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3899 Members
81 Forums
13114 Topics
166668 Posts
Max Online: 722 @ 04/10/08 12:10 PM
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#153030 - 10/17/07 03:00 PM
Re: snareline...more is better?
[Re: JimmyNoobtron]
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Registered: 03/11/07
Loc: West Chester University
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JimmyNoobtron (haha) is right. A larger line (like the 9-15 man snare lines in DCI div I) is way more impressive if and ONLY if they are clean visually and musically. If they're not it's kind of annoying. I'm a solo tenor player but there's 4 snares and 4 basses and 9 pit in our line. Visuals and things like that work better with a bigger line, but we're not as clean as we'd like to be. When my co-captain and I play together, it's clean as a whistle, but the visuals look stupid with just the two of us. It's all a matter of how clean you can get with more people.
_________________________
Egg Harbor Township Class of 2008 (Percussion Captain, Tenors) Raiders Drum and Bugle Corps 2007-08 (Bass 4, Bass 1) West Chester University Class of 2012 (Bass 2, section leader)
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#153033 - 10/17/07 06:43 PM
Re: snareline...more is better?
[Re: JimmyNoobtron]
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blanks
Registered: 02/24/07
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Quote:
More is much, much, better to me. But more also has to be very clean or else you're wasting everyone's time. But a bigger line is more impressive visually as well as sound-wise. Any stick tricks or backsticking or drumhopping looks so much better if it involves a bigger line.
strongly agree but its a must to be clean a big dirty line has nothing on a clean small line But A big line looks so much better
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#153036 - 10/18/07 12:17 AM
Re: snareline...more is better?
[Re: davidmyers]
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Registered: 05/11/03
Loc: USA
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I think people are losing the idea of balance. More doesn't always mean better. A good guide line that most drumlines will or should use is 3 snares to 1 tenor, because tenors tuned right and playing at the right level can outplay even 2 snare drummers. That's why with most Div. 1 Corps you have 9-10 snares and maybe 5-6 tenors.
Modern high-tuned snare drums are producing such a thin tone that they're losing volume. If you want to prove this, take a free-floater tuned with a high tension head and then take a field drum that would have been used 30 years ago with a strong mylar head tuned to a normal field drum timbre(tone color) and hear the difference.
There's also other aspects that have been talked about such as size of the band, number of people in the drumline, etc.
The more balanced you have a drumline, the better it will sound and the more MUSICAL it can become.
_________________________
Always BRINGIN' THA JUNK -Randall James Cook- It's plain to see, you can't change me, cause I'm gonna be a drummer for life
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