What drum does the second part play? It looks like it’s supposed to be snare, but sounds like drum 4 of a tenor.
@benzoentertains
Жыл бұрын
That line is meant for Tenor drum. In the HBCU band world, it’s like a small bass drum. Only difference is that instead of being the driving beat, it adds a new layer to the cadence/song being played. Also: we call “tenors” quads or quints.
@davidcaycedo4104
Жыл бұрын
@@benzoentertains so if my school’s Drumline (which does not have a ”Tenor”) wanted to play this, would we play it on the highest bass drum or have one quint play on drum 4?
@benzoentertains
Жыл бұрын
@@davidcaycedo4104 I would just not have that specific played OR Make up a part for the drop basses to fill in the gap If you’d like, I could go back and write a part and upload it
@davidcaycedo4104
Жыл бұрын
@@benzoentertains I think I could write something, but I’d love to see what you could come up with
@kanedgytheguy8105
Жыл бұрын
@@davidcaycedo4104flub
@BruddhaGromby
10 ай бұрын
...so on that main groove where the second line plays, on the crescendo to forte, it shows 4 notes, but I'm pretty sure I hear 6
@benzoentertains
10 ай бұрын
So the second line (played by the tenor drums) is written to have 4 notes played. The extra 2 notes you hear are being played by the quints. This is because I used the lowest drum from the quints to be played as the "tenor drums." The program I used to write the music doesn't have a drum I can use, so I make do with what I have. It's recommended that the drumline that plays this cadence have snares, cymbals, tenors, bass, and quints.
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