302 80 23MB
English Pages 344 Year 1967
IN THE AMERICAS
DR. JOSEPH H. HOWARD is one of America’s foremost authorities on drums. His personal collection of drums, accumulated over the course of many years in travel to the far corners of the earth, is one of the largest in the world. Dr. Howard, who lives and works in Los Angeles, is a graduate of Fisk University, the University of Illinois, and the University of Southern California.
CHAPTERS
ON:
Drums in Retrospect Classification Construction Amerindian Music Amerindian Drums of North America Indigenous Drums of Central America Amerindian Drums of South America European-American
Percussion
European-American Drums African and Afra-American Influence Afro-American Drums Our Asiatic and Oceanic Heritage Asian and Oceanian-American Drums African Drums Rhythm and Drumming Drum Accessories and Auxiliary Instruments Drumlore Reflections and Projections
DRUMS
IN THE
OAK PUBLICATIONS
AMERICAS $15.00
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS BY DR. JOSEPH H. HOWARD
OAK PUBLICATIONS, NEW YORK, N.Y.
FIRST
PRINTING
Book design by Jean Hammons
© 1967 by Oak Publications
701 Seventh Avenue,
New York, N. Y.
Library of Congress #67-15826
The drive to create, perform and reproduce music is common to all
mankind—a drive so basic that when a man cannot find an instrument to suit him, he creates his own.
who prefer drums.
I should like to dedicate this book to those
Acknowledgements I wish to convey thanks to all who made this work possible, those who helped consciously and unconsciously, and these in particular: Ildefonso Pereda Valdez of Montevideo;
W. Austin Simmons
of Trinidad; R. H. J.
Evertsz, who was particularly helpful in obtaining the musical instruments
of Curacao; Jorge L. Mackay of Panama; T. F. Ramon y Rivera, Director of the Institute de Folklore, Venezuela; Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lookinghorse
of Los Angeles, California; Paul de Paula of Brazil; Felix Fellove and
Trinidad Torregosa of Cuba; Roy Harte of Drum City, Los Angeles, California; Pablo Torres, Mike Pacheco, Chino Pozo and Vigilio Marti, all of Los Angeles; Rev. S. Kalange of Nigeria and Nick Dagodu of
Ghana; Mrs. Laverne Williams of Haiti; Dr. C. C. de Rooy of Paramaribo, Surinam; Sabu Martinez; Louis Kant; Johnny Rodriguez; Chester Washington; Khamis Elfino; Ann Polk, Helen P. Arcos, Maynard Smith, Ethel Taylor and my wife, Mrs. Howard.
Joseph H. Howard
Preface This book is an organological compendium on drums found in the countries of the western hemisphere, drums indigenous to the Americas (Amerindian), those brought in and those which developed after the influx of non-indigenous people.
The aim of this book is to name, localize and describe the major drums played and seen in the Americas. The material presented is based on the information published in many varied sources: books, periodicals, book-
lets, interviews, travel records and personal experience. J have attempted
to cover, as nearly as possible, all of the different types of drums found in
the Americas. An effort has also been made to pinpoint the ethnographic origin and geographic location of the instruments, A. A. Gerbrands offers this anthropological definition of art: “When a creative individual gives to cultural values a personal interpretation in matters,
movement,
or
sound
of
such
a nature
that
the
forms
which
result from creative process comply with standards of beauty valid in his society, then we call this creative process and the forms resulting there-
from, art.” If we accept this definition, then there exists no hierarchy of
“primitive” music, “folk” music, “popular” music, and “classical” music. These terms are mere labels to help us from confusing value with technique.
Contents Page
LT Text Figures 2.0.00... ccecececceeccecseeescecesteeceeseecttseenesens viii TE TMustrations 00.0... cece cceecesececeeeeseseceenceneeseseeseeeees xi TIT)
CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER
10
CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Introduction oo... cccecccesecccccessececensecceecesesssesecesese xiv
OANA NB WN
Drums in Retrospect................2:.:secccceseceecescseeeeeceeeeeseeneeeaee
1
Classification ............20--..-0cce:ccccescescecceceeeeeececeeeneeteneeseeeeeeres 8 Construction ...........2....cccccceccceceececeeecceeeeeeeeeceneteecneeeeeneneeeeees 16 Amerindian Music ..................ccccc:ceccccseceeeeeseeeeceseseeeeeseseeees 32 Amerindian Drums of North America ...............00..00.00.--- 37
Indigenous Drums of Central America .............0.0.-...00000 65 Amerindian Drums of South America .......0.....0...00.0.0e European-American Percussion .............0...0.00:::eseeeeees European-American Drums ................2.2.202::c:s1eeeeeeeeeee African and Aframerican Influence (Parts A, B, and C) ooo... ceeecccecececceeeceeeeeeeceeeeneeeeseseneeee
69 84. 90 102
Afro-American Drums ...20022.0.2.0.002.02cccecceeeeeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeees 160
Our Asiatic and Oceanic Heritage ..............2..00-::1eceeeeeeee 210 Asian and Oceanian-American Drums ....................0000000+ 215 African Drums ...0........00.00.000 ceceeceseecccceeceeceescceteceeteseeseeeeeees 226
Rhythm and Drumming .....2.20.020202.0.0c cee 233 Drum Accessories and Auxiliary Instruments ................... 247 Drumlore o.oo... .ceeccecescseceeccseeesccenceseeesceeacsesecesseeeseeneseseses 265
Reflections and Projections ............2......sssessesceseseeeeseeeeeeeees 276 IV_
Glossary of Unusual Drums and Terms..................-.-- 284
V_ Bibliography .....-2....-::ccesseccssceecseececeeereeeeeceseeecseececaecs 294
VI VID
Notes oo. ccececeeceeesevevevecsevevesscsvessesesseevenseseevaves 312 Index. ooo ceeccceececccceccsecsceceeescesecececeesecesssssesenseseneness 317
Text Figures Page Hollow Log -..-.2.2.2222.222-.2:2e-ccscececccecceceeeeceeecneeeeeteeeaeetecaseceesaeeessneeeesteeeesonssaeees Hollowed Log .......-..2.2..2.++2-.2+--2sceeececeeeeccecee eee eeeeceeeeceeeeeneeneee sensors sineeneseaeeeees Hollowed Log with One Skim ..0..........2...:cccsscsceeeeeceeseeceeeeeeseeesceeeneesneesnneeees
Hollowed Log with Two Skins .............0..11eccceeceecec eee ecetecec eee eenenenenenenee
Silbadores
....ce.leec et eecccscceeccececeseceneceesceeteseseceeceaeeee cence seescccececessaseeseseseeceeeeeeenees
Macuilxochitl-xochipilli 2.2.2.0... cee. cceeeeceeeeceeceec cence cnet eens seceeeeceeeeeseneenenenene
2 2 2
2 3
4
Aztec Dance Drums .........2.- 2.2.2.2 cece cccececeeteneeeneeeeeeteeecateseeseseceneneencecenesoesnens Cylindrical Drury ooo... ceeecece cece cece ee see eeeeececeeeeeeeeeeeeeeceneceeeeeeeeeeseeeseeeeeees
4 9
Comical
9
Barrel-shaped Drum Drv
Hourglass
Drumm
.....-.....22.-..-2-22.2+.2:02+2c0ececcoee cece veneeceeeseeeeeteeeeeeecereeneceeeneees
ooo... ce cccc ec cce cece eee ec nsec ceneneeeeeneceesteeeecseeeeceteeeneenessnecenenees
oo... oi. csecescecececesceeeeece ence eee ee cece ee ceeeeseceeeeceeeesseeseseasseeeeeseeees
9
9
bee) Cee Oe DS a3) || 9 Goblet Drum oo... o.oo cce cece cece cee cece cece ee ene cnet ceeneeecceeeaeeeeeecenseeatesseneceeeeaeeseress 10 Handle Drum «...0.....0.....22.cccececceceeccec cen ceceenteecenseeeceeeeceensesceneecansecseneesseeeseeeesseaes 10 Frame Drum oooon....oo.eec ce sces ces cescescenc cee cnccesceececenscececsecaceescececeseaeensceteneseneeneeaees 10
Hemispheric Drumm .........2........::cececsesesceeeeeeeseeeeeeeececeerteceestececasecesesventtevenevanass 10 Egg-shaped Drum q.0....0....0..cccccccceescseeeseseees essere cece ceesceeseecsceseceeecevaseeasseeneseeee 11 Deep Ketthedrumm «0.0.2.2... ecsceccecesececeeeecece ee ceeeee ree veseeanevereeseecesneneneneneneaetees ll Shallow Kettledrum .2.........0.2...0000..c0cccccccccceseessecceceecceeeeeseeceesteeeeecereeuseneeeseceneaees ll Small Shit Drum ooo... cee eee cece e ec enen see ceeeseeaeceeseesatsuseenecsceceaeenseeceseceaes 13
Suspended Slit Drumm
2.2.2.0... .cecccccecccceceseceesecseeseseceeeeeeeeseseseceeeeceeesecenetecsees 13
Slit Drumm in Stand oo... cee cee cece cece cseee cesses esaneseseeenececsenseaccaeeateee Tacked Drum Head 02.0002...00..0 occ cccoec cc eececcasenc cee eeeeen sete ceeteeceensseeceeeceeseeseesecaaee Necklaced Head Drumm ..00.......0.0..0.0.cccecceccececceseececeeseeeesceteeterenseececeeteeeeesensesees Laced Head Drum 2.oo.......ccc cc ceecccceec cece cesesce settee cote ceeeececeseeceescteaesenenseersacsess
13 15 15 15
TEXT FIGURES
ix
Glued Head Drum «0.00.....0.....00.cccccccccececceec cece cece cece eeceenecee eens cecenescussneeeteceensereesse Braced Drv o00.2.n....... 22.2. cceeecesseecesecececeececsneccensceceeeceeesececseceeeseretsseseeeneentcnseres Buttoned Head Drum o.oo... cceee eee teec cence cence cece eee eeeeeetececceeeeeeesensensenaeeees Staves nee. cee eceecenceseseeesesesscseecessenenseseceesateessestensesencesessecsenseseneesesnessensesentente Assembled Staves ...........0.ccccc cccscscescssseesscoeecescesseseeeessesseseanessessnseseeneceesseneees
15 15 15 18 18
Windlass Open
0.2.2.2... sccecec ccs ee ec eeee eens ec eoeeeeeeeeeseseesesseeseesoneeeesieaseseneasecaeas 19
Windlass Closed .oo......c.cccceccccceecccee ce cess sssesesasenecceneessessneeneesecsesssensseeesecaseeeasenes 19
Metal Hoops ...........-2s-cee2esccecesscseeeseseeceeeseeseseseseeeeeneceesesessesseseseessssteseresesseneeaees 19
Shell Bath 0.00... 0022.0 ccc cece cece ccc eee ccc ece ene eeeeeceeacencasecenecnecaecesseaeessenseeneesesneeness 19 Stave Section 22... cece cece ceesccceees scene ceseseeceesenseaeecesecsseasceaseeensesseesseneeneneens 20
Sanding Lathe 22.2.2... ececcccseccccsececceeececeeseececeteceeenenessceessessesnseseetessvensesnanesanes 20 Stave Shell 2.0.00... ccc cee cceec sees cecetecseseeecneeeeenee cca sasseesseseseensessseeaeeeeseneeseenens 21
Bending Machine |... ....-....2-cs-ccccsececceeeccceeecneeneecteseceseeeaeeeeeseeneseenesenseneeneesees 21
Button Hole oo...
