Announcements

Special Announcement Update:


You asked, we listened! Please note that User Reviews are back! The Home page has returned to an editorial focus, with an emphasis on Articles and Industry News. The drop down menus are gone and simpler navigation has been implemented, and the forum landing page structure is going back to a more familiar layout. This transition is being performed "live", so some things may be moving around temporarily as we complete the process. Thanks for your patience as we implement these changes that our Community Members have asked for.


- Your Harmony Central Team
Anderton

Change a Percussion Instrument’s Tone for Cheap

by Community Manager ‎10-01-2012 11:29 PM - edited ‎01-16-2013 02:57 PM

It's the Next Best Thing to Having a Different "Preset" on Your Hand Drum

by Craig Anderton

 

Recently while engineering a session for the hip-hop group ICC, we were laying down a percussion part with various hand drums (e.g., conga, djembe, bongos, tumba, etc.) when producer Brian Hardgroove wanted a less resonant, more “dead” sound. The object was to avoid conflicts with the main drum track, which had a lot of presence and in some sections was relatively “busy.” I tried the “tape your wallet to the head” trick, but while that muted the sound somewhat, it didn’t change the fundamental character enough.

 

However, a simple, inexpensive solution that can deaden a percussion instrument’s was available right there in the studio: foam. You want a high-density, open-cell, medium firmness, bendable polyurethane foam as used for mattresses, pads, dog beds, bay windows, and the like so you can stuff it into the drum’s body through the opening in the drum’s bottom. You don’t want foam that’s too thick, as it will be difficult to  stuff into the drum.

 

Bendable but medium-firm foam tends to hold its shape when put inside the drum, allowing anything from maximum deadness by stuffing it in to the point where it restricts the movement of the drum head, to using a smaller size bent in half to act like a combination absorber/diffuser. It has no effect on playability, and you wouldn’t even know it was there except for the difference in tone.

 

For one of the larger drums, putting a thick cloth over the drum head gave a similar result. This needs to be secured somewhat so it doesn’t slip around, but other than that, doesn’t really interfere with playability. And there was one more final touch: when using sticks instead of hands to hit the drums, wrapping duct tape around the tips prevented “clacking” on the higher-pitched drums.

 

You might be surprised at how a little experimentation with foam can impart a really different sound to hand drums. It’s not quite like having different “presets” on an acoustic instrument, but the difference can be just what’s needed for a session—as it was in this case

Comments
by 11 on ‎04-23-2013 10:49 PM

Being nearly ready to pop clearly cheap human hair weave isn't slowing Rochelle Humes from curly weave hair The Saturdays down! The glamorous singer hair weave websites popped into leading weave online salon Inanch London, to have a new set of 100% human hair weave applied prior to the arrival of her baby next month. Inanch Emir, who recently won the Best black hair weaves of the Year Award at the Hair Awards 2013.