Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Percussion. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Percussion. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Sáu, 18 tháng 11, 2016

Steel drum: musical instrument facts

Steel drum: musical instrument facts

The steel drum is a tuned idiophone traditionally made from an oil drum, but today is made of high-quality steel. To make a steel drum, or a pan, the bottom of an oil drum is first pounded into a bowl, then shaped and tuned with hammers to form distinct resonating surfaces. Check out my list of fun, weird and just plain amazing fact of life I have found.
  • Steel bands are stylistically versatile, but the most common steel band conventions of melodic phrasing and rhythmic structure are related to Calypso music.
  • While the first steel bands included instruments such as soap boxes, biscuit tins, and dustbins, modern steel bands include vibraphones, cow bells, congas, bongos, triangles and other percussion instruments.
  • Drums are made in families: bass pans, rhythm pans, and tenor pans.

  • The steel band developed directly out of bamboo stamping tube ensembles, which provided carnival music for the lower-class in Port of Spain after a British colonial law restricted the use of drums with skin heads.
  • “Band wars” between rival steel bands emerged in Trinidad, complete with street fighting. Membership in a band soon became interpreted as hooliganism signaling creole disdain for European norms.
  • Manufacturing steel drums is a highly specialized skill. Pans are not standardized, as competition between rival bands fostered innovation in tuning and design.
  • Winston ‘Spree’ Simon of the John John steel band is credited with making the first pan. In 1946, his band performed Ave Maria and God Save the King for an audience that included the British Governor. Wanna take a quick look at funny pictures with captions that can help you relax effectively.
  • As of 1992, the steelpan is Trinidad and Tobago’s national instrument. However, the notion dates from the 1940s when the steel band’s musical transformation was driven by competition between bands as well as by the efforts of progressive middle-class individuals to promote what they viewed as an indigenous art form unjustly maligned by colonial cultural standards.
  • Popularity of the steel band has grown. They are now plentiful in Caribbean diaspora communities as well as non-Caribbean communities all over the world. While Trinidad and Tobago continues to be the center, countries like Sweden, Switzerland, and Japan are now hubs of steel band activity.
How much do you know about tiger facts for kids? Let’s check.

Thứ Tư, 3 tháng 8, 2016

Great Violin facts to know


Every instrument has a history that also involves bizarre, incredible and random facts! Violin players, enthusiasts and music lovers. Right below here are some of the most interesting facts about violin that you might not know.
  • The modern violin has been around for roughly 500 years. It was said to have been designed in the 1500’s by Andrea Amati.
  • Playing the violin burns approximately 170 calories per hour. Forget about your workout and start practicing harder!
  • Violins are typically comprised of spruce or maple wood.
  • Violins come in many different sizes. Typically, students will start learning violin at a young age with a 1/32 or 1/16 size violin. As the student ages they will graduate up to a full sized violin.
  • Violins are very complex. Over 70 different pieces of wood are put together to form the modern violin.
  • The word violin comes from the Medieval Latin word vitula, meaning stringed instrument;
  • The world record in cycling backwards playing a violin is 60.45 kilometres in 5 hours 8 seconds.
  • The most expensive violin in the world was made by Giuseppe Guarneri in 1741. This extravagant violin was appraised with a value of $18 million.
  • Violin bows typically contain 150 to 200 hairs. They can be made up of  a variety of materials including nylon and horse hair.
  • Violin strings were first made of sheep gut (commonly known as catgut), which was stretched, dried, and twisted. Other materials violin strings have been made out of include: solid steel, stranded steel, or various synthetic materials, wound with various metals, and sometimes plated with silver.