Button Loop
Button
Loop
cece cece cc cee ee ee cca coeeneecenenecceceesncecsenesaeeneessesaeaneeseeneeneens 24
oo..-.....eeeecse2cececceeececeseeceneeecseeeeeeseeeeesesseeceseecesesseseeeeseeeceesseeeseseeesees 24
Twist ................sssccesscsssceecceeeeseseess cece cesses scence seaeseensseeanseeenesensseeees 24
Button Peg ooo... eee cee cece cceeccccenceeceececoesesseecececestsseenenaneaneseeasenesanseeseseeeeseenes 24
Hard Drumvsticks 200..00.0000....ceccceseccceescesessesneneseecesseseessuseuesseneessesseeenennesecaeneens Curved-end Stick 22.20.0000... cece ccceeccceeeceeseneceeeesneeenssecsessseseessnneneeecseteceneneaee Rattle Drummstick =... 00.0... ceece cece cence cece en accenececeneessaecaesecesnesueessesseseescaeseenees Semihard Drumrstick _.2......0.0.002. cece cesessseeceseeenensessesessessecessesseeeneeneescueneenes Soft Beater 2... eee eee cece ee seneseceeeeeeeececeecceaseaeceeaeeaseseneasecsenseccasesseaeneees Hammer Stick Curved .2....00.000. 0c. .ccceeccceecceceseeseceecceeeeesenesseneusenccnecaeecesesseccesees Hammer Stick Offset 2.0.0.0... ccc cece ccsecesenececeeeseneeeeccsscessessescsensescescescsaeseees Ball Hammer Stick 20.....0.000.00.ccecceceeccssessesecsesseeececeeneeseeceaecoteccecesstesnsetesseaeencace Acute Hammer Stick oo... cece ccecc cece ceenessseeeneceeneeceseseceecceecsecesecceeeeseencececes Bow Stick ............ceecc cece cceeeeceeec cesses scaeeenescesaeseensneeneeeeesceececessceceecsieeccesessanens Brushy ooo. occ ceee cece ccc eeccenenc cence cccntecceseeeseeceateaseeecscceeeescseneseacsseceestecseesseceeteeees Cultural Areas 0.0.0... leec cee cccee ec cceec cess sentecceeeceeceeceeeeteceecentenesseceseeeeeeseceneees
25 26 26 26 27 27 27 27 27 23 28 31
Frame Shell _.o.......0..0cccccceececcesecceesseseeceeceeeeseeceseeeseasecsessnsnstereeesenssenseneesenseneees Drum Handle .........0..ccecccccceccececeec cece eeeeeceeeeeeeceesessecsseeeneussnenetesesesvasenssteaenaee Frame Groove .o..0.....0.c.2ccccsceccecceceseceeceeceeeeseecenseseeseeveasereeenssesseseneeevevseceteesesenees Horizontal Water Drum 2.20.2... ccccecccceececeececeecveceevecveceeceeeeceevesveeesseaeeeees Vertical Water Drum @....0.2....2..cecc cee cceeececeecceneeceveteee secvsecesseecssseeueessesvseeseees Idiophone Drums, Jivaro, Witoto, Andoke 0.....0..0...ccccccccecescecesesecceseeteeseees
38 38 38 66 66 716
Seven Beat Rhythm Pattern _2.........0....ce.ccceeccccceccceceeeceseeeceeeeeceeeeceseeeeeceeneeenees 34. Five Beat Rhythm Patters .20..2......-2.2secccceeccsecescsnececeeseeeeeeseeeceeeeeeeeaeeeseeseseees 34
Tongue Shit Dre
22.2... eee ccececccecececeeteenteeee tee sees cesneeeseecuersecesseneeeeeseseses 77
Slit Drum Cross Section ...........0.0..0.cccccccceseceeseesesesevescseessenseversesseseeeesciscsseseavess 77
Catuquinaro Plank Drumm .0......0.0.00ccccccccccccescsceteseseeesseeecsnsnensaeseascnsesnstesseeees 79
Afro-american Musical Areas .........0.....2-.0..2+ssscsssessesesseeseveveeceseseeteeessecsesscasens 101
x
TEXT FIGURES
Liturgical Symbol -...22....2....2.2-2-.-.-c1cesecccceeec cscs cece cec cece cece cee eeceeeeeeeeeneeeeseeeeeeeees 106 Jamaican Rhythm Pattern .0.02.....222..0.....0.2c.ccececececcccceeec ecco ce cent eee eee ceeeceteneneaease 189
Asian-american Areas ...........2--.ccccccccecccececcecceecec cee ceseenectaceeaceseseaeeeeeeesneenesaees 209 Tabla Head «ooo... .eccc ec ccceeceec ccc eec cee cee cece cee ect coc ceeeceeecencecscesecacenececetsensceneneensees 222
Banya Head 0 ou.......cccccccccececeseseseeeseeceseseceneeeeeeeesecececeeeescesseegeecsessceestenceneeeeeeets 222
Tabla Sound
Areas ...0..........ccccccccscecceeesesseessseseseeeeeecescetsceacecesseeeaeciceecaeenenseataes 222
Clave Patterns .0............ccccecssssscescsssessesescstsecsecsecserceacsceeeesscccceesesensesasesssensensiene 238 Single Conga Drum Rumba Pattern 222. .2.22....e-..esccceeecceeceeceecceeeeeeeceeteeeeeeees 240 Four Patterns on Two Drums ...0.0....0...ecccccccccscscec cece cee ceceseeeeaceccessaenceceeataeeees 240
Basic Conga Pattern 0.2.2.2... ce cccseccccesceccceccceeeesestecsecteeeeeeeeeeeeeeceeceeneneenenseees War Dare oon. eaeecceccecenesccscsseesscenssesteacsececceccaesasssenesseaesssacsrsesseccanscsacsnecenseneaes Round Dance o..........eccececcccccseseesscesesesecetsessseececaesesacteseceuesacsenssecsenssesecsssesensneeses European March Notations... .......02-ccccecceecec cece eeeeeteeee cece eeeeeeeceeceeeeeenenseaeees
Dixieland Notations
242 243 243 244,
......0...0.....cccccccccececceecececeesceesesecvenccececeseeessenseeeeeesneseseseenees 244.
Illustrations Plate Plate Plate Plate Plate
No. J—Amerindian Drums No. [II—European-American Drums No. III—Afro-Americarnt Drums No. IV—Asian and Oceanian-American Drums No. V—Drum Sets and Batteries Picture No . 1—Cuban Battery ........ Picture No . 2—Haitian Petro Set.... Picture No . 3—Parade Drum Set Plate No. VI— cece eceeceeceeeceeeeeeeeeteeeeeeeeeeneeeteees Picture No . 4—Mydol Drum Set.u. . . . eee eeeeeeeeeeneeeeeeseneeennee Picture No . 5—Cuban Congas Set ............2.0ccccccceececeesec ce ceceeceeee econ eeeceeeceeetesseeeeeees Picture No . 6—Cuban Bata Set 20... ccc Plate No. VII— Picture No . 7—Timpano Set Picture No . 8—Shango Drum Set Picture No. . 9—Surinam Battery Plate No. VII— ccc eee: Picture No. 10—Early American Instruments, U.S.A. _.000....... Picture No. 11—Panamanian Drum Set ..................ccccccccceesceeceseeeeeneeeeeenenes ccc ceecccecescaeeeseeeeessneeeeesseeeeesceeees Picture No. 12—Rada Drum Set o.oo... Plate No. IX— Picture No. 13—Steel Drums 200.000... cece cece cecccececeeeceeceneeeeeeseeeteeetcceeees Picture No. 14—Brazilian Parade Drum .......... eee Picture No. 15—Atabaqués 00000... Plate No. XK— Picture No. 16—Modern Jazz Set .....0........00ccccccccceceeeneccceeeneceeserceceeceseeeseenens Picture No. 17—Naniigo Drum Battery ............0...0....cccccccceccceceseeeeeseeseeeeaees Plate No. XI— Picture No. 18—Bolivian Parade .2......0....0000occccecceesecceeecceeeeeseecceseceeeeverees Picture No. 19—Pasadena Parade .0....... 0... .occceeeceececeecceeeceeeeseeteseeteseceeeess
xi
116 117
117
120
120 121
124 121
125 125
ILLUSTRATIONS
xii
Picture No. 20—Monevideo Parade 2oo...oo....0....0..ecccecccesseecececesueeceseceeceseeaees 126
Picture No. 21—Marine Parade ............000200 occ ccecceccece cece ce ceneeceneeevensaveess 126 Plate No. XII—Single-Headed Drums Picture No. 22—Giant Drums ..oo......... coe cccccceeeccececcececeececceceeeeceeseceeeeeseee Picture No. 23—Tlapanhuehuetl Picture No. 24—Frame Drums Plate No. XIJI— Picture No. 25—Banjo, Curbeta, Gumbe, Maracas ........-.......0..csecccseeeeeeeceeeee Picture No. 26—Cajero, Ka and Catalier...................eseccceceeeeeeeeeeeeees
Picture No. 27—Tumbilla, Balcié, Tambui and Mellicin......0...
eee
Picture No. 283—Tambu, Boku, Rabardage and Matrimonial......................... Plate No. XIV—Two-Headed Drums
Picture No. 29—Tambora, Caja, Tambor, Guayo, and Tymale ...................... 131
Picture No. 30—Tombe, Tinya, Maracas, Bomba, Caja
Picture No. 31—Pang-Kou, Tao Kou, Dak Kou, Pong Kou ......00... 00... 133
Plate No. XV—
Picture No. 32—Tang Kou, Tibet Trumpet, Uchiwa, Pahuiti, Tau-Kou, Odieko, Dedjeridoo .00...0.........20..22ccesecccessceeseeeeneeeceeeeesetecececee 133
Picture No. 33—Dream
Dance Drum .......0..........2....0:ccsseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesneeeeeeeeeee 133
Picture No. 34—Pow Wow Drum ooiio......cecccceeccesceecenceeeeeeeeecececceceeecaeeeeees 134
Plate No. XVI—
Picture No. 35—Musik Di Zumbi, Triangle, Benta, Cachoe ...................--..... 134
Picture No. 36—Tambor
and Pito .......0.......00...cscececeeeeeeeeees
Picture No. 37—Taikos, Ok-Tsusumi Plate No. XVIJ— Picture No. 38—Chang Ko, Kubu, Dhol, Bongo ....................:::::ccssceeeeeceeeeee 136 Picture No. 39—Hand Drums
(Amerindian)
....................:-.:::0-200:ceeeeeeeeees 137
Picture No. 40—Sioux Hand Drum, Gourd Rattle, Tambor de Tloxcula,
Deer Hoof Rattles .............2.00...2cccceceseeeeeeeececeenceecaeescceeennneeeeseeseceeeeeesees 137 Plate No. XVIJI—Kettledrums Picture No. 41—Music Sticks, Pahu (Oceanic kettledrum)
Puili, Bullroarer o.oo...
cce ee ceee cece cece eeseeeeneeeeeesenneceeeseeesteeeccceeeee 138
Picture No. 42—Puhi Hula, Puhi, Puniu (Oceanic kettledrum) .................... 139 Picture No. 43—Tasas (Trinidad and British Guiana) .........00000 00 eeeee ee 139
Picture No. 44—Kultrum, (Araucanion) Chaco..............000.0.0cccccccseeesseeeeeeeee 140
Plate No. XIX—(Water
Drums)
Picture No. 45—Potawatomi, Peyote and Timbal de Barro...........0...ee cc 140 Picture No. 46—Bastel drummer and Chapi player ..........0...00....00.0000-ccecceeoe- 141
Plate No. XX—Friction Drums
Picture No. 47—E] Coco de Efik Obutén, Ayotl ooo. 141 Picture No. 48—Kinfuiti, Cuica, Furruco, Basse, Puita ...0.0..0.000.2. ee eeeceeeee 142
Plate No. XXI—Skinless Drums Picture No. 49—Tambor Semeistico (Manhuaré) ................2.cccceccccccceecceeeeee 143 Picture No. 50—Basket Drum .oou.o.......-.ce.cescesseeceeececeeeeeee
Picture No. 51—Concha de Tortuga, Bastel
Plate No. XXII—
Picture No. 52—Jicara de Agua, Raspador, Flute, Signal Horn..................... 145
Picture No. 53—Quinto Box, Bombam, Bongon, Bamboo Tamboo, Tatil, Capita oi icccccccccccccccccceccsscecessevacseesecececessetiusetteeetteeeececeeeecccce 146
ILLUSTRATIONS
xiii
Picture No. 54—El Catd, La Guagua. ooo... .0.eeesceeeeceeeeceeeeeceeeeceeseeeeeeeeeeees Plate No. XXIII— Picture No. 55—Tepomazeli. ooo. ..cc cece cece ceneeeeneeeeeecenseeeeneeeenseeeeseeeeesees Picture No. 56—Tuilis, Lali, Ipu, Touette 0.0.0.0... cece eee eeeceeeeeeeeneee Picture No. 57—Mokugyo ..oo.......0.. cece cncessceceecencensceeceseseseceeeeceeeseeeseeseeeess Plate No. XXIV—
146 147 147 148
Picture No. 58—Stamping Tube, Ipu Hula
Picture No. 59—Kalookock ................... ceaceeeeeeeaeeseeceeseeeeesceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeceeateneeets Picture No. 60—Pechu di Calumba, Tambour Maringouin (mosquito Arum) ooo... eee eecceeceeceesceesseenscecesceceseececseceseecerssneneceeetes 150
Plate No. XXV—Drum
Accessories
Picture No. 61—Atcheré, Chocalho, Cabaca, Assom ..........0....0.0.cccccceeeseeees 15]
Picture No. 62—Sansa (mbira or thumb piano) Marimbula, Stamping Tube, Flute, Vaccine ........2........cc:cescsseeesccescceeeeeeeseeeeesceenece 151 Picture No. 63—Claves, Akoge ...........2......2220cescceeseceecceeeeceeeeeeeceeceeeneeeeteeees 152
Plate No. XXVI— Picture No. 64—Brake Drums, San Martini, Chapi, Gonkogui, Agan, Gangarria, Agogo, Cymbal, Triangles............00......cecece 152 Picture No. 65—Drumsticks: Asian-American, European-American,
and Afro-American ...................:cc-:ccscsesscessecceceneenceeeceeeneecseceeesseeessennees 153 Picture No. 66—Amerindian Drumsticks ._...0..............ccscccesceecesseessceeseeeees 153 Plate No. XXVII—Ratiles
Picture No. 67—Turtle Shell Rattle, Maracas and Cha Cha ...........000000.0000.... 154, Picture No. 68—Guayo, Wiri, Rasp-sticck, Giiiro and Reco-reco.................-.. 155
Plate No. XXVIII—African Drums
Picture No. 69—Ndango, Ngoma, Ngalabi, Ndere (flute),
Bambala, Ndingidi (fiddle) .22..............ccccssccccccccecccececceceeceeveseeeeereseeneees Picture No. 70—Tamalee, Brekepe and Dundun Picture No. 71—Odomankoma, Atsimevu, Mpentima ...................0...22000000--- 157 Plate No. XXIX— Picture No. 72—Turo, Gwa-ini, Bongon, Kettledrum, Darabukkas, Trough Zither, Mbira (Sansa) Ngoma and Ser Tehen................-.--------- 157
Picture No. 73—Pedi Moropa, Haitian Mortar, Acoli Lace Drum, African Motar, Lujongo (Tugbard of Uganda) 2000.0... .essceeeeeeeeeeees 158
Picture No. 74-The Ntumpane
(Talking drums of the Ashanti)................ 159
Introduction Musical sounds are everywhere present for human observation: birds sing, a taut bow-string produces a tone, a hollow trunk resounds; curiosity, experimentation, and chance may well have suggested the possibilities of sound production to man.’ From the earliest days of history, he has sought sound-producing instruments to express his emotional and esthetic drives.
Music and the instruments chosen to express it vividly dramatize the
emotions and passions of men. Their study can thus shed light on the
historical, sociological and economic development of a people. There is about the sound of drums a strange and mysterious quality. Perhaps this quality is one reason why all musical cultures have somehow been influenced by drums. In a world of diverse musics and instru-
ments, drums are universal; all countries and races have had drums of
some kind. During the last thirty or forty years, the study of the folk music of the Americas has received a strong impetus in all its areas of influence: European-American, Amerindian, Afro-American, and Asian-American. Several American governments, the United States, Brazil, Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti, and others, have been instrumental in the furtherance of this
work by the appointment of individuals and committess to preserve, by
written word, recording, and collection, their musical folk heritage. As a
result, much American aboriginal and folk music, rapidly disappearing under the pressure of contemporary civilization, has been rescued. The material now accumulated is surprisingly large, but scattered in governxiv
INTRODUCTION
xv
mental reports, museum
journals, periodicals, publications of various
learned societies, records of travel, and books of miscellaneous nature. From
The music and instruments of the Americas are still in the making. a fusion
of European,
Amerindian,
African,
and Asian
musics,
American music has come to express an originality which is obvious to the most casual observer. The result, therefore, is American,
distinct from
anything else: a musical culture which owes all to everyone, and thus, in a broader sense, nothing to anyone. It is the object of this work to describe and discuss the more popular drums in the Americas, both past and present.
