-
Recent Posts
- How to Become Good at the Piano on Your Own Time
- Drum Sets: Setting the Beat
- Are You Truly Ready to Learn to Play Guitar?
- Drums Throughout Humanity
- The Beauty And Peace Of Learning to Play the Piano
- Piano Playing Secrets Of The Pros
- Learn To Play Drums (Part 6) – Quick, Easy, Simple! (Beginner Basic Rock Beat)
- Learn to Play Guitar for Beginners Some Aspects to Keep in Mind
- Drum Practice Cheat Sheet
- The 10-24-7 Rule – Learning Piano Music the Easy Way!
- Native American Drums And The History Of Native Americans
- How to Improvise Freely on Piano!
- How To Play Guitar Faster
- Getting Together the Right Drum Kit
- Piano Lesson: Compose And Become A Better Pianist
Tags
acoustic American bass beat beats beginner Beginners chords cymbals down drum drumming Drums Easy expertvillage Fast free Guitar Home how how to play the piano instruments kick Learn learning lesson lessons music musical Native notes Online Piano Play Playing rhythms rock Should simple snare Songs Tips to up videoCategories
Archives
-
RSS Links
Drum Sets: Setting the Beat
Drum sets are indispensable additions to any band. Every music band typically needs at least three members; a drummer, a bass player, and a guitarist. Especially rock and pop bands need drummers to keep the beat going while the vocalist belts out the words. In popular culture, drums signify energy and liveliness, and are known to have a positive effect on the player’s personal attitude in the long run.
Drums are of two types, such as, acoustic drums, and electronic drums. Acoustic drums are, as the name suggests, full manual. These have to be manually tuned prior to playing and depend on the drummer’s skill to create good music. Electronic drums, on the other hand, have amplifiers, speakers, or even auto-tuning mechanisms attached to them. This makes tuning these drums significantly easier than the acoustic ones.
There are some pros and cons of both acoustic and electronic drums. Acoustic drums allow a seasoned drummer to literally play around (pun intended) with his kit. The drummer can add overtones, remove overtones, muffle sound, magnify sound; all with the correct turn of some screws. These do not depend on any additional instruments, except maybe a microphone put in front of them at times. But an electronic drum set will depend on amplifiers, speakers or even additional electronic beat changers to produce the right kind of music. This makes carrying them around quite cumbersome.
Acoustic drums are full manual instruments, and thus require a lot of time and patience to master. The characteristic “crack” that drummers love to create cannot be produced unless the sweet spot is struck, which is located in a different spot for each drum. Locating it may take hours of strenuous practice. In an electronic drum set, the beats are electronically produced, so the “crack” can be produced at will. However, most veteran drummers insist that the electronic “crack” does not come anywhere close to its manual variant in terms of quality.
Electronic drums can act as an easy way out for budding drummers who do not wish to stay glued to the kit for hours at a stretch. But, in order to fully master the art, one needs to practice with acoustic drums. Not only do these improve the player’s understanding of music, these also prepare their ears so that they can easily recognize one wrong tone among many correct ones. This helps them perfect their skills in the long run.
Drum sets are great instruments to have around. But, in order to master them, a budding drummer must endure hours of strenuous practice.
? At World Music Supply, we offer wide variety of percussion products and accessories including Ludwig & Mapex beginners drum sets, snare, cymbals & percussion effects at reasonable rates.