I play in a worship band for Teen Community Bible Study
every Thursday night. I will usually play guitar or the cajon (a fancy word for
a drum box). The cajon is a box with snare springs at the top of it, to create
a bass and a snare sound (depending on where you hit the box with your
hand). We have been using the cajon in
this particular band ever since we started because it was all we could afford,
and it fit our playing style because we do not play loud. Just a few weeks ago
a nice person donated a full drum set to the church we play in and hold Teen
Community Bible Study. We talked to someone in the church and they said we are
free to use it and fix it up if we would like. I was licking my lips at those
words. I have never actually played a drum set before, but I knew what it was
composed of and I knew how to play it, I just never had the opportunity before.
I sat down and played a little and it sounded awful; and it wasn’t because I
was bad at playing the drum set. The toms were unbearably out of tune and the cymbals
sounded like cheap china cymbals. Thankfully,
I knew how to fix up the set because of my previous knowledge in my high school
drumline.
I first
started fixing up the toms. The drum has many tension rods around the rim to
tighten or loosen the drum head. You need a drum key to fix the drum head,
which I have because I had to do the same thing tuning the tenor drums I
marched with. So I tightened the tension rods in a star formation and eventually got the toms
sounding much better. One of the other band members has a drum set at home and
he said he could bring in one or two of his cymbals to put on the “new” set we
got. The bass drum, hi-hat, and snare drum all sounded fine, so we made the old
drum set as good as new.
There
are many different drum sets and brands. To start off, there are two different
types of drum sets available: Acoustic and Electric. The acoustic is the one
most bands have. They are louder and bigger. Electric drums are better for beginning
drummers. They are quieter, smaller, and they have different settings you can
use. There are literally about 75 different drum brands. There are a ton I have
never even heard of, and I’ve had a lot of experience with drums and drum
brands. The most common and quality brands are Yamaha, Vic Firth, Innovative
Percussion, Pearl, Zildijian, Remo, and Pro Mark.