The organization of materials shown by chapter headings is by subject, but the subdivision, within the chapters, generally refers to musical or
cultural areas. A cultural area, according to Clark Wissler, is a geographical area occupied by a number of peoples whose cultures show a significant similarity to one another and a disimilarity to peoples of other areas. The Amerindian drums are grouped by the areas, outlined by George Peter Murdock in his Outline of World Cultures.‘ European-American drums, as well as Asian and Oceanian drums, are limited in variety. To avoid repetition, they are grouped according to type, and local names are used when they differ from the traditional names.
Many instruments mentioned in this book, are known by different names, depending on the area or language used. An attempt has been made, to use the local name of the instrument by which it is best known. In some instances, the spelling is phonetical, and all of the authorities do not agree. The pronunciation within a group or country varies, creating additional orthographic problems. . The study of musical instruments, in its fullest sense, cannot be separated from the study of the man who plays them. Thus, both man and his instrument are the subjects of this story.
1 DRUMS the
IN RETROSPECT
The history of musical instruments may be traced as far back as Stone Age. Late Stone Age man began to use clay in the con-
struction of musical instruments. He made clay drums in the shape of cups and hourglasses and sometimes even provided them with eyelets for the lacing of the skin. No doubt long before, he had noticed a different sound from a growing tree. It was natural that man treated the hollow log with respect. Primitive societies the world over have attached great importance to the sound that emanates from hollow wood and all of them have given spiritual or religious meaning to these sounds. Man was and is a superstitious being, a great believer in signs. He noticed,
through world
but could
not
understand,
the
the sky and all the changes
about
work of some
him.
All mysterious
path
of the
sun
that took place
things
were
regarded
and
the moon
in the natural
as the special
unseen spirit, for a natural law was quite beyond
power of understanding.
his
He imagined that the forest and the very air
were peopled with spirits that in some way had power over nature. He
attempted to communicate with these spirits by making noises. Every strange sound in nature which he could not understand was to him
the source
of the spirit world;
in this manner.°
so, in turn,
he
attempted
to win
favor
In all probability the first drums were merely fallen trees whose cores had rotted. Later, man developed tools and did his own excavation of the core or allowed insects to bore it out for him as the Australian aborigines
do today, by placing a stick in an ant hill and, when 1
2
the
DRUMS
insects
eat
In the
Hebrides
musical
away
instrument.
the core,
removing
the stick
and
in the Pacific
Ocean,
there
Dedjeridoo, Islands
IN THE AMERICAS
a trumpet.
using
it as a
(See Pl. XV — No. can
32)
be found
“drum groves”: — huge trees whose centers have been hewn out by the natives and used as drums. They also fashion the trees into strange sea animals, which they use in their religious rituals. The tree drums, which stand twelve
or more
of the modern slit drum.
feet high, are thought to be the forerunner
There have been many theories propounded about the evolution of musical instruments. The drum and the flute (or whistle) are consid-
ered to be the first developed by man. The evolution of the wood drum is thought to have followed this order:
1. Hollow log (natural) ~~
4. Hollowed
Te
eS
log with two skins
DRUMS
IN RETROSPECT
3
Many Amerindian clay drums have been excavated in the Americas, although skins and tensors, being animal products, deteriorate quickly. However, the prehistoric instruments that have survived to be excavated are of extremely durable material: bone, stone or pottery. These instruments are simple in shape, probably originating from utensils — the more
advanced
barrel
shapes,
etc.. are relatively
recent.
Most of the great civilizations of the world have left some record
of their music.
Cave
paintings
and carvings
of ancient
India
show
drums with two heads and a slightly bulging body. The heads are fastened on with thongs laced crosswise in “X” form. In the tomb of Rameses III of Egypt, there is a painting of a
harpist accompanied
by two drummers, one playing a large drum and
the other, a small one. In Peru, similar artistic representation of musical
instruments testifies to the existence of music. Whistling jars, excavated in Peru, depict double-membrane
ago.
Peruvian
vessels,
more
than
1,500
drums
which
(SILBADORES)
years
old,
of
Mochica
were
in use
(pre-Inca)
1,500 years
style,
in which
is
represented a humanized bird with a little drum called, in the Inca language, “tinya.” They are still used by the highland Indians in Peru today. (Courtesy of Peruanistica)
The Aztecs employed professional scribes who recorded, in pictorial epics painted on “amatl” or bark paper, the great festivals of their day, which depict many musical instruments.
DRUMS
MACUILXOCHITL-XOCHIPILLI, (Redrawn
(Codex
AMERICAS
God of Music, playing Huehuetl.
from Codex
AZTEC
IN THE
Borbonicus)
DANCE
Florentino XXIII
—
19 Musicians)
DRUMS IN RETROSPECT
5
A gigantic bass drum is shown on a Sumerian vase of the third millennium B.C. Drums have been found by archaeologists in a Neolithic stratum
in Moravia.
A
Mesopotamian
vase,
made
around
3,000
B.C.,
shows a man striking a frame drum. Other Mesopotamian works of art indicate that at least four different drum types were used. Babylonian excavations,
dated
to 3,000 B.C., have
revealed several statuettes show-
ing both men and women playing frame drums with their hands. One
of the
best
Asia,
is mentioned
literary
sources
of
information
on
music
and
musical instruments is the Bible. It not only mentions specific instruments, but also describes occasions on which music was played. The tambourine, or toph, seen frequently in Moorish Spain, North Africa and
in the
Bible.
Egyptian drums before 1 A.D. consisted of three types: 1. The hand drum, a bimembranophone of parchment, two to three feet long, with a shoulder cord for support (allowing the hands to be free).
2. The barrel-shaped drum, also bimembranophone, the heads encircled by catgut (which is a means of tuning), played with sticks. 3. The earthen Darabukkeh,* a one and one-half foot long goblet-shaped monomembranophone, held under the arm and played with hands. 4. The Tambourine type drums (Egyptian after 1 A.D.), a)
b)
round —
similar to the modern
type;
oblong — slightly curved at sides, barred in middle (making
two tambourines);
c) square — square frame with a stretched skin and four catguts across.° The Oriental drum was introduced into the Western world through Greece — where the use of the tymponan or tamborine was restricted to the orgiastic cult of Dionysus and Cybele — and from Greece to medieval Europe. An English twelfth century miniature shows a juggler dis-
guised as a bear striking a barrel drum suspended from his neck. duced
Around
modern
1300, Arabian
into Europe. tympani.
*Darabukkeh;
kettledrums,
called “nagarah,” were intro-
Used in pairs, they were
About
the same
the forerunners of the
time the tabor, a cylindrical
also known as Daraboukkeh, and Darabukkas.
drum,
6
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
appeared in Europe. Drums were not used in Europe earlier in the Mid-
dle Ages, strange as it may seem. At the beginning of the thirteenth century the jingle frame appeared in Europe. It was called “temple” in Provengal, “timbre” in
French and “timbrel” in English, while Germany termed it “rotumbes.” In modern times it is called “‘cembalo” in Italian and “tambourin” or
“tambour de Basque” in French, “tambourine” in English. ‘‘pandero” in Spanish and “pandeiro” in Portuguese.’ It was only during the reign of Edward VI (1547-1553) that the
drum masters were added to the English army. By 1591 the “master drummer” had become the “drum major.” It was also the duty of the drum majors to: have apparatus for punishment. It was customary to hold courts-martial at the drum head and the drum major would superintend the flogging of soldiers; instruct and train drummers; fur-
nish the drummers for various regiments; and keep the drum equipment
in order. Later the drum major became commander of the band, having authority over the music and musicians. By
the
marching)
fifteenth
century,
the kettledrums,
drums, had been adopted
as well
as the
side
by the armies of Europe
(or
as part
of their military equipment.’ By the seventeenth century, these armies advanced to the sounds of bagpipes, fifes, trumpets and drums. If the enemy kettledrums were captured, the battle was won — for there were no longer the means
of signaling the forces.
The kettledrum remained restricted to the military until it was introduced into the orchestra about 1670. John Locke with his opera Psyche (1673) and Lully with Thesie (1675) are rivals for priority. It re-
mained for Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frederick Handel to give them a permanent place in rhythmic accentuation in the orchestra.
The tabor, a Moorish drum brought to England following the Crusades, is still used there today, in a dance which is traditionally called the “Morris (Moorish) a foot in diameter and
Dance.” It is a small, two-headed drum, six to seven inches deep, the two heads
about being
laced together across the body. History has been kind to us concerning Africa, having left its record in the diaries of travellers and notes of geographers. By sifting these leaves, an interesting deposit of information about African music can be obtained. John Ogilby’s well-known “Africa,” published in Lon-
DRUMS IN RETROSPECT
7
don in 1670, states that when a drummer died he must not be buried or thrown into a sea or river, but was to be sealed into a hollow tree; for they imagined that his entombment in the earth or sea would make them
fruitless and
barren.
In life, the drummer
was
at the social Jevel
of the European beggar or more accurately, the itinerant jongleurs (jug-
gler-musicians) or vagabond fiddlers, and not unlike them in conditions. Drums in the Americas fall into four groups: 1)
preconquest
instruments:
instruments
writings of the first missionaries, relics and ruined temples and tombs, etc.
2)
contemporary
Amerindians,
indigenous
seen
in early paintings,
instruments
instruments:
those
excavated
of
from
present-day
distinct from
3} imported instruments: those borrowed from or constructed by European, African, or Asian peoples in the Americas. 4)
modern
instruments:
those which have evolved from the above
groups. The musical tradition of the Amerindians was so strong and deeply
rooted that European
colonization could not destroy it. Eventually, the
tradition was altered, but European music and instruments were them-
selves altered in the process.
Long before the conquest, there had flourished great civilizations in several parts of the Americas. When the conquistadors, the adventurers, the sailors, the geographers, and the traders first explored
American
soil, they were
already
in a “drum
society”:
the Amerindian
had a well-established drumming tradition. The percussion instruments later brought by the Europeans included only membranophones, entirely familiar to the Amerindian. Moreover, the Indians had idiophone drums, unknown to the European,’ and, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the Africans and, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the Asians recreated their instruments in the Americas.
2 CLASSIFICATION In
1914,
Curt
Sachs
and
Erich
Van
Hornbostel
collaborated
on a
classification of musical instruments, generally based on acoustical principles. Under this system drums fall into two classes — membranophone
and idiophone. Membranophones are percussion instruments that produce sound by means of vibration of a tightly stretched membrane by striking or rubbing. There are thus single-headed drums —- monomembranophones — and double-headed drums — bimembranophones. (It is interesting to note that, while single-headed drums are extremely varied, the shapes of double-headed drums are limited to a very few types.) Idiophones are percussion instruments made from sonorous materials. They produce sound without the addition of a stretched skin. string or a vibrating air column. This category may be subdivided into
two categories, depending on how the sound is produced. Percussed idiophone drums are struck and friction idiophones are rubbed or stroked." Another method of drum classification includes the shape of the body, or sound chamber. If the solid part (body) is a tube, it is called a tubular drum; a deep tubular drum if the body is longer than the diameter of the
drum
head,
shallow,
may be of several shapes:
if the body
is shorter.
Tubular
drums
CLASSIFICATION
9
(a) Cylindrical drums
(b) Barrel-shaped drums
(straight sides)
(bulging sides)
(c) Conical drums
(tapered sides)
(d) Hourglass or “waisted” drums (smallest diameter in the middle)
(e) Footed drums (non-portable drums, the body supported by a carved pedestal)
10
DRUMS
(h) Frame drums
Kettledrums
shapes:
have
IN THE
AMERICAS
(diameter of head is greater than height of drum)
vessel-type closed bodies
and come
(b) Egg-shaped drums (largest diameter below the top)
in several
CLASSIFICATION
1).
(c) Deep kettledrums (bodies longer than the diameter)
(d) Shallow kettledrums (bodies shorter than the diameter)
The materials from which drums are constructed are often used for classification. They include wood, gourd, bamboo, clay or pottery, metal,
bone and shells of all kinds— animal. plant and mollusk. The Alaskan Eskimos use the intestines of sea animals and some tribes of Amerin-
dians in the Caribbean use the craw of the pelican for heads. Animal
bones were used as drum-sticks by Amerindians and Afro-Americans, and
the skin of victims was at one time used for membranes of Mexico.
In some
by the Aztecs
instances, the skin was not that of a victim, but the
skin of someone who had made provision to “live on in the sound of the drum.”? Human skulls have been used in Tibet as drum shells. Methods of playing are also used in classification. Instruments that
are
struck
are
classified
as percussion
instruments.
Those
that
are
rubbed or stroked are called friction instruments. Drums of European origin are generally played with sticks. However,
the
tambourine
is the
only European
drum
in the Americas
that
is traditionally played with fingers and hands. In the Americas the playing of drums with bare hands is generally considered to be of African
12
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
origin. Very popular in Latin America today, this method was in use in the United States until the twentieth century, but gradually disappeared. Interestingly, it is growing again in popularity with the influence
of Latin-American music. The codices Beker and Florentino of the Aztecs imply that they used this method of playing, but it disappeared from the Americas with the decline of their culture.? Bare-hand drumming in the Americas is, therefore, doubtless an Aframerican
technique
although
Africans and Aframericans also use the sticks or stick-and-hand combinations. Playing positions of drums are as varied as the drums themselves. They may be held in one hand and struck with the other, as with the tambourine. They may be held horizontally or vertically. They may be placed on a stand so that they can be struck from a standing position; some Amerindian and Aframerican drums have carved feet which permit
the drum to be placed on the floor or ground. Idiophone drums or barrel slit drums are generally supported in some way to allow the body to vibrate. The large slit drums are suspended by cords or ropes, while the smaller ones are sometimes sup-
ported by a small block underneath each end.
