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| | #1 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 6
| do drums create harmonics? im doing an essay and need to write about harmonics in drums, do they even create harmonics? if so how? and how does it affect the sound? |
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| | #2 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,453
| that's a very big question! i'm not qualified to answer your questions but i imagine they definitely have harmonics in their sound with several fundamentals and harmonics in the attack portion. the only sound that doesn't have harmonics would be a digitally created sine wave but as soon as it's out of your speakers or even before it's out of your speakers and interacted with components, wall, furniture, etc it will have harmonics even digital to analog converters can add harmonics to the signal but really, i'm not qualified at all to answer this (other than my experience) and maybe my above hypothesis is even incorrect but hey, who knows! good luck |
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| | #3 |
| Gear nut | yes of course they do ..LOL if your tuning the drums lets say.... and you tap around lighly each lug on the drum head you have the pitch, if you take a tuning key and tap the same lug as close to the rim/edge of head youll hear the harmonic note. |
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| | #4 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: NY or Germany
Posts: 253
| i believe with drums they're known as overtones |
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| | #5 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 62
| yes, they vibrate at many different modes. However, the situation is more complicated than with a string or air column. A quick google found this picture of some of the different modes you get: http://www.tabla.com/tablach1.html |
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| | #6 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: London
Posts: 1,653
| Strictly speaking, harmonics are overtones -the two words are pretty much interchangeable except the first overtone (octave) is normally called second harmonic. In response to the original question - yes there are harmonics from drums. In fact much/most of what you hear is actually harmonics (this is true of many/most musical instruments). As pointed out, the harmonics from a 2D surface (drum skin) is far more complicated than that from a 1d object (string/column of air etc). Add an extra resonant head and the vibrations from the shell and things get very complex indeed. Most of the harmonics generated are 'inharmonic' in terms of western music....that is they are not octaves/fifths etc. It is the balancing of these harmonics, to give a sense of evenness of tone, that is it at the core of drum tuning - something which I find bl00dy difficult ! |
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| | #7 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Poland
Posts: 414
| As has been said, you can break this question down into two parts. The first part concerns the musical tones & 'over-tones' of the resonant drums. The second part concerns the harmonic content/structure of the actual sounds of both the drums & cymbals being struck. It would help if you could make clear where your question is intended. Perhaps for your essay you could make some recordings of drums and show some analysis? Andy
__________________ -------- Simpson High Resolution Microphones, Poland - Acoustic Impedance Matching Microphones www.SimpsonMicrophones.com ** Now updated with faster download MP3 samples ** Gregorian Choir mp3 - Orchestra mp3 - Piano mp3 - String Quartet mp3 - Drum overheads mp3 - Tabla mp3 - Sitar mp3 |
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| | #8 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Terra Australis
Posts: 197
| The first concern is whether the shell itself has excessive or unwanted overtones as regardless of head type or tuning, this affects the quality of the sound produced. If a shell has a dominant fundimental note with few overtones, then when set up and correctly tuned it will normally be a good sounding drum. Timber type and density, construction method, mass and dimensions all contribute and just when you think you have the shell figured out, you go and add hardware and heads which changes the rules ![]() ![]()
__________________ Digital information lasts forever....................................or maybe 5 years. Whichever comes first. |
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| | #9 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 482
| what i've never understand is why we don't tune our snare/toms/bd to the key of the song, like with timpanis. explanations? ![]() |
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| | #10 |
| Gear nut Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Berkeley, CA
Posts: 80
| I'd recommend reading the Synth Secrets articles concerning percussion and drums: SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS SYNTH SECRETS The ones I listed are the ones focusing on the physics -- there are other articles that focus more on how to get analog synthesizers to sound like the physics. The entire list of Synth Secrets articles is here: Search SOS Articles Database |
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| | #11 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 160
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| | #12 | |
| Gear addict Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 482
| Quote:
i'm guessing they don't have enough resonance/overtones to make it worthwhile. | |
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| | #13 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jun 2002 Location: New York
Posts: 3,582
| Quote:
But besides the retuning for every song mentioned above, and other similar dilemmas (such as the need to stay off your mid tom during the bridge because a key change made that note "out" etc). , 'tuned' drums often sound wrong for many musical applications. Percussion is often not meant to be 'in tune'. Otherwise, why not simply have a marimba or some pads with bass notes assigned to them? think of a big orchestral bass drum vs the tympani. Most orchestras have both. The single headed tympani produces a definite pitch the double headed bass drum produces an indefinite pitch, which is more visceral, more an explosion of sound than a note. Which sounds bigger? Which sounds scarier? I'd pick the bass drum in both cases. Cymbals and gongs could be constructed to ring like a bell instead of clank like sword or crash like a wave, but they generally are not. Even if you were willing to change it tune by tune, how cloying it would be if your ride cymbal was an endless series of C notes for a song that was in the key of C. ding ding ding ![]() IMO drums are essentially Noise. Noise used in a musical way, but noise nonetheless. bam boom crash I find pitched sounds are often too 'polite' to make the grade as "drums" in the rock and roll sense.
__________________ . “What you ask about is music. What you like is sound. Now music and sound are akin, but they are not the same.” — Confucius | |
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| | #14 | |
| Gear addict Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 482
| Quote:
![]() neat tuning link. | |
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| | #15 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Switzerland/New Zealand/guitar case
Posts: 2,554
| Interestingly most tuned instruments have overtones based on the harmonic series, however some percussion instruments such as bells have overtones based on minor thirds, people have also designed bells with major third overtones. from wikipedia: Quote:
this was an interestin article on harmonics in bells too: Untitled Document however if your essay is for a recording course as opposed to a physics or even music course then this will probably be beyond it, they will be looking more for how drum tuning effects the way drums gel in a recording narco | |
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| | #16 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 482
| is all this why maple sounds more musical/warm than birch? more and/or more major overtones? personally i prefer birch for toms/bd - power and impact but less pretty 'music' to clutter or cloud things up. at least so it seems. on the right track? |
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| | #17 | |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Berlin
Posts: 9
| Quote:
![]() I think the science stuff is interesting but not particularly practical in the "hands-on" sense. Here's some of the conclusions I've reached over the years (as usual, YMMV):
One more thing, these rules apply to drum tuning for rock, pop, country R&B and all other fatback groove-based styles. Jazz kit tuning is a whole different ballpark and most players tune their drums waaaay higher than fatback kit. Am expert on drum tuning is a guy named Bob Gatzen. Go check out his videos on Youtube, he talks about this stuff in detail and shows you how it's done. He's helped me immensely. Over'n'out
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| | #18 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Berlin
Posts: 9
| Dang McNabbit! I meant to say STAR TREK, as in the first three notes played by the trumpets during the "Space, the final frontier" bit. Probably not the best example ... "Here comes the bride" is the classic example.
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.themancable.com http://www.alpendub.de ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _|_ |_ _ ._ _ _.._ _ _.|_ | _ |_ | |(/_ | | |(_|| | (_(_||_)|(/_ |
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| | #19 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 482
| thanks man cable. good stuff. |
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