It Isnt, Poindexter
It Isnt, Poindexter
edit by a drummer: it is possible! it's all about tuning! I'm just a starter so not very good at it, but my teacher said the following: if you want a deep pitch, you gotta make sure you start tuning at the top, and keep the pitch as low as possible, then the bottom should be pitched a little bit higher, (half a turn of the screw or so, try and learn), and to get it pitched high, one should do the opposite. thus, if one tunes the biggest very high, and the smallest drum very low, they can produce the same pitch.
A snare drum sound like a hit on the roof or the hit on your wall.
It depends largely on how it is tuned. A large drum will generally produce a lower sound, but this is because they are usually tuned to produce that pitch because smaller drum heads do not have enough surface area to create that low a pitch without becoming floppy. Likewise, a large drum head such as a floor tom can produce a higher pitch, but not as high as a very small drum like a piccolo snare.
No, the bass drum is not pitched because it does not play the melody to a song it only plays the beat .
A bass drum typically has a lower pitch than a cello. The bass drum produces deep, resonant sounds due to its large size and the way it is played, which generates low-frequency vibrations. In contrast, while a cello can produce low notes, its pitch range generally extends higher than that of a bass drum. Thus, the bass drum is generally considered to have a lower pitch overall.
The talking drum is a West African drum whose pitch can be regulated to the extent that it is said the drum "talks". The player puts the drum under one shoulder and beats the instrument with a stick. A talking drum player raises or lowers the pitch by squeezing or releasing the drum's strings with the upper arm. This can produce highly informative sounds to convey complicated messages. The ability to change the drum's pitch is analogous to the language tonality of some African languages.
A snare drum sound like a hit on the roof or the hit on your wall.
Yes, they can produce specific pitches.
It depends largely on how it is tuned. A large drum will generally produce a lower sound, but this is because they are usually tuned to produce that pitch because smaller drum heads do not have enough surface area to create that low a pitch without becoming floppy. Likewise, a large drum head such as a floor tom can produce a higher pitch, but not as high as a very small drum like a piccolo snare.
No, the bass drum is not pitched because it does not play the melody to a song it only plays the beat .
A bass drum typically has a lower pitch than a cello. The bass drum produces deep, resonant sounds due to its large size and the way it is played, which generates low-frequency vibrations. In contrast, while a cello can produce low notes, its pitch range generally extends higher than that of a bass drum. Thus, the bass drum is generally considered to have a lower pitch overall.
the bass drum produces the lowest pitch
biger bass drums ring out more(unless muted) and are deeper. smaller have a higher pitch
It is not possible to answer the question since neither a drum not a pail are standard measures: they can be big or small.It is not possible to answer the question since neither a drum not a pail are standard measures: they can be big or small.It is not possible to answer the question since neither a drum not a pail are standard measures: they can be big or small.It is not possible to answer the question since neither a drum not a pail are standard measures: they can be big or small.
the top of it i think hop its helps im not thatgood
The talking drum is a West African drum whose pitch can be regulated to the extent that it is said the drum "talks". The player puts the drum under one shoulder and beats the instrument with a stick. A talking drum player raises or lowers the pitch by squeezing or releasing the drum's strings with the upper arm. This can produce highly informative sounds to convey complicated messages. The ability to change the drum's pitch is analogous to the language tonality of some African languages.
Usually high unless it's tuned low.
Snare drum