CLASSIFICATION
13
14
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
There is much cross-cultural overlapping in the methods of playing drums in the Americas. Nonetheless, the position of the drummer is in many cases a key to the instrument’s ethnic origin. The method of straddling the drum, with the head protruding from between the legs, is of African origin; neither the Amerindian nor European uses this style. The construction of the drum may be used in classification. Most of the drums constructed in the Americas before the stave barrel were hewn
from
solid blocks of wood
or a tree trunk. This is particularly
true of Afro-American and Amerindian drums. Today we find more and more drums being made from staves of a barrel, boxes and commercial containers of all types. A frame drum, or tambourine type drum, is placed in a separate group because it has a shallow body less than one-half the diameter of
the head, or a wooden ring. Finally, the method of attaching drum heads may be used to classify drums. Heads are glued, nailed, buttoned, laced, necklaced and braced onto, as well as suspended above, drums, depending on the drum
type and local custom.
The technique of gluing the head is found generally on ceramic drums in Amerindian culture. Nailed-head drums are popularly found among Asians and Aframericans, being naturally limited to wood drums and the technique is thought to be Asian in origin. The practice of cutting holes in the head and looping them over pegs inserted in the body of the drum
is called or referred to as “but-
toned” head, a practice of African origin. A “necklaced” drum is one with cords running circumferentially around the head to secure it to the drum. A drum with metal braces attaching the head to the body is called a “braced” drum. This method of attaching a drum head is a twentieth century western innovation.
The drum ‘can thus be tuned, eliminating the necessity of heating the skin to raise the tone. Laced drum heads are attached to the body with cords or thongs of leather. They may be attached to the body directly
or by being attached to the opposite head or to pegs, indirectly.
CLASSIFICATION
15
| fr Glued Head
Tacked Head
Laced
Necklaced
Braced
Buttoned
Classification of drums with regard to ethnic origin is on the basis
of construction, method of playing and prevalence in particular ethnic
groups. American drums may be on the highest level, divided into four groups according to ethnic origin:
(a) Amerindian (indigenous to the Americas) (b) European-American (introduced from Europe)
(c) Afro-American {d} Asian-Oceanian American. In many cases it is possible to state only the geographic placement of certain
instruments.
There
are, of course, drums
rooted
in the tradi-
tions of Europe; there are instruments showing vestiges of pre-Columbian rituals and ceremonies with origins buried in the legends of the
indigenous
Indians of America;
there are the African
drums
from
the
Congo and Guinea; and there are drums from Asia. Most drums of the Americas, however, like the people, are not pure specimens, but hybrids,
containing only a few scattered examples
of pure ethnic origin.
3 CONSTRUCTION Drums are made by skilled craftsmen with meticulous care, based on traditions which emerged from a thorough understanding of the ma-
terial used and the function intended. These traditions must include. a working knowledge of what is required for a resonator to produce the desired sound. Drums are composed of one or two components: a sound chamber (body)
and
a membrane
(skin).
Some
instruments
are
composed
of
both components and others of only one. Some Amerindian tribes have a custom of rolling up a hide and beating it with sticks; this might even be classified as a “bodyless” drum. Idiophone drums, hollowed-out solid blocks of wood, have no skin — only a sound chamber. Body or Shell: A drum shell is not merely
a wooden
cylinder;
it is a resonator
designed to obtain maximum sonority from the vibration of the head. In our modern society this is accomplished by shaping the drum in conformity
to
known
laws
of acoustics.
In
less
advanced
societies,
how-
ever, the same effect is accomplished by other means. For centuries drum shells were hewn from logs. In some areas of the Americas
where
labor
is cheap
and
tradition
well established,
this
procedure is still followed today, particularly in Afro-American and Amerindian cultures.4 Preferred woods include mahogany, which is resistant to pests; avocado, which is easy to work; maple, which lends itself to a smooth finish; and cottonwood, which is both light and easily
worked.
16
CONSTRUCTION
17
In boring the log, in Cuba diameter,
is started
in
the
top
and Haiti, a hole, about six inches in with
a cold
chisel
and
mallet.
When
carried halfway through, the log is reversed and the procedure repeated. When the log is bored, the top is widened to within two inches of the final outside diameter and the inside tapered down to two thirds
the top diameter. In some cultures, the bottom one third is stuffed with
wet rags and the top two thirds then soaked wth lamp oil, and the interior burned out to the desired thickness. After the inside is hewn or burned away, the drum is laid on one side and rings are grooved around it. Carving is begun by chipping wood from between these rings. When the correct outside form has been
obtained, the inside is finished by filing. Generally, no shell will be over one and one-half inches thick at any point; the center or widest part
will average one-half inch; however, the foot may be up to two and onehalf inches thick. With the carving of the body completed, the entire
drum is, for several days, treated with oil, which is allowed to soak in to
prevent cracking. The shell is now ready for heading.
With the nineteenth century’s enforced coexistence of Afro-American
and Amerindian society with an industrial economy in North America, in many areas the lengthy traditional procedure of drum making was
replaced by the expedience of discarded wooden boxes, kegs, barrels, and other types of wooden containers. When industry found wooden barrels too expensive
and started to use metal drums and cartons, a few
unemployed coopers turned to making drum shells. Most congas in the United States today were, in fact, made by coopers (keg or barrel makers). Stave Drums: Stave drum
shells are fast replacing
the log drum
sheils in most
areas. The manufacture of stave shells is faster and the wood is easier to obtain.
Moreover,
and thus more
the instrument
is more
easily
repaired,
portable. Ideally, these shell staves are made
is lighter
of grade
“A” lumber, free from knots, with the staves cut along the grain. Woods
preferred are white oak, black walnut, hard fir and mahogany. Construction of Stave Shells:
Step One: For a thirty-one-inch high shell, eleven-inch head and a seven-inch
bottom, twenty to twenty-one staves are cut on a jointer machine or from a pattern. Each stave is thirty-one inches long, two and one-half
18
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
inches wide at the middle and one and three-quarter inches wide at the
ends, with the length gradually tapering from middle to ends.
Step Two: The staves are assembled within a hoop. A metal ring is driven down
on the staves pressing them tightly together.
METAL RING
Step Three: Now the staves are turned upside down, with the metal ring in place, and a cable is wound around the loose end of the staves, then attached to a windlass.
acy
CABLE
WINDLASS FR
J
CONSTRUCTION
19
Step Four: By turning the windlass the staves of the loose end are pulled together.
Step Five:
A metal ring is placed over the staves and the cable is released.
roy
Step Six:
The shell is now soaked in hot water for a half hour. This helps to relieve the internal stress on the wood, created by bending.
Step Seven: When
the water has cooled, the shell is removed
sun to dry. The staves thus become
“warped”
and placed
in the
into the desired shape.
20
DRUMS
Step Eight: Now the staves are numbered falls apart, but each
stave
retains
and
both rings
IN THE
AMERICAS
removed.
The
shell
its shape.
Step Nine: The staves are jointed and cut to the proper shape and size. The
sides of each stave are bevelled and the ends are cut from one and
one-half inches to one inch, the middle from two and one-half to one and three-quarter inches. Between the ends and middle. the tapering is retained.
CRC5}
SECTION
Step Ten: The
staves
are
reassembled,
put over a hot plate (kiln) Step Eleven:
metal
rings
replaced,
and
the
shell
to drive out moisture.
When the shell is thoroughly dry, the top ring is removed and glue placed between the staves. The top ring is replaced and the procedure duplicated on the bottom.
Step Twelve:
After the glue has dried, the metal rings are removed and the shell is placed on a lathe and sanded.
a -
~
——
_
SSS
“—
__
CONSTRUCTION
21
Step Thirteen: Steel hoops are tightened over the shell to reinforce it. The shell is now ready for heading.
The U.S.A. drum manufacturers have found that while wood makes the best shell, large drum shells often do not hold their shape. It was
found that since plywood seems to overcome this difficulty, most U. S.
manufactured shells are now made of three-ply veneering: the upper and
lower layers are made from maple, which, being very dense, lends itself
to a smooth finish; the middle layer is of poplar, which is tough and
strong. The veneering is glued in flat sheets and run through a “bend-
ing” machine. After leaving the bending machine, the shell is reinforced with an inner hoop of maple and, finally, with a counter hoop.
Small snare-drum shells have been found to be better when made of .18 gauge spinning brass. Drum heads are made from animal peritoneum (or internal skin), outer hides, lizard and fish skins, plant fibers, cloth, certain leaves, bark and plastics, depending on the size of drum, the material available, local
custom and the way the drum is to be played, e.g., a drum to be beaten with a stick needs a tough hide head. Like other solids employed for musical purposes, membranes vi-
22
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
brate both horizontally and transversely. Their frequencies vary as the length,
width,
and
thickness
of
the
membrane
vary.
In
the
circular
without specific devices for tuning do not have
a fixed
membranes most frequently used for drums, the higher frequencies, or “overtones,” come close together and are nonharmonious. The sound is thus indistinct and noisy. In the case of the kettledrum, the scientifically shaped resonator and the mechanically adjustable head make it possible to tune the instrument to a definite fundamental."
Drums
pitch — they
are never the same.
Heating
and wetting the skin raise
and lower the pitch, but a specific tone cannot be maintained. The
method
of treating a rawhide
to be used
varies in different localities, but on the whole,
for a drum
the procedures
head
are simi-
lar: after the hide is removed from the animal, it is scraped to remove fat and
connective
tissue, then
soaked
in a lime
solution
or buried
in
ashes to loosen the hair. (The southwest Amerindian simply stretches his skins on the drums and allows them to dry in the sun.) After the hide has soaked
for several
days,
it is laid flat, and
the
hair removed by rubbing in the direction of growth with a rough stone
or a serrated wood block. The skin is then washed and laid out flat or
tacked to a frame to dry. When the drying is complete, a circular piece is cut to the desired diameter, allowing three inches to overlap the shell. The hide is now ready for use, but it is very important that, before it is stretched over the shell, it should be soaked
least twelve hours before placement. body
of the drum.
Occasionally,
in water
at
The head is placed wet on the
a head
is, for
decorative
purposes,
placed on a drum without removing the hair; the hair is then removed from the playing surface with glass or a very sharp knife.
When a tanned skin Amerindian water drums,
is to be used as a drum head, the skin must be smoked until
as with the it is a dull
brown. Such heads are generally played wet because cured skin draws taut when wet.!®
There are certain treatments and preventive measures used in connection with preserving the life of a skin that are often necessary. On damp
days, when
the drum
becomes
dull and muffled,
yeast, palm
oil,
water proofing (shoe wax) or beeswax is rubbed into the skin to prevent quality change, just as the Chinese shellac their drum heads for
similar reasons.’” Some individual drummers seem to like the smooth, even surface of sanded drum heads untreated.
CONSTRUCTION
23
Drummers have very definite and often strange ideas concerning drum heads: Amerindian drummers of Peru employ male hides on one side and female on the other; white mule is popular with drummers of
Cuba
and some
prefer the skin of an animal
some
Haitians
made
from calf-hides five to six weeks old. These are thin and strong
claiming,
for example,
killed in a certain way,
that the skin of an animal
killed
by a blow on the head will last longer than one that has bled to death. In the United States, Anglo-American drum heads are traditionally but easily affected by weather. In the past few years, a plastic allweather head has begun to be used by many drummakers. The method of placing a skin on a drum is vital. It can mean the difference
between
a flat
sound
or
a brilliant
one.
First,
the
skin
is
soaked from three to twelve hours until it is soft and pliable. The next step depends on how the skin is attached. Laced Heads:
The skin is attached to a thin ring of metal, rawhide, rattan, cord,
wood hoop or rope, referred to as a “‘flesh ring.” The flesh ring is gen-
erally a little larger in diameter than the shell. The wet skin is placed
on the shell and the flesh ring is then put over the skin. The ends of the skin are pulled up over the ring, then holes are made through both layers of skin and the lacing is run through these holes above the flesh ring.
In most Anglo-American drums, a counter ring is used. After the skin is placed with the flesh ring on the top, the ends are folded up and a second ring is placed on top of the folded up ends. This forms a lock between the two rings with the skin in between. Most often, holes are made in the wooden counter ring or clamps placed over it. The laces run through these holes or from the clamps. In rare instances the counter ring is nailed to the body.
(See Pl. XIII
—No. 28.) Tacked Heads: The shell is placed upright and the skin is placed over the shell with the hair side up. It is then folded over the sides of the shell and tacked approximately one inch from the top on one side. The skin is then pulled from the opposite side and tacked approximately one inch from the top. This is repeated all around the drum, until the tack heads are not more than three-quarter inches apart. Then the membrane is allowed to dry slowly. Drying requires about three or four days, de-
24
DRUMS
pending on the thickness of the tacks must be driven farther in, taut, raising the tacks slightly.'* Buttoned Heads: The wet head is placed on punched through the skin in the
IN THE
AMERICAS
head. Before the drum is tested, the for the drying skin shrinks and draws
the shell, and five to nine holes are shell. The number of holes is deter-
mined by the diameter of the shell and by custom. The skin is removed — the holes made a little larger and incomplete loops cut around these
holes. The strip cut is approximately one-quarter inch in width and attached at the top. Moving downward, slanting holes are made in the shell. Pegs are made to fit these slanting holes. The skin is then damp-
ened again and placed back on the shell. The loops are turned over and the pegs driven into the holes. After the head
is dry, the skin can be
tensed by driving the pegs in farther. Buttoned heads are used on some small drums in Haiti.’
Direct Laced Heads: In several areas in the Americas, such as Panama, the United States, Trinidad and British Guiana, holes are made in the head and the
skin is laced directly to the drum shell or to the opposite skin. This type of lacing is found frequently on Indian drums.”
Head Tensors: Drum
tone
is sometimes
not
maintained,
even
when
the
head
is
correctly placed, owing to broken fibers in the skin from wear, loosening of the lacing or dampness in the air. Many contrivances have been cre-
ated to overcome this problem. Such procedures and devices are called tensors:
(a) (b}
Heating the head to raise the tone just as wetting lowers it. This is true of most Amerindian drums. Blocks, bolts and nuts tightening the head against the shell;
CONSTRUCTION
25
used by U. S. drum manufacturers.
(See Pl. VII — No.7.)
{c) “Ears” placed between the lacings. (See Pl. XVI] — No. 35.) (d) Pegs inserted through the head into the shell at an angle. (See Pl. VITI— No. 12.) (e) Pegs or blocks placed between the lacing and the shell act also as tensors of the skin. (See Pl. IX — No.
