Drum set tuning

Contents

Drum Set Tuning

Drum set tuning is the process of tensioning drumheads on a drum to produce a pleasing drum tone. A drummer tunes the drums using a drum key, a small, square socket-wrench that fits over the tension rods.

Drum tuning styles and techniques vary between different drums, music genres, and the preferences of drummers. In addition to tuning drums, drummers often treat drums with muffling material to alter the drum sound.

Tom Toms

Tuning toms is the act of ensuring that:

When tuning a drum, know that the top (batter) head controls attack and ring, while the bottom head controls resonance, sustain, overtones, and timbre.

Snare drum and bass drum

Snare drum

Bass or Kick drum

The Process

When tensioning a head,start by tightening the tension rod closest to you; don't tighten it all the way, just a couple of turns. (This is because you want keep an even tension across the drum head, which you can't do if one lug is super-tight and the others are super-loose.) Now move to the tension rod opposite the first lug and give that tension rod the same number of turns; do the same with the remaining lugs, in order, moving from one side of the head to the other.

When you return to the first tension rod, tighten this rod a little tighter, and then move around the lugs again, applying a little extra tension each time around. Keep this up until the head is free of wrinkles and a very low tone is produced when you hit the head.

Continue tightening the rods (in order), a little bit at a time—no more than a quarter turn each time. From time to time, you should tap the head next to each tension rod and tighten or loosen each rod so that the tones are all the same all around the drum. (When drummers say that a drum "is in tune with itself," they mean that the head is equally tensioned all the way around.)

Repeat this procedure until the head has the desired pitch. (At times it might be desired to use a specific key or individual musical notes to tune each drum to, creating more melodic tones and a more musical sound to the drums overall). Give the head another set of taps around the edges to make sure the tuning is even, and then you're done—with that head. If you use double- headed drums, you'll need to repeat this procedure with the bottom head.[2]

Muffling

Many drummers prefer a dryer sound with less ring. There are many different techniques you can use to reduce ring.

One approach is to loosen the batter head a quarter to a half turn. Another way is to either increase or decrease the pitch of the bottom head so that it's different from the pitch of the top head. Either of these approaches produces a slightly dryer, funkier sound.

If you still have unwanted ring—or don't like the tone of these types of heads—then you can turn to any of the following external muffling techniques:

References

  1. ^ How to Tune Drums Drumbook.org
  2. ^ Miller, Michael. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Playing Drums, 2nd Edition. (2004) Alpha Books.

External links

Printed Reference Matter

Wang C.Y. Journal of Sound and Vibration, February 1999, vol. 220, no. 3, pp. 559–563, Ingenta.

Laura P.A.A.; Rossit C.A.; Bambill D.V. Journal of Sound and Vibration, December 2000, vol. 238, no. 4, pp. 720–722, Ingenta.