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rudiment

 
Dictionary: ru·di·ment   ('də-mənt) pronunciation
 
n.
  1. A fundamental element, principle, or skill, as of a field of learning. Often used in the plural.
  2. Something in an incipient or undeveloped form. Often used in the plural: the rudiments of social behavior in children; the rudiments of a plan of action.
  3. Biology. An imperfectly or incompletely developed organ or part.

[Latin rudīmentum, from rudis, rough, unformed.]

rudimental ru'di·men'tal (-mĕn'tl) adj.
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Thesaurus: rudiment
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noun

  1. A fundamental principle or underlying concept. base1, basis, cornerstone, foundation, fundament, fundamental, root1. See over/under.
  2. A fundamental irreducible constituent of a whole. basic, element, essential, fundamental. Idioms: part and parcel. See part/whole.

 
Veterinary Dictionary: rudiment
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1. primordium.
2. an organ or part that has failed to realize its potential function.

 
Word Tutor: rudiment
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A basic principle or skill in a complex subject or activity.

pronunciation We learned the rudiments of writing essays in school.

 
Wikipedia: Rudiment
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A rudiment is basic patterns used in rudimental drumming. These patterns form the basic building blocks or "vocabulary" of drumming, and can be combined in a great variety of ways to create drumming music.

There have been many attempts to formalize a standard list of snare drum rudiments. The National Association of Rudimental Drummers (NARD), an organization established to promote rudimental drumming, put forward a list of 13 "essential" rudiments, and later a second set of thirteen to form the original 26. Finally, the Percussive Arts Society (PAS) reorganized the first 26 and added another 14 to form the current 40 International Drum Rudiments.

The origin of snare rudiments can be traced back to Swiss mercenaries armed with long poll arms. The use of long pike in close "hedgehog" or Phalanx formation required a great deal of coordination, and tabor's ability to cut through battlefield noise was used to set the tempo and communicate commands to pikers. Short sustain sound produced by tabor drum allowed to produce easily distinguished patterns which were used to convey different formation commands. These drumming patterns-commands became the basis of the snare drum rudiments.

The first written rudiment goes back to the year 1610 in Basel, Swizerland[1]. The cradle of rudimental drumming is said to be France, where in the 17th/18th century professional drummers became part of the King's honour guard. The craft was perfected during the reign of Napoleon I. The march Le Rigodon and his different interpretations in the 18th century is one of the cornerstones of modern rudimental drumming (among others the "two level"-playing). [2] [3]

The "buzzer-drums", later called "tambours" (French) came originally from Turkey to Europe during the crusades. Later other drums came with the Turkish wars in the 17th century. (encyclopedia Brockhaus)

The turkish origin of Tabor is highly questionnable for following reasons: the Tabor or "tambour" word comes from Latin "drum", the tabor drum was use by Swiss and German mecenaries several centuries earlier, and the crusades were over before Turkish conquest started. There are a number of examples of medieval taborers in buildings of the era, for example Lincoln and Gloucester cathedrals, and Tewkesbury Abbey, which predate Turkish wars by at least several hundred years. The use of Pipe and Tabor was wildly spread in Ireland, Scottland, England, France and on Iberian Peninsula, areas not affected by Turkish wars.

Today there are 3 main Rudimental Drumming cultures: Swiss Basler Trommeln (probably the highest level of all), Scottish Pipe Drumming, and American Drumming. Rudimental Drumming - Joachim Fuchs-Charrier


Contents

40 P.A.S. International Drum Rudiments

Roll rudiments

Single stroke rudiments

The single-stroke roll consists of alternating sticking (i.e., RLRL, etc.) of indeterminate speed and length.

No. Name Notation Description
1. Single Stroke Roll Image:1 single stroke roll.gif Evenly-spaced notes played with alternating sticking. Though usually played fast, even half notes with alternating sticking would be considered a single stroke roll.
2. Single Stroke Four Image:2 single stroke four.gif Four notes played with alternating sticking, usually as a triplet followed by a strong beat (as in the picture) or as three grace notes before a downbeat (like a ruff).
3. Single Stroke Seven Image:3 single stroke seven.gif Seven notes played with alternating sticking, usually as sextuplet followed by a strong beat.