Certain drums call tion, but more because better to bring out the and soft beaters; long,
15.)
for specific drum-sticks, owing in part to tradiexperience has shown that certain varieties serve desired tonal qualities. There are hard, semihard short, straight, circular and crooked-end drum-
sticks. All may be classified according to the density of the beating end, the length, shape and flexibility of the shafts. Most drum-sticks are made of strong hardwood cut into a long, slender shape. The Amerindians
use white
oak, hickory,
ironwood,
ash,
elm and soft pine cut from the trunk of a young sapling (trunk wood is much stronger than branch wood). The length of their drum-sticks
is determined by the diameter plus one hand width. Leather thongs are frequently used on the handles of the drum-sticks to prevent slipping.
The thongs form a loop long enough to be wrapped around the second and third fingers comfortably. To the Amerindian, drum-sticks are personal possessions and are thus made according to his personal likes and dislikes. The Afro-American, on the other hand, shows little prefer-
ence as to the material of his sticks. Hard Drum-sticks: Long, slender sticks with little or no padding on the tip. They produce a sharp, clear sound and are capable of the precise rhythm necessary for dancing
and
marching.
This
type of stick is used with most
Amerindian hand drums, Aframerican and Anglo-American snare drums.
While the Anglo-American and Aframerican rarely decorate drumsticks (attaching no importance to these tools other than their functional value), the Amerindian attempts to create artistic implements that stimulate the imagination. He uses buckskin covering, tassels, fur, beads
and paints to adorn his sticks. Curved-End Sticks:
Found in use among the Amerindian, these have great rebound and
26
DRUMS
resiliency. They
are used for elaborate hand
drums
IN THE
AMERICAS
and dance
Constructed from one piece of wood, their shafts are soaked until pliable, then removed, bent, and tied with rawhide.
drums. in water
bdbohd
Rattle Drum-sticks: Used on hand drums
and dance
drums
of some
North
American
tribes, the rattle sticks are uniquely Amerindian. They are made by curv-
ing the end of a long drum-stick, covering the curved end with rawhide and enclosing pebbles inside. The rattle from these pebbles can be heard distinctly when the stick is used on a dance drum.”! However, it is also used as a dance rattle.
Semihard
Drum-sticks:
The semihard sticks are made by adding a little padding to the end of the stick—felt, buckskin with strips of cloth or hair underneath, and
leather being appropriate materials for this purpose. This type of stick is used with both Anglo-American and Amerindian drums.
Cebectsttseiere
tesenl—
cali
ho
thal
CONSTRUCTION
27
Soft Beaters:
The soft drum-sticks are generally used with large instruments. The padded ends can be used most effectively in coloring, muffling and controlling the sound of the drum. a
(
i,
I
teat htsteh 'fp
Ef
x
Be sistey+ Curved Sticks: The drum-sticks used with water drums are of a different type from those of any other American drum. Usually curved sticks, each about three-eighths inches in diameter (See Pl. XXVI— No. 66), they are
—_—e
made of hardwood, preferably oak, from nine to twelve inches long. These beaters are distinguished by the knob on the end, slightly larger
than the rest of the stick.
Hammer
Sticks:
Hammer sticks are used by some Afro-Americans and are made from thin hardwood tree branches. A branch is chosen that has another branch growing off at an acute angle; it is cut just ahead of the joint and approximately
twelve inches back of the joint. The angle branch is
cut to a two- or three-inch length. The bark is stripped away and the ends
rounded
off. When
the stick is dried
out, it is waxed
and
ready
28
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
for use. This type is very popular in Haiti and Brazil, and is an exact reproduction of the type used in West Africa. (See Pl. XXVI— No.
65.)
The Bow Sticks: Used
in
bow made
Haiti
on
the
rada,
from a hardwood
seconde,*
the
bow
stick
twig about a foot long. The
is
a small
ends of this
twig are rounded off and pulled into the shape of a bow and tied with
a string. These drum,
drum-sticks seem to be limited
traditionally used in voodoo
to the Haitian Seconde
rites.
The Brush:
This is a wire fan of 100 to 150 thin steel wires that telescope into a protective, thin, light-weight metal cylinder. Approximately twelve and one-half inches long, it started out as a “fly swatter,”
used
in the
late twenties and early thirties for special percussion effects. It was popularized by the late “Chick” Webb; today it is standard equipment for all jazz drummers.
(See Pl. XXVI — No.
Other objects used
traditionally
65.)
in the Americas
as drum-sticks
have included deer antlers for the “turtle drum,” and sheep shank bones
on the casks of the early Afro-Americans, but such types are limited to small areas. One
must
remember
“Rada, Seconde—The
that
Amerindians,
Afro-Americans,
second of a set of three drums used by the Rada
and
cult of Haiti.
the
CONSTRUCTION
29
Asian-Americans have not always been Christians, nor are they all Christians today. Many
of them still cling to their traditional forms of wor-
ship. This reflects in their drum construction and procedures.
Since not every drum proves to be satisfactory to its maker, the
Afro-American craftsman often seeks to ensure the cooperation of hidden forces, and resorts to occult power for help. Drums constructed under these conditions may be referred to as “cult drums.” We find many
such drums
in the Americas:
Cuba,
Brazil, Haiti, Jamaica, Trini-
dad, Surinam and other countries. Aframerican cult drum construction is accompanied by rites and precautions which bespeak the drum’s sacred nature and at the same time help to augment its supernatural quality. In fact, an early ceremony
endows
the drum
with a soul.
Even
before
the axe has felled the tree,
the cult priest performs a ritual to the god who will answer the drum’s call when the instrument is finished. Before the drums are absorbed into acts of worship, they are consecrated with special baptismal rites. For this occasion, they are arrayed in “robes” with the colors of the god,
and named in the presence of “godfathers” and “‘godmothers.” The religious beliefs of the Amerindian
and those which the Afri-
cans brought to the Americas were astonishingly similar. This is particularly evident in their occult activities. In both Aframerican and many
Amerindian religious traditions, a single creator-deity existed, supported by a pantheon of divinities of the elements. In both systems the manipulation on a magical level involved fetishes (magical charms) that sought to focus metaphysical forces with the aid of ancestral spirits or such elemental forces as rain and fertility. In both, the relationship between humans and nature was expressed in a concept of metamorphic
power, for example, the ability of gods to change from human to animal form. Moreover, worship of metaphysical forces was ritualistic, rather than meditative, involving for both peoples the idea that the metaphysical forces had to be sustained by feeding or sacrifice, and their bene-
diction maintained by propitiation. Ritualistically, the major faith ordeal of both systems was related to fire and, in both, the service of supplication involved drums and collective dancing.”
The similarity of these two systems of belief presaged a strong incentive toward assimilation — and confusion: as demonstrated by the
“Black Caribs” of Honduras.
30
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Cult instruments are constructed by prescribed procedures take the form of rituals. Many Afro-American and Amerindian
that two-
headed drums contain fetishes. A characteristic drum fetish might be composed of snatches of animal hair, pebbles from the sea, parapher-
nalia used in making hunting charms, and other objects, depending on the intended use of the instrument. Among
the
Cherokee
and
the
Shawnee,
a fresh
skin
was
secured
every spring for the drum used at religious dances. This skin was taken
from the first deer killed on a ceremonial hunt preceding the Spring bread
dance,
the
skin
being
tanned
immediately
on
the hunt,
brought
back to camp, and placed on the shell. Rada cult drum shells of oak are cut on the rising moon in Haiti. If they are not cut at that time, it is believed that the shell will become
infested with worms. The entire procedure is opened with a ceremony of dedication to a god. Bata drums of the Cuban Lucumi cult must be made by a cult priest. A painted skin on a drum usually indicates it is of either Amerindian or Asian
origin. If the head is painted with geometric
designs,
it is Amerindian; if there is writing or pictures, it is Asian. Afro-American and Anglo-American drum heads are not normally painted. Occasionally, Afro-Americans leave a ring of hair on the skin for decoration,
but even this is rare.
The Amerindians make the most elaborately decorated heads in the
Americas. They prefer natural colors and use them effectively in painting symbolic
designs on their drum
the soil, they are partial to strawberry red, turquoise blue, yellow predominantly in their hefore the head is completely
heads. A people
who
are close to
earthen colors, using watermelon green, charcoal black, chalk white and pumpkin symbolic head designs. Paint is applied dry, generally with a sharp stick, feather,
or brush. The only elaborately carved drum shells made in the Americas are
found in Surinam among the “bush Negroes” (who use snake designs),
certain Amerindian
tribes of Mexico, Hawaiians
(Polynesian),
and the
handles of Eskimo drums ( Alaska}. (See PI. VII — No. 9.) The Afro-American prefer their shells plain and shellacked. In Haiti, the tradition of painting the shell with the colors of the “loa,” or deity,
to whom
the drum
is consecrated,
is popular.
A “vever,”
or cult
symbol, is also painted on the shell. The cult drums are also dressed
CONSTRUCTION
31
with scarves bearing the colors of the saints and the names given the instruments at the consecration are decorated only with bells.
ceremonies.
The
Bata
drums
of Cuba
Amerindians paint their shells, and use fur, horns, tassels, beads, bits of metal, sea shells, and cloth in decorating the body of their instru-
ments. The Anglo-Americans make use of high glossy finishes, metals and tassels in decorating the shells of their drums in all the Americas. Afro-American
drums,
in the eighteenth
and nineteenth
centuries, were
often highly carved and decorated, but with the constant cleric-inspired
drives to wipe out these instruments as a remnant of savage elements in American
life,
drums
became
more
expendable
spent in decoration.
PWN
. . . .
California Peninsula Basin Plateau Plains 10. Midwest WBAINN
. . . . .
Arctic Coast Mackenzie-Yukon Northwest Coast Oregon Seaboard
11. Eastern Canada 12. Northeast 13, Southeast
14. Gulf
15. Southwest
16. North East Mexico
17. Meso-American 18. Isthmian
19. Colombian 20. Peruvian 21. Chilean
22. 23, 24, 25. 26.
Fuegian Pampean Chaco Paraguayan Eastern Lowlands
27. Atlantic
28. Goyaz 29. Para 30. Xingu
31. Bolivian 32. Montana
33. 34, 35. 36. 37. 38. 39.
Jurua-Purus Amazon Loreto Caqueta Savanna Guiana Orinoco
40. Caribbean 41. Floridian
Western
:
Hemisphere
and
less
time
was
4 AMERINDIAN
MUSIC
The music of the American Indian is the only true native music in the Americas. Amerindian* music has remained distinctive and indi-
vidualistic; little of the European and African music has been absorbed. into it. Dancing is to the Indian his highest art form — surpassing singing,
ceremonial crafts, and legendary lore.” In most Amerindian
music, how-
ever, dancing, singing, and drumming are combined to make one art. Through the dance, the Amerindian worship with rhythmic movement
and the dance takes on deep religious significance. Drums
sented
at
many
occasions:
celebrations,
storytelling
of
are repre-
exploits
and
medicinal rituals, as well as exclusively religious ceremonies. Although Amerindian
music is by no means
may be made concerning it as a Musical instruments of the erable variety, all being generally this accompaniment was wholly or no
attention
to pitch.
homogeneous,
some
generalizations
whole. Amerindian have appeared in considused for singing accompaniment. Since of a rhythmic nature, there was little
Rhythm
was
more
prominent
than
melody
because most songs were sung not contemplatively, but for public rituals and dances. Indian accompaniments
are thus dominated
by flutes, rattles, and
*To avoid confusion with the people of India, we use the term “Amerindians”, including
in this classification all native American peoples from the Seri of the Gulf of California, who represent a simple technology on the American continents, to the Mayas, whose
approach to a phonetic system of writing and architecture represents the high-water mark
of Amerindian
achievement.
The
Amerindians
own language, customs and traditions.
32
thus comprise
many
tribes, each
with
its
AMERINDIAN MUSIC
33
drums. Generally, ‘the singers sit or stand around the drums, beating time lustily as they sing. In only a few songs or ceremonies does the
drum fail to play a vital part. Pure instrumental music, however, is prac-
tically unknown, Preconquest Indian music seems to have revolved about religion; even recreational art forms were connected with a central theme of worship. Religion, far from being isolated from art, was integrated with it in
society. Music was thought of in relation to gods rather than in relation to men. That is, music function was solely religious rather than social. Indian
tribes may
vary individually
in the treatment
of the sick,
but music in some form appears in the customs of most tribes. Sometimes the Indian physician may simply beat a drum or shake a rattle, but more often he sings a song which comes to him, he believes, in a dream. It is not the song itself that cures, but the power emanating from the song. Medical Uses: The Sioux medicine man has an elaborate musical-medical system, with a song for nearly every ailment. As he sings, he beats a drum or shakes a rattle in a rhythm, possibly designed to invigorate an exhausted patient and sooth the nervous patient although Mrs. Frances Densmore, scholar of American
Indian music, found in her study of healing songs
of many tribes that the medicine man sang to soothe and quiet and not to stimulate the patient.* Many songs give suggestions similar to those used today in medical hypnosis. In some tribes, the doctor administers material remedies and sings to give them effectiveness, while in others, he depends entirely upon the power of the songs. It has
been
found
that
fast
music
tends
to
increase
metabolism,
muscular energy, heartbeat, and blood pressure, while soft music has an
anaesthetic effect (in Bellevue “Ave Maria” has been employed ical changes take place also in example, played near an egg for The
music
used
Hospital psychiatric ward, Schubert’s to quiet violent patients). Subtle chemmuscles and glands. Shrill music, for half a minute, will spoil it.
in treating the sick
in Amerindian
society
was
nearly always soothing, often played with repetitive rhythms that were hypnotic in effect. Perhaps it simply lulled the patient, leaving him more
susceptible to suggestions. More likely, music was used primarily in treating other than purely organic diseases and for anaesthetic purposes.”
34
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Social Uses: The drum is to today’s Indian a great speaking spirit; its uses are manifold: to call councils, frighten away supernatural enemies, stir men to bravery, treat the sick, attend marriage and courtship, announce birth
or death, signal, and accompany ceremonies. It is coexistent with tribal life, since every public ceremony and every important event in the life of a male has its accompaniment in song. With the impact of European civilization however, many customs have been retired. Among some
tribes, ancient songs are now used for purely social dances. Training:
Drumming, on the whole, is taught by an apprentice system. A child who shows promise today is taken under the wing of a “lead” drummer and taught the songs, the drum
patterns, and the dances;
when
his skill
has reached a certain level, he is allowed to sit at pow-wows and thus further his education.* There are also drumming games and contests held among the drummers. The
Sioux
“lead”
drummers
function
as choral
directors,
leading
and rehearsing all special songs and determining generally what song is appropriate to what occasion. Songs are sung only when needed, (e.g. a prayer song for rain is sung only during a drought). In the Sioux
nation, a “lead” drummer is appointed every year for the tribe, chosen for his drumming and singing ability (drumming without song is un-
known).
