key start back at 12 o'clock and turn it 180 degrees.  Now go round the drum, crisscrossing again with the half turn on each tension  rod.

4. Repeat step 3 until the drum is close to the pitch that you want. You will  want to do much smaller increments when it is close to the desired sound.  Consider a 90 degree or 45 degree turn on each tension rod.

If it is a new head you will want to seat the drum head. Place one hand on  the centre of the drum palm down. Place the other hand over it as if giving CPR.  Push down fairly hard until you hear a terrifying splitting sound. Now relax,  you haven't broken the head. You've just broken it in, allowing the bond between  the glue and the rim to stretch to the shape of the drum. This would have  happened anyway once you started smacking it with a wooden stick and it would  have gone out of tune. Now tune it back up and it should stay there.

FINE TUNING

We are now close to being fully tuned but there is one more stage. To fine  tune the drum you must tap the head an inch in from each tension rod. The pitch  should be identical on each. That means the drum is evenly tuned. If one area is  different in pitch, tweak it with the drum key and use your ear to listen until  each part of the drum sounds even. Voila!

SNARE

Generally considered the most important drum of the drum kit, it is also very  personal. Listen to ten great drummers and you will hear ten different snare  sounds. This is affected by the snare drum shell material, snare heads, bearing  edges, tuning, snare strand tension, playing style, and so on. You must find the  right head combination and tuning for your own playing.

If the snare is buzzing, there are some solutions you can try:

1. Detune the lugs either side of the snares. You must then tighten the other  lugs to compensate. This is the snare (bottom) head only, not the batter  head.

2. Tune the batter head, or snare head to a different pitch.

3. Retune the high tom to a different pitch if that drum is causing the  sympathetic frequency response.

4. Some drummers tape the snares to the drum head at either end. Experiment  with this.

5. If all else fails, smash it with a sledge hammer in an uncontrolled fit of  anger and then calmly begin to tune your spare snare drum and hope for better  results.

TOMS

These require the same technique as above but the relationships between each  tom is important here. Many drummers tune toms a fourth apart. You can use a  piano to get an idea of how this interval sounds. Some drummers are very  specific and tune to exact pitches whereas others are happy with the approximate  sound of the fourth. At the piano, hit a C note. Then go down and hit a G and  then finally the D. That is the sound you want to aim for.

The relationship between the resonant and batter head is also important and,  again, down to personal preference. As a general rule, the batter head primarily  affects the tone, while the resonant head affects the note length. If the batter  head is tensioned differently to the resonant head, it will decrease the  resonance but may cause a pitch bend effect in the note sustain, which can be  undesirable. Tuned to the same tension and the resonance might be too long. It's  a case of trial and error to find your preference.

BASS DRUM

In many styles, the bass drum is the easiest to tune as us drummers tend to  muffle it to get that thud sound. Some drummers simply finger tighten each lug  so that the wrinkles are only just taken out. Some use the drum key and go much  tighter. Regarding muffling, some heads such as the Evans E-mad have their own  integrated muffling systems. However, often something is placed inside the drum  to achieve that dead sound depending on how much boom each drummer wishes to  retain.

This might be a pillow, a towel, an EQ cushion (which is basically a more  expensive pillow sold by drum head manufacturers) or a dead body (just testing  if you're concentrating!). Play around and see what works for you in your  particular setting.

TO TAPE OR NOT TO TAPE?

Over the years many different materials have been placed upon drums to  achieve certain sounds. These range from gaffa tape, paper towels, wallets,  cigarette packets, tea towels, and anything else that does the job. Purpose made  solutions include the O-rings and Moon Gel, both of which should be part of any  drummers tool box to help control unwanted overtones if and when they arise in  different studios or concert halls.

My opinion is that you shouldn't get caught thinking that the use of such  techniques are needed in reaction to your inadequacy to tune a drum. If it helps  achieve the best sound which ultimately helps you to offer the best drum track  that the artist, producer or client is looking for, then do it. Every room  causes the drum to react differently and your combination of drums/heads might  just need a little helping hand for certain styles in certain situations. Do  what you can to get a great sound.

I hope this guide helps a little but there really is no substitute to  learning your own way through trial and error. Put in the effort to discover  what works, make your mistakes, and learn from them. Whatever you do, don't shy  away from it or your drums will never sound their best.

About the Author

Matt is a professional drummer, tutor and author. He has written for many music magazines around the world as well as writing a novel titled 'Run Rabbit Run' and a non-fiction book called 'The Drum: A History' published by Scarecrow Press in Novermber 2011.

He publishes a drum blog from his website with articles, videos and other items of drumming interest.

www.mattdeanworld.co.uk

His first novel is also available. The action thriller is titled Run Rabbit Run. More details can be viewed at http://www.amazon.co.uk/Run-Rabbit-ebook/dp/B005A7VEJY

Drum Lesson 1/8 notes


Drum Notes


Related Posts

Frequently Asked Questions...

How to play the drums/read drum notes?

Hi I'm getting a drum set soon but I have no idea how to play them of read notes. Please give good answers it is an easy 10 points


Answer:

Congratulations. Drums are awesome!

Take lessons from a professional drum teacher.