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  2. Drum stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_stick

    Plain wooden drumsticks are most commonly described using a number to describe the weight and diameter of the stick followed by one or more letters to describe the tip. For example, a 7A is a common jazz stick with a wooden tip, while a 7AN is the same weight of stick with a nylon tip, and a 7B is a wooden tip but with a different tip profile ...

  3. Wikipedia:Describing drum sizes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Describing_drum...

    The size of a cylindrical drum such as a snare drum, tom or bass drum is commonly expressed as diameter x depth, both in inches. However, this convention is not universally adopted. For example, 14 x 5 is a common snare drum size. However, some manufacturers use the opposite convention, and put the depth first, so they would call this size 5 x 14.

  4. Grip (percussion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grip_(percussion)

    Gus started holding the left handed stick in an underhand grip. This allowed the drummer to play the drum and march without banging their knees or thighs into the drum. Many drummers use "traditional grip" on drums that are perfectly horizontal, especially in marching percussion. The grip became obsolete when marching snare harnesses were ...

  5. Percussion mallet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percussion_mallet

    Drum sticks are beaters normally used in pairs, with each held in one hand, and are similar to or derived from the snare drum sticks that were subsequently adopted for kit drumming. They are the most general-purpose beaters, and the term covers a wide variety of beaters, but they are mainly used for untuned percussion.

  6. Bachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bachi

    Bachi for taiko drums. Drum bachi (桴, 枹) are made in a wide variety of sizes and materials, as appropriate to the drum it will be used to play.A typical bachi is about 22 mm (7/8 inches) in diameter, 400 mm (16 inches) long and made out of a hardwood such as oak.

  7. Marching percussion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marching_percussion

    The "drum line" term began to be used by other marching percussion ensembles in the 70's along with the instrumentation used in the drum & bugle corps activity. This includes multi-tenor drums and pitched bass drums with split parts, embellishments like back-sticking and stick tosses, and innovations like mylar drumheads.

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