Hand drum

A hand drum is any type of drum that is typically played with the bare hand rather than a stick, mallet, hammer, or other type of beater. The simplest type of hand drum is the frame drum, which consists of a shallow, cylindrical shell with a drumhead attached to one of the open ends.

Contents

Types

The Following descriptions refer to tradditional versions of the drums. Modern synthetic versions are available for most if not all of the drums listed through various manufacturers.

Middle & Near East

Africa

Latin percussion

Far East and India

Native American

(Name not found) There is a traditional Native American drum that is tall and has vertical slits at the bottom of the drum allowing sound to escape from the sides. This drum, although extremely rare in the modern world, has shaped the way many play drums in modern America. A quick search of the web or attending diverse drum circles will reveal many people sitting on their drums which are laying horizontally on the ground. It is believed that this style of playing the drum (rather than sitting in a chair or holding it on your lap) originates here traditionally (as well as simply being convenient)this is how the drum was played.

Europe

External links