Drum kit – called a drum set, trap set or simply drums – is a collection of drums, cymbals, and other percussion instruments.
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Drum kit – called a drum set, trap set or simply drums – is a collection of drums, cymbals, and other percussion instruments.
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The drum kit is usually played while seated on a stool known as a throne.
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The drum kit is a part of the standard rhythm section, used in many types of popular and traditional music styles, ranging from rock and pop to blues and jazz.
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The modern drum kit was developed in the vaudeville era during the 1920s in New Orleans.
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Drum kit'set music from the 1920s provides evidence that the drummer's sets were starting to evolve in size and sound to support the various acts mentioned above.
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Drum kit solo is an instrumental section that highlights the virtuosity, skill, and musical creativity of the drummer.
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Drum kit solos are common in jazz, but they are used in several rock genres, such as heavy metal and progressive rock.
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Trigger sensors are most commonly used to replace the acoustic drum sounds, but they can often be used effectively with an acoustic kit to augment or supplement an instrument's sound for the needs of the session or show.
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Virtual drums are a type of audio software that simulates the sound of a drum kit using synthesized drum kit sounds or digital samples of acoustic drum sounds.
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Traditionally, in America and the United Kingdom, drum sizes were expressed as depth x diameter, both in inches, but many drum kit manufacturers have since begun to express their sizes in terms of diameter x depth; still in the measure of inches.
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Four-piece kit extends the three-piece by adding one tom, either a second hanging tom mounted on the bass drum and often displacing the cymbal, or by adding a floor tom.
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For jazz, which normally emphasizes the use of ride cymbal for swing pattern, the lack of second hanging tom in a four-piece kit allows the cymbal to be positioned closer to the drummer, making them easier to be played.
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Five-piece Drum kit is the full-size Drum kit and the most common configuration used across various genres and styles.
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Kits using smaller drums in both smaller and larger configurations are produced for particular uses, such as boutique kits designed to reduce the visual impact that a large kit creates or due space constraints in coffeehouses, travelling kits to reduce luggage volume, and junior kits for very young players.
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Drum kit muffles are types of mutes that can reduce the ring, boomy overtone frequencies, or overall volume on a snare, bass, or tom.
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Bass drumMuffling the bass can be achieved with the same muffling techniques as the snare, but bass drums in a drum kit are more commonly muffled by adding pillows, a sleeping bag or another soft filling inside the drum, between the heads.
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Since the drum kit uses the deep bass drum, drummers are often given a large speaker cabinet with a 15" subwoofer to help them monitor their bass drum sound.
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Drum kit music is either written down in music notation, learned and played by ear, improvised, or some combination of some or all three of these methods.
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Drum kit parts are most commonly written on a standard five-line staff.
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