No. Although it is effective in sound quality and rhythmic accuracy to subdivide buzz rolls, some situations could call for a use of unorganized buzz rolls. Such situations are typically associated with the property of creating musical distortion.
if you want a good snare drum then yes. but it is not impossible
14x6.5" Orange County Stainless steel/nickel snare
Not necessarily - but you should use them. With regular snare sticks (5A or something) you will get a very thin and weak sound. Your rolls will be different. And you will go through sticks like crazy with them breaking all the time. Get a pair of marching sticks. They will last a lot longer and save you money in the end.
Some popular techniques for playing the snare drum in music include rudiments such as single strokes, double strokes, paradiddles, and flams. Drummers also use techniques like rimshots, ghost notes, and buzz rolls to create different sounds and rhythms on the snare drum.
Most of the time, when the snare drum is tuned, it is tuned to the note "C".
The snare head and snare system
The top side.
snare at it
The snare is always the loudest percussion instrument within a drum kit. You could be playing all of the different drums at once and you will always still hear the snare over everything else. Source: Been a drummer for 13 years.
snare came from snare drum and the snare on it is the wire-like material that creates the sound.
The Double Ply ec3 heads deliver a punch, so an Evans EMAD snare head would go well with them.
the marching snare has a crisp loud noise as for a concert snare has more of a bass style