He must have a good
memory
as well, for he must be able to
sing many songs. He must keep perfect time, a more serious and difhcult requirement than it seems. He should have a high voice; judgment of a voice seems to be based on the range he or she has, rather than on quality. Indian drumming is unison drumming. If there are twelve drummers, they must keep time as rigorously and accurately as if only one person were playing. All songs are introduced with the drum. The “lead” drummer nals for the beginning, end, and internal sections
two
distinct parts), generally
by three loud
classified as war songs, general patriotic
sig-
(nearly all songs have
drum
(or “flag’”)
strokes.
Songs
are
songs, social songs,
ceremonial songs and prayer songs; many of these with vastly different meanings may have the same beat pattern.* * *A pow-wow
**e.z.,
A
is a social gathering and dance.
seven-beat
pattern
might
be
oa
ae
1234567
a five
beat
one, aa
a
12345
AMERINDIAN
MUSIC
35
Drum Types: In the excellent drum classifications suggested by Dr. Clark Wissler in
his “American
Indian,” we find:
1. Tambourine type — found in the plains areas and northward to Alaska.
2. Single-headed,
water-tune
type — found
in
the
eastern
maize
area (prairie), continuous through the West Indies and South America. 3. Double-headed type — seen in the southwestern United States southward into Mexico.
4. Log drums— found in Central and South America. 5. Pottery drums—found in the southwest of the United States and in Mexico, sometimes water filled.
6. Other miscellaneous types found in North America include: (a) Iron kettles, popular among the Kiowas, found in the west central states;
{b) Tubs and kegs, sometimes of enormous size, used by the Sioux; Turtle shells or half gourds, found among Mexican
(c)
(d)
Baskets
of closely
woven
grass,
uncovered
and
Indians;
inverted,
popular with the Yuma, Pima and Papago of southern Arizona;
(e)
Water drums, found in North America.
In the Southwest, drums were painted with gay designs and consummate care was exercised in their making. The turtle, a highly respected warrior, was frequently used as a decoration on war drums — his
was
thought
to
command
courage.
Eagle
feathers
similarly
efhgy
inspired
bravery. Likewise, much symbolism went into the construction and decoration of drums; even greater care was taken with the drum-sticks which were often decorated and feather-padded with small pillows on the end.
Certain instruments were thought to be of divine origin and were treated accordingly. The ‘‘Teponaztli” (See PI XXIII — No. 55) and the “Tlapanhuehuetl”
(See Pl. XII — No. 23)
of Mexico, for example, were
held to be gods temporarily forced to endure earthly forms. In the Orinoco region of Brazil, all drums were sacred. The “Bo-tu-tu” was the
idol drum
of the Orinoco region.2” The Mayans
called the “Tunkul,” a kettledrum.
have a sacred drum
36
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
In the Americas, one might get the impression that all Indian tribes had drums; there are. however. certain rare tribes and even areas that. as far as can he determined, had no drums. California, generally a drumless region, did have idiophone drums, associated with the Kuksu
cult area near the California-Washington
border:
a hollow log. stamped
on by dancers; also present in some northern California tribes was a plank which was danced on. The Tule of Panama
were a drumless cul-
ture.
PLATE
Ke-l-you
I— Picture No.1) Amerindian Panhuehuetl (Modern)
(Sewyak)
Drone Flue... Chief Drum
Teponaztli
OF
E.
(Modern)
Hilevas de Tenabaris (Hand Drum)
Picture No. 2 (COURTESY
ILC.
Cajas QUITO,
Drums
ECUADOR)
° AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA ARCTIC
COAST
The Eskimos of Northern Alaska could be grouped in three major
ecological patterns:
the people
around
the tareumiut
the caribou;
of the land, whose people
life is developed
of the sea, whose
orientation
is toward sea mammal hunting; and those Eskimos who have been attracted to military installations and recent urban developments for employment.
The cultures of the various Eskimo groups are marked by a high
degree
of sociability.
Social activities are not centered
in the homes,
rather in the Karigi, the quasi-ceremonial gathering place or dance house. It would be unreasonable to look for many instruments among the Eskimos; their natural surroundings preclude any but the simplest forms. Moreover, the intense cold makes the use of any kind of wind instru-
ment nearly impossible since the breath would condense on the mouthpiece. Drums in Eskimo society are purely social instruments which are used by the tribes for singing and dancing but never for signaling or hunting, as with many
North Americans.
In day-to-day life, through the ownership of certain drums and songs, the “‘anatqut” or “Shaman”-priests control many activities of the people. These “Shamans” or holy men of the Eskimos deliver incanta-
tions to the spirits for good weather, success in hunting and health; 37
38
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
magical songs are bought and sold along with physical charms; songs are even owned and inherited. The Eskimos have in music a harmless method of settling arguments and grudges. The antagonists meet by appointment for a duel of satirical songs before an audience. The winner is chosen on the basis of the most public laughter provoked at the expense of his opponent.” The drum accompanies many occasions, whether secular or religious.
Eskimo rhythms of slow songs tend to be asymmetrical and complex. Most of these songs are accompanied by beating of drums or of some part of the body, this indefinite rhythmic pattern often producing a complex rhythmic poly-phony between voice and beats. While other instruments
today
include
rattle, accordion,
concertina,
types of drums are traditionally predominant: idiophone
drum.
yau,”
at Point
and
In Greenland Barrow,
it is called “kilaut.” In frame drums may vary Sewyak (Savvit): throughout Alaska, but
the frame
“kelyau,”
and
drum
and
violin,
two
the frame drum and the
among
is referred
to as “ ael-
the central
Eskimos.
Alaska it is called “sewyak” or “Savwvit.” These in size but remain consistent in construction. (See Pl. XII — No. 241 also varies in size its method of construction is fundamentally the
same, with variations occurring, for example, in the method of tying the handle to the frame. The body or frame is one to three inches wide, and three-eighth inch to one-half inch thick, usually made
of spruce or
willow. This frame is bent to form a circle eight to thirty inches in diam-
eter. The ends of the frame are beveled and fitted into a bone or tooth handle the same width as the frame. The handle is then joined to the frame with wooden pegs or rawhide. Over one side of the frame is stretched a piece of thin skin, a sheet
PEGS
(
FRAME
SIDE
VIEW
BONE
HANDLE
AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA
39
of the peritoneum from a whale, walrus, seal, or even reindeer or moun-
tain sheep. This membrane is secured to the frame by means of a rawhide or sinew cord wound over the stretched membrane in a sunken
groove cut in the frame. The six-inch-long handle, often carved to represent
the whale
or walrus,
loon
or albatross,
may
be made
from
teeth,
bone, horn or wood, and is held in place by sinew laced around or
through holes in the handle. The completed drum mav be painted with
vivid stripes or decorated with pictographs. The instrument is tuned by wetting and heating, although pitch is not of great importance. The musician holds the instrument away from his body. The drum is struck with a thirty-six-inch long thin drum-stick
(Kentun)
on the
wood rim, the player rotating the drum to meet each stroke alternately hitting left and right on the rim.
Eskimo rhythm is generally duple or quadruple, leader with a small decorated baton. Kalookock
XXIV —
(Kalluyaq):
Box
Drum
—-
The
being set by a
“kalookock
(See
PI.
No. 59) is a rectangular box drum hung from a pole so as
to swing along the path of the sun. It is used in the Wolf Dance as well
as the Messenger Feast. In use, it is swung from side to side and struck
on the bottom. A new box drum is constructed each year for the Messenger Feast and retired afterward, since there is a new host each year,
who must, for his own prestige, be responsible for everything. The Messenger Feast, or Messenger Dance,is the most elaborate social-ceremonial occasion in the culture of the North Alaskan Eskimos, the principal social event
of the year, lasting four days.
In contrast to the Whaling
Feast and Caribu Feast, the main religious events, the Messenger Feast
has few if any religious implications. Its basis is the enhancing of im-
portant individuals, social status, more specifically the status of “Umealit,” men who owned boats and headed whaling crews. The Umealit of one community invite the Umealit of another to attend and to engage in
an economic exchange. The feast offers an opportunity to reinforce ties of kinship, intercommunity solidarity and cultural uniformity. It also not incidentally accents the social status of the men sponsor the feast.”
of substance
who
Skinless Drums: The “Kalookock” is an idiophone (skinless) type drum. Other types in the category in North America include basket drums, plank drums and the teponaztli-type drums.*
*See also Idiophone Drums of South America.
40
DRUMS
Man discovered early that hollow objects duced louder and different types of sounds than were solid. Beating of clubs against hollow logs and widespread method of producing loud sound cussion. The highest development of log drums
IN THE
AMERICAS
when struck prothose objects that became a common and rhythmic perwas reached in the
New Hebrides Islands, where upright tree drums stand eighteen feet
high and are two feet in diameter. They are hollowed out to a thin shell through a narrow slit on one side four inches wide, from the bottom to two thirds of its length.
MUSIC OF THE SOUTHERN
ESKIMOS
The Copper Eskimos of Northern Canada use poplar wood frames and deer-skin heads for their frame drums, using a heavy twelve-inch skin covered drum-stick to correspond to the thick, heavy head. There are two types of dances among the Copper Eskimos — the “pisik” and the ‘“aton.” In the pisik the dancer drums as he dances,
while in the aton, the drumming is furnished by another. Among these people, the drum is considered to be communal property. Women drum as well as men and at least one drum is found in a community.”
Farther south heavier drum heads are found: young moose rawhide
and tanned moose hide among the Dease River Kaska, for example, being used on frame drums fifteen to sixteen inches in diameter. These Indians also use hoofs and horn rattles with their drums. The Indian drums of Alaska are similar to the construction as well as in material used for their Aleut and Alaskan Eskimos have been influenced by beria on the west and northwest coast culture on the
Eskimo drums in construction. Both the culture of Sisouthwest. But un-
like the
the Eskimos
Eskimos,
the Indians
strike
the
skin
while
strike
the drum frame. Tungtungix
(Aleut
frame
drum):
Among
the
Aleuts
of
Alaska
we find a single-headed drum consisting of a wooden rim covered with a membrane of seal stomach, which is held in place by cords. The drum
is played by grasping, with the left hand, cross-cords inside the instru-
ment, and beating with a drum-stick in the right hand, the drummer skillfully keeping the drum vibrating and accompanying with motions of the body; at intervals drums are interspersed with song, while the women continue their own songs throughout the whole performance.”
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
41
MACKENZIE-YUKON The Nahane
Indians of northern Canada, which embraces the Tahl-
tan, the Tsetsaut, and the Kaska,
might
use the drum
use a frying pan, a tambourine
drum
in gambling. The
Kaska
or an oil tin as a drum,
beaten with a plain piece of thick willow. For dancing and singing they use a violin and guitar. The tambourine drum is a standa-d musical instrument with heads made from young moose rawhide, sometimes three feet in diameter. The Dease River Kaska use a semi-tanned moose-hide, averaging about fifteen or sixteen inches in diameter, undecorated.”
NORTHWEST COAST The Amerindians of the northwest coast of North America are well known
for their decorative
musical
instruments,
which
are carved
and
painted most elaborately in totemic designs.* The most important uses
of the drum are for their many pantomimic dances and the special dances of the Shaman. In this area drumming is an intrinsic part of the songs and cannot
be separated from them. The rhythm of the tunes is exceedingly complex; but the most striking characteristic is the fact that a syncopated
beat is used.®
Gau: The Tlingit Indians of Alaska refer to all drums as “gau.” They use three types. Two are the idiophone types—the wooden box
decorated with carvings and paintings of totem symbols, the floor board which is beaten with a carved wand at feasts for birth, hunting, and other occasions, and the frame drum.** Hand
Drums:
The
Nootka
Amerindians,
death
in the northwestern
tip of the U.S.A. and in British Columbia, have two classes of drums,
hand drums and idiophone drums. The hand drum is a special type of frame drum, well known among Amerindians, and often called “war drum,” “chief drum,” or “medicine drum,” depending on locale.
It may be either single or double headed, round or square.
The round hand drums are shallow. (See Pl. XVII — No. 39).
The body is made from a narrow wooden frame or hoop and is usually less than four inches high and about eight inches across.
The deer-hide heads are generally laced to each other across the body. Used by medicine men, they are painted with ritualistic symbols. Rattles are put inside and out to impart special powers. In *The designs favored are representations of “hooyeh,” the raven; duck, eagle, whale, walrus, human effigies, skulls and others.
“hérta” the bear, wild
42
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
some cases these are fetishes of some type or strings of beads or small sticks that strike the skin when the head is struck, producing their own sound. A piece of wood from the north side of the cedar tree (thus free from knots) is used for the body. A wood strip is soaked for twenty-four hours, then bent; this overlapped and tied with rawhide through holes made
with red-hot metal or stone. By heating,
each drum has its own characteristic sound. The hand drum is found more frequently in North America than in South America. The Nootkas have three types of idiophone drums: a plank laid across short sticks or across the laps of the drummers and beaten with short hardwood billets; a box used as a drum by beating the bottom with a fist wrapped in shredded cedar bark; and hollowed-out cedar logs
beaten with sticks or the heel of the right hand. Other northern instruments include the wooden rattle, usually carved in the form of a bird; the Shaman’s rattle, of baleen or moun-
tain-sheep’s horn; strung pecten shells; whistles; bull-roarer and dance
skirts hung with bird beaks, deer hooves or claws.®
CALIFORNIA Musically, this area extends through the Yuma of Arizona, but excludes a few of the Northern California tribes.
Percussion instruments, in addition to rhythmic accompaniment, provide brief introductions and conclusions for the songs. The rhythm instruments
include
foot
drums,
baskets
(beaten
or
scraped),
frame
drums, rasps, rattles, and split-stick clappers. The container rattles are made hoof
of gourds, rattle
turtle shells or cocoons,
is also
common.