Multiple bounce roll rudiments

No. Name Notation Description
4. Multiple Bounce Roll Image:4 multiple bounce roll.gif Alternating handed strokes with no specific number of bounces. Should sound even and continuous. Also called "buzz roll."
5. Triple Stroke Roll Image:5 triple stroke roll.gif Each stroke can be bounced or wristed. Also called a "French roll."

Double stroke open roll rudiments

The double stroke roll is a rudiment consisting of alternating diddles (i.e., RR, LL, etc) of indeterminate speed and length. There are 10 official variants of the double-stroke roll (see below).[4]

No. Name Notation Description
6. Double Stroke Open Roll Image:6 double stroke open roll.gif Like the single-stroke roll, usually played fast, but even when played slowly, alternating diddles are considered a double stroke roll. Played so each individual note can be heard distinctly.
7. Five Stroke Roll Image:7 five stroke roll.gif Two diddles followed by an accented note.
8. Six Stroke Roll Image:8 six stroke roll.gif Unlike most other double stroke rudiments, the six stroke roll begins with an accented single note. Then it is followed by the diddles and another accented note.
9. Seven Stroke Roll Image:9 seven stroke roll.gif Three diddles followed by an accented note.
10. Nine Stroke Roll Image:10 nine stroke roll.gif Four diddles followed by an accented note.
11. Ten Stroke Roll Image:11 ten stroke roll.gif Four diddles followed by two accented notes.
12. Eleven Stroke Roll Image:12 eleven stroke roll.gif Five diddles followed by an accented note.
13. Thirteen Stroke Roll Image:13 thirteen stroke roll.gif Six diddles followed by an accented note.
14. Fifteen Stroke Roll Image:14 fifteen stroke roll.gif Seven diddles followed by an accented note.
15. Seventeen Stroke Roll Image:15 seventeen stroke roll.gif Eight diddles followed by an accented note.

Diddle rudiments

In percussion, a diddle consists of two consecutive notes played by the same hand (either RR or LL). Compare to the drag, which also consists of two consecutive notes played by the same hand.

The paradiddle is a rudiment consisting of a four-note pattern of the form RLRR or LRLL.[4] When multiple paradiddles are played in succession, the first note always alternates between right and left. There are also several official variations of paradiddle rudiments. Paradiddles are often used to switch hands while playing steady notes. For example, if steadily playing sixteenth notes, with right hand lead (RLRL, etc), then wanting to end on a drum to the left of the current drum, he may stick it as follows: RLRL RLRL RLRL RLRR L with the final left tap on the ending drum.

No. Name Notation Description
16. Single Paradiddle Image:16 single paradiddle.gif Two alternating notes followed by a diddle.
17. Double Paradiddle Image:17 double paradiddle.gif Four alternating notes followed by a diddle.
18. Triple Paradiddle Image:18 triple paradiddle.gif Six alternating notes followed by a diddle.
19. Paradiddle-Diddle Image:19 paradiddle diddle.gif Two alternating taps followed by two alternating diddles.

Flam rudiments

A flam is a rudiment consisting of a quiet "grace" note on one hand followed by a louder "primary" stroke on the opposite hand. The two notes are played almost simultaneously, and are intended to sound like a single, 'broader' note.[4]

No. Name Notation Description
20. Flam Image:20 flam.gif A single primary note note preceded by a grace note which is played with the opposite hand. The temporal distance between the grace note and the primary note can vary depending on the style and context of the piece being played.
21. Flam Accent Image:21 flam accent.gif Alternating groups of three notes of the form [Flam - tap - tap].
22. Flam Tap Image:22 flam tap.gif Alternating diddles with flams on the first note of each.
23. Flamacue Image:23 flamacue.gif A group of four notes and an ending downbeat, where the first note and the down beat are flammed, and the second note is accented.
24. Flam Paradiddle Image:24 flam paradiddle.gif A paradiddle with a flam on the first note.[4]
25. Single Flammed Mill Image:25 single flammed mill.gif An inverted paradiddle (RRLR, LLRL) with a flam on the first note of each diddle.
26. Flam Paradiddle-diddle Image:26 flam paradiddle diddle.gif Alternating paradiddle-diddles with flams on the first note of each.
27. Pataflafla Image:27 pata flafla.gif A four-note pattern with flams on the first and last notes.[4]
28. Swiss Army Triplet Image:28 swiss army triplet.gif A right hand flam followed by a right tap and a left tap, or (using a left hand lead) a left hand flam followed by a left tap and a right tap. [5][4] It is often used in the place of a flam accent, since repeated flam accents will have three taps on the same hand in a row, where repeated swiss army triplets only involve two taps on the same hand.
29. Inverted Flam Tap Image:29 inverted flam tap.gif Alternating diddles (offset by one sixteenth note) with a flam on the second note of each diddle.
30. Flam Drag Image:30 flam drag.gif Alternating groups of three notes of the form [flam - drag - tap].

