Functional Guide to the Drum Set

Functional Guide to the Drum Set

In the beginning, hominids hit random things in order to make a pleasing noise, possibly something they could dance to. Human cleverness soon invented drums and, eventually, cymbals. Both became so important to early societies that the various roles of the instruments were often formalized and systematized. This meant that individual instruments had specific tasks and the players had certain duties. In the drum set, we have many of these classic percussion components, and we frequently pay tribute to their traditional purpose and inspiration.

Bass Drum
The bass drum is the original time keeper. Troops marched and dancers danced to the tempo set by the bass drum, plus it provides a robust bottom end to the sound. Today the bass drum serves the same basic role thanks to the invention of the bass drum pedal. In addition to 'four on the floor', the bass drum’s function has evolved to augmenting the bass line and reinforcing figures. In jazz, it’s often treated as an additional tom.

Snare Drum
The snare drum sets both the rhythm and the mood. As the foremost and most exciting voice, its job is to ensure everything stays on track. A solid back beat keeps contemporary music jumping; a mellow brush pattern sets the stage for a more pensive mood; rapid fire snare strokes can add excitement and impel the music forward.

Ride Cymbal
In the first half of the 20th century, the ride cymbal took over the role formerly held by short rolls on the snare. That change freed the snare drum to take on other duties, and the ride cymbal is now used to define and carry the rhythm.

Crash Cymbals
The first cymbals served two purposes: to help celebrate events and to intimidate the enemy. That remains little changed today. We use our crash cymbals to punctuate and to celebrate making music. And we use them to get people's attention.

Hi-hat
The hi-hat was invented to replicate the sound of 'clash' or symphonic hand cymbals, but the device turned out to be capable of so much more. Stomping on the pedal gives us a ‘chick’ sound. Or we can stomp and let ‘em ring. Play them closed and you have a snare-like sound. Open just a bit and you have a sizzle cymbal. The hi-hat can also give us slosh, bark, pea-soup, and a few others. With so many tonal variants, you can use the ‘hats’ to add a lot of texture.

More is More
Given that the hi-hat can function like a snare, a crash cymbal or a ride cymbal, it’s reasonable to assume we can get similar versatility from the other instruments. Indeed you can play a ride pattern on the snare, bass drum, tom, whatever. You can play a back beat on a tom or on a cymbal stack. Yes, we've preserved the traditional functions, but nowadays we prefer to do more with our instruments.

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