Flutes,
fitted with
tubes
with
pebbles.
reeds
and
The
whistles
deerare
their wind instruments. Whistles are sometimes bound together to pro-
duce a multiple-tone instrument. * The
foot drums
are better known
in California than skin drums.
Foot drums are planks, boards or floors that are danced on or kicked to produce rhythm for singing. Tsilo
(Kuksu):
The
Pomo
California
drum
is
the
most
im-
portant and characteristic feature of the Pomo dance house. It is played by stamping on it with the bare feet. It is made from a section of a large oak log and measures approximately six feet in length by twentytwo inches in width. The bark is removed
and it is carefully hollowed
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
43
out and reduced to a uniform thickness of about two and a
half inches.
A trench, the same width as the log and about eight inches in depth, is
dug and near each end two short stand stakes are driven so they come about even with the surface of the floor. Heavy grapevines are then used to form a support for the shell between the stakes. The drum is placed on these supports with the cured side up. The trench forms an excellent resonating chamber; a space of about twelve inches in length is left in front of the drum for the passage of the sound waves. This drum produces a deep, booming tone as the drummer stamps upon it, steadying himself against a stake
set firmly in the ground near the front right-hand corner of the drum. Two
drummers
(“tsilo
gauks”)
are
used
alternately.
considered important officers, second only to the fire tenders.” Drums
They
are
were used chiefly in the Ghost Dance and in the other re-
ligious ceremonies. However, each tribe has its own customs and traditions in ‘the use, construction, playing, and naming of their foot drums.* (For example, the Maidu
tribe calls their foot drum
the “kile.”)
The
men who make this instrument have to spend some time in the “sweathouse,” a purification hut for preparation of those to do the job.
Kile: An Amerindian foot drum, it was made from a huge log and found among the Maidu tribe of California. The kile was made from
the
sycamore
tree,
a hard
wood.
After
the
tree
was
felled,
a section
about five or six feet long and two feet in diameter was cut from the trunk. This was split lengthwise and the best side selected. The center section was burned
and scraped
out, leaving a half-moon
section in the
two ends. This operation left the half-log looking like a water trough. The entire operation was carried out by the river and no one was allowed to see the drum until it was brought to the village where the feast was to take place. A shallow trench was dug in the ground and the drum
was placed over it, hollowed side down.
The instrument was played in two ways. One was to have two or
three men stand on top of the drum and dance in time to the singing.
The second method was to have two or three men stand and pound on the drum with a heavy club. The clubs were lifted and dropped in time with the singing. The Yurok today use a cracker box, covered with horse-hide, with
*Ghost Dance—A religious movement that spread from the Great Basin—which taught that all Indians,
living and
death. (1890)
dead,
would
return
and live happily
forever without
misery
and
44,
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
their gambling songs. There are stories of hollow logs being at one time used as drums
by the Ykuts of California, but on the whole,
California
could be classified as a skin drum bare area.*®
GREAT BASIN The simplest musical style on the North
American
continent
is
found in the Great Basin. Percussion instruments include rasp, rattle, and drums. The drums found are the frame and the kettledrum (a skin
stretched over a pottery vessel, partialy filled with water}, the whistle, true flutes and musical bows. The non-religious music includes songs in animal tales, songs connected with gambling games and lullabies. The rattles are of the container and jingle types; deer hooves are quite
common.
A
notched
stick,
two
feet
long,
rubbed
with
stick, is frequenty seen.” Witu-A: A Paiute frame drum about sixteen inches in The frame was made from chokecherry or juniper. The head with the hair surface facing in, was stretched tightly over the skin was held by six thongs radiating toward the center and a handle. Each thong was slit a short distance from the end
a
small
diameter. of hide, top. The acting as and was
put through the hole in the skin head. The body of the thongs was then brought through its own end slit. The six thongs converged in the
center, their fastening hidden by several rows of a cotton cloth, wrapped and stitched. The drum-stick was short and hide wrapped on one end.”
PLATEAU The Columbian plateau region is difficult to characterize because its culture exhibits influences from both plains and the northwest coast, but the drums in this area are similar to those found in the northwest coast, more or less. The Salish (Sanpoil) Indians of Washington state used a frame drum about three and one-half inches deep and eighteen and one-half inches in diameter. Many were painted with geometric or realistic designs. The drum-stick had a padded end with deer’s hair enclosed in skin. Drums and drum-sticks are sometimes ornamented with deer hooves and feathers.*! PLAINS In the Central states, South, East and West, on plains and prairies, are the remnants of the Comanche, Winnebago, Crow, Dhegiha (Omaha and
Osage),
Pawnee
and Gros Ventre
cultures.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
45
The percussion instruments include frame drums, membrane drums of rolled rawhide, the two-headed drums, rasps of wood, hide, and bone,
and rattles and jingles made of gourd, animal hooves and rawhide.
Music in the plains is mostly functional and most of it is associated with dancing. Four distinct types of music are found among the plains Indians: love songs, lullabies, general sacred music, and the Ghost Dance ritual music.”
The Comanche of Texas have two types of drums: the large, two-
headed dance drum, which up to six older men beat in unison POW-WOW DRUM Pl. XV — No. 34) and a hand drum, a hoop
(See with
a dry skin stretched over it. They also used the bull-roarer and rattles
of many types. (See Pl. XVII — No. 39.) Nexe-Gaku (Gaku meaning “to beat”):
The large Omaha drum was made from a
Nexe
water
vessel
—
section of a hollowed-out tree,
partially filled with water containing charcoal.* Skin, dressed or undressed, was stretched over it. The drum was tuned before being used (and, if necessary, again
during the ceremony). Tuning was done by tipping the drum and wetting the skin from the water within, then drying it before a fire until it yielded the desired pitch. These drums were beaten either with a single
strong stroke or with a rebounding strong stroke followed by a light
one.#
Nexe-Gaku-Bthacka
(Bthacka
meaning
“flat”): This
small
Omaha
drum was made by stretching a skin over a small hoop. This drum was used by “doctors” attending the sick and in some rituals. It was beaten
with a stick,
The drum was the most popular musical instrument among the Omaha. It was generally used to accompany most songs, both secular and religious, Jan-Nexe-Gaku: A wooden box drum, which has not been seen in use
in many years, was also an Omaha drum. The Osage had three drums: a double-headed frame drum; a large dance drum, accommodating four or five drummers; and a water drum (a caldron, covered with a damp skin). They also use the gourd, several types of rattles and a whistle.“ The Gros Ventre tribe of Montana also used three drums: a large, suspended, two-headed dance drum, a rawhide drum, and a feathered “Charcoal was to add fire.
46
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
pipe drum. Four drum-sticks went with each drum, one for each player.
The drum head was painted half blue and half yellow. The sides of the
instrument are skirted with the same color combination. The bodyless rawhide drum, held in one hand and beaten with a
stick, was rarely seen this far west. The feathered pipe rite has a sixteen-inch drum with a painted head of red with a blue thunderbird.* On the plains of North Dakota, the Mandan Indians had a turtle drum,
large
dance
drum,
wooden
drum,
hide
drum,
and
hand
drum.
The hide drum was merely a buffalo skin, rolled in a cylinder and beaten with sticks. Among the Mandan there were companies or clubs in which membership was purchased for a price. One could progress from one club to the next higher. Each group had its distinctive dress, rattle, drum, whistle pipe and dance step.” Hakkowpirus (“breathing mouth of wood’’): A Pawnee drum made from a section of a tree hollowed out by fire and chipping. The skin was stretched over the open ends of the log and secured. The Pawnee also had a buffalo-hide drum, similar to that of their neighbors, the Mandan.
Water drums Dance, they used was held to teach there were beings
were used by the pieces of rawhide the men how to act who watched over
dancers of the One-Horn
Red Lance society. In the Wolf for drums. The One-Horn Dance in battle and to remind them that them and gave them courage. The
carried a hand drum, sometimes referred to as
the “pahukatawa” drum. It was made from a water willow tree trunk, planed, soaked, and bent over with the ends fastened together with sinew. Four flints were tied inside the shell, which was then headed with buffalo-hide, when available, but more frequently with cow-hide. When dried,
the heads were painted black and the rim was painted with four buffalo skulls drawn on the side.” The gourd rattle, among the Pawnee, was sacred; the flute, used primarily for courtship, was made from bone or reed. Whistles were also used.
Peyote Drum (Cheyenne): A water drum used by the plains Indians in the United States, to be employed only at Peyote cult cere-
monies.
The
Peyote
cult is a North
American
Indian
cult, believed
to
have begun in Mexico, religious in nature. They make use of the peyote
plants in the ceremonies.
Peyote
panding) drug from the cactus illusions and delirium.
is a hallucinogen
(consciousness
ex-
(lophophora williamei) — it produces
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
47
The Peyote drum is made from a cast iron or copper three-legged
kettle. It stands from eight to ten inches in height and six to ten inches
in diameter. The head is made from buckskin and attached to small pebbles. The head is attached to the body by a cord which is laced around the pebbles and body of the instrument. Before the head is attached, charms
(medicine)
and charcoal, sev-
eral Peyote buttons and water are placed inside the kettles. The cord
for the skin is so laced that it forms a star at the bottom of the drum.”
The drummer sits with his legs crossed, using one drum-stick of hard walnut
wood,
unpadded
and
about
fourteen
inches long.
Water is put onto the skin frequently throughout the night of the Peyote meeting to keep the instrument tuned. Peyote is passed around to those who wish to partake of it. It produces dreams and peculiar
mental reactions. At the end of the meeting the “tea” or water in the
drum is drunk by anyone who feels it would do him good. XIX — No. 45.)
(See PI.
Midwest: Palawatomi Water Drum: Carved from a cedar log, twelve inches in diameter and similar to the Midi drum in construction. The rectangular
buckskin head is held in place by a hoop of white cedar wrapped in cloth,
(See Pl. XIX — No. 45), sparingly decorated with red, blue, and yellow stripes painted around the bottom and head. The drum-stick is curved and
knobbed on the end. The
Ojibwa
Bungi, Missisauga,
EASTERN CANADA (Chippewa) of Ontario include and the Ottawa,
all of whom
the Saulteaux,
have
the
interesting drum-
ming traditions. The drums used only for singing are the hand drums,
consisting of a piece of rawhide stretched over both sides of a hoop and laced together on the outer edge of the hoop. These hand drums are often supplied with cords inside like snares with small pegs tied and twisted about them, causing a vibration against the head when beaten. It is also commonly called a “Moccasin Game Drum.” The same
type drum,
with a bone
two
inches in diameter
of the drum, is used by the Shaman.
“snared”
in the center
The drums used in the ceremonies are called “Kimicomisanan,” meaning “our grandfather,” a term explained as due to the fact that it is one of the oldest things known to the Chippewas.”
48
DRUMS
The
Midi
Drum:
The
instrument
used
in
IN THE AMERICAS
the
ceremonies
of
the Midiwiwin and by members of that society when singing their songs in private is called a Mitigkwakik, meaning “wooden kettle.” It is commonly known as a “water drum.”
The Water Drums: The water drum dominantly an Amerindian contribution to Amerindians believed that water in the drum ual carrying power, as it certainly changed
in the Americas is preAmerican percussion. The produced a greater spiritthe tone. Heard close at
hand, the water drum produces a dull thud, pleasing and yet peculiar in its quality. Some distance away its sound volume increases.
There are three types of water drums found in the Americas:
The Potter (Metal Vessel) — A late innovation, this kettledrum
is found in the southwest United States and Central America. The shell is one-quarter filled with water. The Log Water Drum — Found among the woodland North Amerindians,
centers
around
the
north
central
area
of the
conti-
nent. We find this type among the Chippewa, used as a medicine drum; and the Chippewa claim that this instrument has unusual potency.
The Gourd Water Drum— Played with hands or sticks, consists of a half gourd floating cut side down in a container of water. It is found in Central America, the northern areas of South America
and the West Indies.*
The drum of the Midi is made by hollowing out a sixteen-inch basswood log. A wooden disk is fitted to the lower end of the cylinder and
a small hole drilled in one side. Heavy tanned deer-skin, eighteen inches in diameter, is wet, wrung out, laid over the top of the shell and stretched by pressing around it a willow hoop. The hole and plug make it possible to pour and remove the water without removing the head. This drum is decorated with colored bands indicating the owner’s status
in the Midiwiwin.
The
drum-sticks,
(“bagakokkwan”),
are
said
to be more valuable than the drum and frequently older. Some sticks are carved to represent loons and owls; those carved to represent loons
are regarded much more highly, however.
The Midi drum is used to invoke sacred spirits when seeking ad-
*Water
drums, while indigenous
Africa. The
Korand
to the American
continent, were and are today known
Hottentots, according to Kirby, had a water drum
in
called Khais, a
wooden jar or pot, covered with deliaired goat-skin which was secured by a rim. In this rare instance, the drummers were women, who played the instrument with bare hands in a sitting position.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
49
vice or aid for the sick, and at the initiation of new members
or the
advancement of a Midi from one tribal degree to a higher one.” Two other drums similar to the Midi drum are the Chippewa water drum and the Palawatomi water drum; the only differences are in deco-
ration. Ogiteida-Dewe-Igun
(Drum of the Brave): This Chippewa hanging
war drum, approximately seventeen inches in diameter, is made of wood, with a metal rim, and decorated with representations of lightning and
turtles. Lightning is a picture of the dream of the man who invented the
use of the drum among the Amerindians — Wenabago sent a turtle as his
messenger.
The
drum-stick
has a crossbar
near the end which,
struck against the drumhead, produces a slapping sound.51
when
The old Chippewa drums were the Midi and hand drum, but in recent years, a large flat drum has come into use. For this purpose, modern bass drums are sometimes utilized or occasionally, converted
washtubs.
In ancient days, when
a finished drum was not available, the circle
of drummers would each hold a rawhide with one hand and stretch it between them, slapping it with the other hand. Or they might drive stakes into the ground, forming a two-foot circle and stretch the skin over them. Today,
huge,
tub-shaped
dance
drums
are used
by widely
scat-
tered tribes. Whether among Chippewas, Menomini, Winnebagos, Sauk-
Fox or other tribes of the north central forests, these dance drums, both secular and religious, are much alike in detail of construction and deco-
ration.” Pow Wow Drum (“Everybody's Drum’): A two-headed instrument, designed for any kind of common-place group dance where the rank and file of the tribe or tribes are present, this drum has tremendous volume. It is a counterpart of a European bass drum and in many cases the European
drum
is used. The
drum, fifteen feet or more away; the instrument,
dancers move
clockwise
around
the
is generally
the
four or more drummers sit around
hitting it in unison.
