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  2. Speed garage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_garage

    Speed garage features sped-up NY garage 4-to-the-floor rhythms that are combined with breakbeats. [3] Snares are placed as over the 2nd and the 4th kickdrums, so in other places of the drum pattern. [4] Speed garage tunes have warped, heavy basslines, influenced by jungle [5] and reggae. [6] Sweeping bass is typical for speed garage. [7]

  3. UK garage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_garage

    Speed garage already incorporated many aspects of today's UK garage sound like sub-bass lines, ragga vocals, spin backs and reversed drums. What changed over time, until the so-called 2-step sound emerged, was the addition of further funky elements like contemporary R&B styled vocals, more shuffled beats and a different drum pattern. The most ...

  4. 2-step garage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-step_garage

    2-step garage, or simply 2-step, is a genre of electronic music and a subgenre of UK garage. [1] One of the primary characteristics of the 2-step sound – the term being coined to describe "a general rubric for all kinds of jittery, irregular rhythms that don't conform to garage's traditional four-on-the-floor pulse" [1] – is that the rhythm lacks the kick drum pattern found in many other ...

  5. List of drum manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_drum_manufacturers

    This is a list of some drum makers, individuals and companies known for making drums and accessories, such as drum sticks. It includes defunct companies, and companies who additionally make instruments other than drums, and manufacturers of cymbals, which are a common component of drum sets.

  6. Pipesdrums Magazine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipesdrums_Magazine

    The site was originally an independent offshoot of the Piper & Drummer, a quarterly print publication produced by the Pipers & Pipe Band Society of Ontario until March 2006. The online magazine serves the world competing piping and drumming community of approximately 75,000, according to a recent estimate conducted by the National Piping Centre ...

  7. Leedy Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leedy_Manufacturing_Company

    The Leedy Manufacturing Company (also known as the Leedy Drum Company) was an American manufacturer of percussion instruments headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana.Leedy was highly successful in the early twentieth century, [1] and was at one point the largest manufacturer of drums and other percussion instruments in the world.

  8. Slingerland Drum Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slingerland_Drum_Company

    Slingerland is a United States manufacturer of drums.The company was founded in 1912 and enjoyed several decades of prominence in the industry before the 1980s. After ceasing operation in the early 1980s, Slingerland was acquired by Gibson, who briefly revived it and owned it until November 2019, before selling Slingerland to DW Drums, who announced the intention of re-launching the brand.

  9. Drum Workshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_Workshop

    Drum Workshop was founded in 1972 as a teaching studio by Don Lombardi. Alongside student John Good, Lombardi began a small drum equipment sales operation to cover the studio's operation costs. After the closure of the Camco Drum Company in 1977, its manufacturing equipment was purchased by Drum Workshop. [2]