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Well without seeing it, it sounds from the serial number to be an early 1970's model, this is a reference from the Ludwig site, "At approximately the 750,000 mark in the serial number sequence, Ludwig discontinued the brass Keystone badge and replaced it with the blue and olive parallelogram-shaped badge". The original Ludwig badge was a Brass/gold looking one.
The Ludwig snare drum, also known as the Black Beauty, was made and is still produced in the US. The Ludwig snare drum is an awesome piece for any collector.
Ludwig drums are one of the most popular brands among musicians. They can be purchased at most music stores such as Musician's Friend and Guitar Center. Additionally, there are now many online music shops and specialty drum shops that carry Ludwig snare drums and other Ludwig products.
The Ludwig Black Beauty drum snare has a seamless brass shell, and has Supra-phonic sound. These snares are priced higher due to the quality and workmanship of them.
No ... is not. The band chooses the number of the snare drum before the concert ,of each song. (or not)
The snare head and snare system
snare at it
snare came from snare drum and the snare on it is the wire-like material that creates the sound.
the marching snare has a crisp loud noise as for a concert snare has more of a bass style
Entrap and entangle are words that mean snare. Free and exclude are opposites of snare.
a concert snare normally is taller and a trap snare is made to have more frequent use
Yes. In 1667, Bob Feltercrotsch Snare invented the snare and named it for himself.