the snares on a snare drum are on the outside of the drum. the causes the vibration to not be affected by the accoustics
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Snares are located on the outside of the bottom head.
The strings at the bottom of the snare drum are actually called "Snares". The tightness of the snares determines the length of the "chh" sound you hear when the drum is hit.
A snare drum got its name from the chains or snares on the bottom of the drum.
It is the metal part around the outside of the drum that is around the drum head.
The snare throw off is a lever that allows a player to adjust the amount of snare buzz or turn on or off the snares on by moving them farther or closer to the resonant head. It is usually located on the side of the drum.
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.
The strings at the bottom of the snare drum are actually called "Snares". The tightness of the snares determines the length of the "chh" sound you hear when the drum is hit.
if you want a good snare drum then yes. but it is not impossible
Snares are long metal, wrinkled, strings along the middle on the bottom of a snare drum.
Well it has evolved from being only used as a marching snare in war to make its way in to music, spearheaded by jazz, the snare drum is now a necessary of every drum kit and concert band. Little known fact: before the snares of the snare drum were made of metal, drum makers used dried cats' intestines for the snares.
A snare drum got its name from the chains or snares on the bottom of the drum.
That depends on the brand, type of snare, and condition the drum is in. I've seen Pearl marching snares cost as much as $500 new, but regular concert snares may only sell for $200 new.
It is the metal part around the outside of the drum that is around the drum head.
it depends what kind of drum. some drums have a simple elastic band that vibrates, and a snare drum, has some metal snares, that's why its called that.
A snare drum works by having these small bead like things on the bottom and when you hit it with a drum stick it rattles and it gets the sound it does when you hear it
It is maybe used on a drum kit. A snare is also a kind of trap used for capturing animals. For more information go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snares
You bet'cha!! Peter Jarvis is a respected composer in the percussion world. Some of his snare drum compositions include Tunes Without Pitches, Op. 8 and The Snares of Time, Op.5
The snare throw off is a lever that allows a player to adjust the amount of snare buzz or turn on or off the snares on by moving them farther or closer to the resonant head. It is usually located on the side of the drum.