A
drummer is a musician who plays
drums, which includes but is not limited to a
drum kit ("drum set" or "trap set", including but not limited to
cymbals) and accessory based hardware which includes an assortment of pedals and standing support mechanisms,
marching percussion and/or any musical instrument that is struck within the context of a wide assortment of musical genres. The term
percussionist
applies to a musician who performs struck musical instruments of
numerous diverse shapes, sizes and applications. Most contemporary
western ensembles
bands for
Rock,
Pop,
Jazz,
R&B
etc. includes a drummer within the context of its music based ensemble
for purposes including but not limited to timekeeping, and artist based
applications deemed appropriate towards the elevation of a prescribed
music based aesthetic. Most drummers of this particular designation work
within the context of a larger contingent (aka rhythm section) that may
also include, keyboard (a percussion instrument) and/or guitar,
auxiliary percussion (often of non western origin) and bass (bass viol
or electric). Said ensembles may also include melodic based mallet
percussion including but not limited to: vibraphone, marimba and/or
xylophone. The rhythm section, being the core metronomic foundation with
which other melodic instruments, including voices, may present the
harmonic/melodic portion of the material.
First and foremost, a drummer is a musician that performs music on
the multi-percussion instrument known as the drum set, which usually
consists of a bass drum (with pedal), a floor tom, tom-toms, a snare
drum, hi-hats, a ride cymbal, and a crash cymbal.
In popular music, the primary function of the drummer is to "keep
time" or provide a steady tempo and rhythmic foundation. However, in
other musical styles, such as world, jazz, classical, and electronica,
the function of a drummer is often shifted from "time keeper" to
soloist, whereby the main melody becomes the rhythmic development
generated by the drummer or percussionist.
There are many tools that a drummer can use for either timekeeping or
soloing. These include cymbals, (i.e. china, crash, ride, splash,
hi-hats, etc.) Auxiliary percussion, (i.e. bells, Latin drums, cowbells,
temple blocks) and many others. Also there is a single, double, and a
triple bass pedal for the bass drum.
Military
Before motorized transport became widespread, drummers played a key role in
military conflicts. The
drum cadences provided set a steady marching pace, and elevated troop
morale
on the battlefield. In some armies drums also assisted in combat by
keeping cadence for firing and loading drills with muzzle loading guns.
Military drummers were also employed on the parade field, when troops
passed in review, and in various ceremonies including ominous
drum rolls accompanying disciplinary punishments. Children also served as
drummer boys
well into the nineteenth century, though less commonly than is
popularly assumed as due to the nature of the job experienced older men
were preferred.
Drummers are not employed in battle, but their ceremonial duties continue. Typically
buglers and drummers mass under a
sergeant-drummer and during marches alternately perform with the regiment and/or battalion ensembles.
Military based musical percussion traditions were not limited exclusively to the western world. When Emir
Osman I
was appointed commander of the Turkish army on the Byzantine border in
the late 13th century, he was symbolically installed via a handover of
musical instruments by the Seldjuk sultan. During the
Ottoman Empire,
size of a military band reflected the rank of its commander in chief:
the largest reserved for the Sultan (viz. his Grand Vizier when taking
the field). It included various percussion instruments, often adopted in
European military music (as 'Janissary music') The
pitched bass drum is still known in some languages as the Turkish Drum.
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