Drag rudiments

No. Name Notation Description
31. Drag Image:31 drag.gif A drag consists of two consecutive notes played by the same hand (either RR or LL). This is similar to the diddle, except that by convention diddles are played the same speed as the context in which they are placed, where drags are played at twice the speed as the context in which they are placed. For example, if a sixteenth note passage is being played then any drags in that passage would by definition be thirty-second notes, where diddles would be sixteenth notes. Drags can also be played as grace notes. When played as grace notes on timpani, the grace notes are alternated (rlR, lrL). [6]

Continuously playing alternating drags (or diddles) results in a double-stroke roll.

A similar rudiment is the ruff, which is a note with three grace notes, but they are usually alternated [6]

32. Single Drag Tap Image:32 single drag tap.gif A single drag tap is two alternating notes where the first note has drag grace notes and the second is accented.
33. Double Drag Tap Image:33 double drag tap.gif A double drag tap is a single drag tap with another grace note drag before it.
34. Lesson 25 Image:34 lesson 25.gif A lesson 25 is three alternating notes where the first note has drag grace notes and the third is accented.
35. Single Dragadiddle Image:35 single dragadiddle.gif A single dragadiddle is a paradiddle where the first note is a drag.
36. Drag Paradiddle #1 Image:36 drag paradiddle 1.gif The first drag paradiddle is an accented note followed by a paradiddle with drag grace notes on the first note.
37. Drag Paradiddle #2 Image:37 drag paradiddle_2.gif The second drag paradiddle is two accented notes followed by a paradiddle with drag grace notes on the second accented note and the first note of the paradiddle.
38. Single Ratamacue Image:38 single ratamacue.gif A single ratamacue consists of four notes where the first note has drag grace notes and the fourth is accented. [4]
39. Double Ratamacue Image:39 double ratamacue.gif A double ratamacue consists of a single ratamacue with a drag before it.
40. Triple Ratamacue Image:40 triple ratamacue.gif A triple ratamacue consists of a single ratamacue with two drags before it.

Historical organization (Standard 26 American Drum Rudiments)

Thirteen "essential" rudiments

  1. The Long Roll
  2. The Five Stroke Roll
  3. The Seven Stroke Roll
  4. The Flam
  5. The Flam Accent
  6. The Flam Paradiddle
  7. The Flamacue
  8. The Ruff
  9. The Single Drag
  10. The Double Drag
  11. The Double Paradiddle
  12. The Single Ratamacue
  13. The Triple Ratamacue

Second thirteen rudiments

  1. The Single Stroke Roll
  2. The Nine Stroke Roll
  3. The Ten Stroke Roll
  4. The Eleven Stroke Roll
  5. The Thirteen Stroke Roll
  6. The Fifteen Stroke Roll
  7. The Flam Tap
  8. The Single Paradiddle
  9. The Drag Paradiddle #1
  10. The Drag Paradiddle #2
  11. The Flam Paradiddle-diddle
  12. The Lesson 25
  13. The Double Ratamacue

Last fourteen rudiments

More recently, the Percussive Arts Society added 14 more rudiments to extend the list to the current 40 International Drum Rudiments. Note that the ordering was completely changed during this last re-organization, so these numbers won't match those above.

  • The Single Stroke Four
  • The Single Stroke Seven
  • The Multiple Bounce Roll
  • The Triple Stroke Roll
  • The Six Stroke Roll
  • The Seventeen Stroke Roll
  • The Triple Paradiddle
  • The Single Paradiddle-Diddle
  • The Single Flammed Mill
  • The Pataflafla
  • The Swiss Army Triplet
  • The Inverted Flam Tap
  • The Flam Drag
  • The Single Dragadiddle


