yes, as long as itst the correct size, but i wouldn't suggest it. hey ladies call me, 480-336-0855
Well that really just depends on what kind of sound you want. It would probably sound/look ridiculous to most, but whatever floats your boat man.
This used to be super popular. They call it "concert" setup - concert toms and concert bass. (There's no such thing as a concert snare; if you remove the snare-side head the snares won't work.) A concert drum is louder and has a "cleaner" tone; a drum with a resonant head has a "fuller" tone with more overtones and harmonics.
The snare head and snare system
A Kevlar snare drum head is pretty hard. It uses the same material put into bullet proof vests.
the snares on a snare drum are on the outside of the drum. the causes the vibration to not be affected by the accoustics =================================================== Snares are located on the outside of the bottom head.
Kevlar heads sound really good and a steel drum is really all you can put them on. My drum teacher put a Kevlar head on a wood snare and it cracked it.
The snare drum is different to normal drums, as it has two skins. Under the bottom on are a series of chain-like-things. (Sorry for not being more specific). When you hit the top skin, the bottom one vibrates making the chains rattle. The snare is the "chain-like-thing" referenced above and it really isn't chain-like at all. A snare is several long, thin, metal strands with a very tight spiral pattern. They are stretched along the resonant head (bottom head) of the snare drum. The vibrations of the snare against the head produces the snare drum's signature sound. The snare can be tightened or loosened to change this sound from a sharp crack to a soft fizzle.
It is the metal part around the outside of the drum that is around the drum head.
typical drum (toms); Rim, head, Tension rod, collar, lug, shell, resonator head. Snare; as above, snare wires, snare strainer, butt, snare side head. bass; as with toms, spurs and bass drum claw.
It doesn't have another name. The snares are steel wires, sinuously-wound and tensioned so that they contact the lower drum-head. When the top head is struck, the snare-head resonates in sympathy, making the wires rattle against it to give the characteristic timbre to the drum's sound.
typical drum (toms); Rim, head, Tension rod, collar, lug, shell, resonator head. Snare; as above, snare wires, snare strainer, butt, snare side head. bass; as with toms, spurs and bass drum claw.
Batter head Batter head hoop Double-ended lugs Shell Snare-side head hoop Snare-side head Snare Throw-off Snare butt end Snare strainer Vent grommet The vent grommet normally secures the nameplate Very occasionally you'll see a snare drum on an isolation mount like you'd mount a tom, but that's normally done when someone plays piccolo snare.