Books
Publishing year Name Author
1812 A New, Useful, and Complete System of Drum Beating Charles Ashworth
1815 The Art of Beating the Drum Samuel Potter
1861 The Drummers' and Fifers' Guide Bruce Emmett
1869 Strube's Drum and Fife Instructor Gardiner A. Strube
1886 The Trumpet and Drum John Philip Sousa
1935 Stick Control George Lawrence Stone
1942 Modern Interpretation of Snare Drum Rudiments Buddy Rich
1945 The All-American Drummer Charley Wilcoxon
1959 14 Modern Contest Solos For Snare Drum John S. Pratt
1979 The Technique and Mechanics of Rudimental Snare Drumming Ken Mazur
1992 The Drummer's Rudimental Reference Book John Wooton
2004 The Beat of a Different Drummer Dominick Cuccia

Notable contributors

  • John S. Pratt: composer, arranger, Former U.S. Military Academy instructor
  • Charley Wilcoxon: instructor, author, and teacher
  • Dante Agostini, French instructor, autor and teacher
  • Dr. Fritz R. Berger, inventor of the Berger-Notation, Basel Switzerland
  • J. Burns Moore: instructor, author, and teacher
  • George Lawrence Stone: instructor, author, and teacher
  • Earl Sturtze: instructor, author, and teacher
  • Les Parks: instructor and arranger, Sons of Liberty Fife and Drum Corps, Hawthorne Cabaleros, Garfield Cadets
  • John S. Pratt: instructor, author, and teacher
  • Fred Sanford: instructor and arranger, Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Ralph Hardimon: instructor and arranger, Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Tom Float: instructor and arranger, Blue Devils Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Marty Hurley: instructor and arranger, Phantom Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps during the 1970's and early '80s
  • Paul Rennick: instructor and arranger, Phantom Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Scott Johnson: instructor and arranger, Blue Devils Drum and Bugle Corps
  • James Campbell: instructor and arranger, The Cavaliers Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Bret Kuhn: instructor and arranger, The Cavaliers Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Dennis DeLucia: instructor and arranger, Bridgemen Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Thom Hannum: instructor and arranger, Cadets Drum and Bugle Corps
  • Charley Poole, Jr. instructor and arranger, 27th Lancers Drum and Bugle Corps

Hybrid rudiments

Over the years, many other rudimental patterns have been informally identified and given creative names, although most of these are based upon the original 40. They are commonly known as "hybrid rudiments" or "hybrids," and are especially common in drumlines and drum corps. A few notable examples are the Herta, which is a drag played with alternating sticking, the Cheese, a diddle with a grace note, and the Eggbeater, a five-tuplet with the sticking "rrrll"; indeed, these hybrids have themselves given way to more innovative and arguably more difficult hybrids, "Cheese Invert" (an inverted flam tap with cheeses instead of flams) and the "Diddle-Egg-Five" (a paradiddle-diddle followed by an Eggbeater and two diddles, one on each hand).

References

  1. ^ http://www.pfyffersyte.ch/files/repertoire/hit2005_PundT.php
  2. ^ http://www.tamboursde89.com/revue/88.pdf
  3. ^ http://www.pfyffersyte.ch/files/repertoire/hit2005_PundT.php
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "International Drum Rudiments" Page of the Percussive Arts Society (PAS)
  5. ^ Swiss Army Triplet Example on VicFirth.com Accessed 8/11/2007.
  6. ^ a b Nasatir, Cary. "Too Many Rudiments?". Conn-Selmer Keynotes. http://www.keynotesmagazine.com/article.php?uid=120. Retrieved on February 3 2008. 

External links


 
Translations: Rudiment
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - rudiment

Nederlands (Dutch)
rudiment, beginsel, onderontwikkeld orgaan

Français (French)
n. - rudiment

Deutsch (German)
n. - Grundzüge, Grundlagen, Rudiment

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (γνωστικό) στοιχείο, βάση, υποτυπώδης μορφή, υποτυπώδης αρχή, (στον πληθ.) στοιχεία, πρώτες γνώσεις

Italiano (Italian)
rudimenti, abbozzo

Português (Portuguese)
n. - rudimentos (m pl)

Русский (Russian)
зачаток, рудимент, элементарное знание

Español (Spanish)
n. - rudimentos, nociones elementales, rudimento

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - de första grunderna, anlag, antydan

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
基础, 雏形, 入门

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 基礎, 雛形, 入門

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 기본, 초보, 조짐

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 基礎, 基本原理, 初期の形, 萌芽, 原基

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) مبادى, شي في مرحله بدائيه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮יסודות, סימני התפתחות, שרידים‬


 
 
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