This
instrument
central object in the community, symbolizing community spirit and solidarity—hence the name “everybody’s drum.” The body is hewn from a solid log, twenty to twenty-six inches in diameter, or made from a large wooden tub; cedar is generally chosen. It is covered with cow or deer rawhide, laced across the body, allowing
50
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
three inches to overlap the body. Seldom are these drums painted or decorated. They are suspended from four stakes placed in the ground. (See Pl. XV — No. 34.) Dream Dance Drum: This drum is reserved for the Dream Dance, a colorful ritual of Messianic nature that developed among the northern woodland Amerindians at the same time that the Ghost Dance became popular in the plains. Many ceremonies have grown up around this drum because of the Amerindians’ affection for the instrument. For example, during the month of July, some plains tribes exchange drums as a sign of friendship and peace.* The presented drum is constructed in strict, ritualistically prescribed tradition and “dressed” in a beaded skirt. As a part of the ceremony, which lasts for four or five days, there is much dancing and festivity. The
appropriate
songs are taught to those who
are going to
receive the drums. After the drum is decorated, it is carried with great ceremony to the dance ground. The Dream Dance drums have stripes several inches wide running across the head directly through the middle. When the drum is properly placed on its stand, the stripes run east to west, representing the path
of the sun. The center stripe is yellow and an inch wide, and there is
a quarter-inch green stripe on each side. The “north” half of the head is painted blue to represent the heavens to the north and the “south” half painted red to represent the warmth of the south. The instrument is dressed in a skirt of bright colors (corresponding to the colors of the head) and decorated with a fur rim and a beaded necklace or belt. The drum is hung in a decorated stand. (See Pl. XV — No. 33.) This drum is thought to have special powers, harmful as well as good. It is played and housed by the chief or his delegate. The Chippewas believe that the sound of the drum reaches the ears of the gods;
thus, anyone misusing the instrument will bring the gods’ wrath upon his family or the whole tribe. Therefore, the drum is never left alone. Tewehigan: On the Labrador Peninsula the drums of the Montagnais-Naskapi show constructional resemblance to the drums of the Eskimo
and Asiatic forms.
Ranging
from
fourteen
to twenty-four
inches, they are built on hoops three to six inches wide made of birch or poplar. Caribou skin is stretched taut over a wooden ring to fit out*It is told that many generations ago the Sioux gave to the Chippewa a large drum, taught them the “songs belonging to the drum” and told them the tradition of its origin. This gift resulted in peace between the two tribes.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF NORTH AMERICA
51
side of the hoop, covering the body of the drum. When there are two heads, they are laced together with red painted thongs; when one head is used, it is laced to the body.* All of these drums have a “snare,” in the form of a stretched sinew
to which bones or goose quills are tied. This device produces a sustained
buzzing sound. Single-headed drums have two snares, at right angles to each other. Drum-sticks are often made from carved caribou antlers. A wooden stick with a wide end is also common.
When the Tewehigan drums are played, they are hung from tent
poles or house rafters, level with the drummer’s head. The drum is held
close to his face to muffle the words so no one in the audience can learn
his song.
The drum is used magically by the tribe in the hunting ritual. Some small object is placed on the skin and watched to see in which direction it moves when the drum is beaten. In this way they use the drum to find direction where game may be found.* The Micmacs of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick use a box drum made from birch bark, which they strike with the fists. They also use as
a drum, a piece of folded birch bark, which they strike with sticks at festival dances, accompanied by singing.
There are also relics of skin drums among the Micmacs. One specimen
is four
inches
deep,
twelve
inches
across,
with
a single
deer-skin
head, held in place by a double-laced thong. The twelve-inch drum-stick has the hitting end covered with leather. NORTHEAST
On the Atlantic seaboard the most predominant musical cultures are the Iroquois which includes the Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga,
Seneca,
Tuscarora,
and
the
Creek
confederacy.
The
most
dis-
tinctive musical feature of this area is antiphonal singing. Rhythms are simple, with a steady beat pattern, although extended rattle tremolos are sometimes heard. Percussion
instruments
include
the
frame
drum,
double-headed
drum, and the wood or pottery kettledrum. Rattles are made of gourd, turtle shell, hollow horn and bark cylinders. Deer-hoof rattles were com-
mon in the past. A musical rasp was also used but the bow, as an instru-
52
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
ment, is not reported in the Eastern area. Most tribes played tube reeds and
whistles.
True
flutes were
used
in sacred
and
official
secular
cere-
monies.
Powunv’-Gum (Paukandi-kan): The hide drum is made of dry deer-skin, rolled or folded and bound with cord, that fastens two long
wooden slats about the width of lath strips. It is approximately thirlytwo inches in length, and stuffed with grass. During the first eight nights of the annual ceremony, the drumsticks are plain bars of oak, sixteen inches long, with no markings except a figure ““X” carved on one side. This figure is said to symbolize crossroads on the pathway of the soul. On the ninth night, these plain sticks are put aside and replaced with sacred sticks called “Paukandi’kan-lax-usi-lei-k” (meaning “forked ones”). These have, on the upper side, carvings of the human face, one stick representing a male and the other a female. These carvings are in high relief, with symbolic red and black paint. The female stick also has carved representations of the female breasts. Forked ends are also cut in the sticks, which are carved
from oak.*”
Ga-No-Jo-O: The Iroquois water drum
was an object of distinc
tion both musically and functionally. It was the only drum used through-
out the dance rites among the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga and Oneida communicants of the Long House religion.** This drum was small in
comparison with those of other eastern tribes, seldom more than five or
six inches wide. The body of the instrument was made of sections of wood fitted tightly together in the fashion of a pail. The skin was held taut by a snug hoop.
Drummers
are extremely particular in tuning to
the required pitch necessary for the accompaniment to the voices of the singers.
The drum-stick is carved to fit the thumb and forefinger and has attached a small wooden ball which provides an “echo” beat. The stick is balanced between the fingers of the drummer and bounced upon the moist head. At one time, water drums
were made
from wooden
vessels covered
with woodchuck skin, but, today, they are made from butter tubs and painted kegs. The vessel is made water-tight with vegetable gums and the amount of water used determines the tone. A small bunghole in the
side allows water level to be regulated.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA
53
SOUTHEAST The Creek of Alabama and Georgia formerly used earthen pots as
water drums; then a cypress tree stump was cut close to the ground and
covered with damp bear-skin. More recently, they too resorted to a keg partially filled with water and covered with buckskin.
the
SOUTHWEST We find three musical styles in the southwestern states: The Pueblo,
Pima-Papago
and
the
Navajo.
Rhythmic
accompaniments
range
from steady beats to definite rhythmic designs independent of those of
the melody. The instruments used are of wide variety. The drums include double-headed hide drums, pottery kettledrums, foot drums, and basket drums.
Rattles
include
the
domestic
gourds,
turtle
shells,
sections
of
hollow horn, pottery, sleigh bells, animal hooves and jingle type rattles. Whistle tubes with ribbon reeds, musical bow
found in this area.
and true flutes are also
The music is predominantly religious, but, work
songs, gambling
songs and lullabies are found as well. Songs are sometimes organized in sets and elaborate cycles, lasting days, and indicating musical specialization of a high order. The drum, as we
usually
consider
it—a
permanent
percussion
instrument — does not exist among the Navajo; their drum is improvised at the time it is needed. The probable reason is that the drum’s powers make it dangerous to keep. Since the pottery drum is feared, it is constructed, used, and disposed of with special care. Evil influences gather in drums and, once they are confined there, they are released and blown out of the smoke hole.” Asa-Dadi-Ohi: The Navajo pottery drum, used in the War or Squaw Dance, is simply a skin placed on a pot. The instrument, once dedicated,” is usually hung in a place where it will not be used by mistake, a tree or an empty shed. Every two years it is coated with pinon
gum to preserve it.
For a group dance, water is poured in from the cardinal points through four minute holes in the head of the drum. Four men work together on the drum—the leader facing east and holding the drum hy “Once it has been used as a drum, the vessel car never be used as a cooking utensil; it is believed by the Navajos that the food would make anyone ill.
54
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
the handles. Holes for the eyes and mouth are also punched in the head for each new use.” The drum-stick is made of a piece of bent wood, similar to that used by the Pueblo people. The drum-stick can be made of cedar, scrub oak or wild cherry, a long twig, carefully bent into a looped end and tied. The flat end of the loop is used for beating. After the ceremony, the stick is again straightened out and deposited, with pollen, under the bark of a cedar. (See Pl. XXVI — No. 66.)
Ca: A basket drum of the Navajo, is an inverted basket. It is also found among the Mojave, Papago, Yuma, Diegueno and Maidu. The Navajos use a sacred basket. It has a red band in the middle,
with black serrated edges. The colored band is intersected at one point by a narrow line of uncolored
wood. This line is formed
to assist in
the orientation of the basket at night, in the medicine lodge, when the fire burns low and there is little light: the ritual requires that the basket be turned in a certain direction in relation to the universe. The weaving of this basket has a prescribed ritual procedure when the basket is to be employed by the medicine man. The helix of the basket, the butt of the first twig used and the tip of the last twig used
radially must lie due east and west. If this border becomes worn or torn in any way, the basket is unfit for sacred use. These basket drums are used in the night chants which last five nights. They are played with yucca drum-sticks* and only on the western side of the lodge house. A small Navajo blanket is laid on the ground with its longer dimension extending east and west. An incomplete circle of meal, open to the east, is traced out on the blanket with other
figures. The inverted basket is laid on the blanket with the which are made from the leaves of the yucca by the shaman. are constructed for each ceremony, just before the singing leaves of these sticks must come from the same plant; all
drum-sticks New sticks begins. The must be of
the proper length and free from worms, stains, and blemishes and are chosen with deliberate ritual. The baskets themselves are of tightly
woven roots and grass, hemispheric in shape and about the size of a
large mixing bowl. When
the rites are done,
the basket
is given
to the shaman,
who
*The Pima and Yuma tribes’ basket drums are struck with the bare hands hy two or three drummers who sit around the drum in a “cobbler” position.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
NORTH
AMERICA
55
disposes of it. In any case, it must not be used for serving food. When the
basket
drive
out
is raised
from
the
the evil influence
ground,
it is fanned
of the songs
with
collected
the
under
hands
to
the basket
during the singing. Each tribe using this instrument has its own traditions and procedures. The basket drums are more or less confined to the Amerindians of the U.S.A. (See Pl. XXI— No. 50.)
The Navajos use three types of rattles: the wild gourd, obtained
from the Pueblo Amerindian; hide flute, and whistle are also used.
Gweltilkomid:
teau Yumans
The
(Havasupai)
and
two-headed
of Arizona.
hoof
drum
rattles. The
found
It is made
bull-roarer,
among
from a
the
pla-
section of a
hollow cottonwood log about eighteen inches high, twelve inches in diameter, and with the hide ends laced together. It is carried slung under the left arm. This drum formerly was a clay vessel water drum. The drum-stick (gweltilkomidii) is of the looped type. Made from a willow handle ten inches long, it terminates in a double loop four inches in diameter, which is bound in cloth and painted red.*
The Cochiti of New Mexico are famous for their drums and drummaking is an important economic pursuit. The drum heads were formerly made from deer-hide; but, with the decline in the number of deer killed each year, cow-hide is now used in their construction.
The mountain cottonwood is the wood of choice for drum-shell making. When the cottonwood dies, the center rots away, making the
hollowing
process
easier
for
the
drummaker.
The
logs
are
cut into
about ten-foot lengths and loaded on wagons to be taken to the village, there to be stored until worked. The log sections vary from three to four inches for small souvenir drums, to two feet or more for the large dance drums.
Hides of various animals are prepared in a similar manner. The hide is split up the belly and removed in one piece, although the hide of the
head,
tail
and
lower
limbs
are
seldom
used.
The
skin
is then
soaked in a mixture of brains, oak bark and roots of mountain mahog-
any. Then, after being soaked and partially dried, it is scraped with a blunt instrument to remove the hair.
The larger drums are kept for the Amerindians and the smaller ones
sold for the tourist trade.
O-Ya-Pom’-Potz:
Drums
of
the
Cochiti
are
from
twelve
to
56
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
thirty inches in diameter and the same range in height. The drum-sticks are called “o-potz.” The old, commercial
day of Santiago’s
Day,
snare
drum,
is called “o-ya-pinitz.” The
used
on the feast
large dance
drum
is referred to as ‘‘paiyat-yama” meaning “youth” or “young gentlemen.” The drummers, who are called “kiyapom-potz,” are chosen by a
council as the official drummers
of the society. Four or five drummers
are chosen and they form their own organization.
Drums used in the ceremonies are never practiced upon; they are stored by the drummers. When the drums are to be usd, it is a ceremony carried out by the drummers. The drums are heated to get the right “voice,” and corn meal is “fed” to the drums as a form of blessing and request for prayer.
After the dance the singers toss a pinch of meal onto the drum,
inhale from the head, and rub meal on their throats, thereby assuring the continuance of their own voice and general well-being. Old drums are not discarded, but, rather, they are retired. This instrument is two toned because one head is heavier and larger than the
other, but only one head is played at a time.“ Tepehan: A Zuni vase-shaped pottery drum, carried in the left arm and beaten with a looped drum-stick in the right hand. The mouth is curled and the head is retained with rope. They are white or cream and are generally decorated with cougars, bears and snakes which are represented in combat. The Zuni also use wooden drums not more than twenty inches high, held between the knees and beaten with a padded stick. A rectangular drum and a bundle drum (made by wrapping a bundle of clothing very tightly in a strong buckskin) have been reported. Rattles, flutes, notched sticks and whistles are used on occasion for accompaniment.© Tombe:
An
Amerindian
drum,
common
in the southwest
of the United States, played with one drum-stick.
region
The body is hewn from a dead cottonwood shell where the center
has decayed. The center is burned and scraped out until a shell of one to one-half inch in thickness remains. The outside is wrapped in wet rags to prevent damage to the log while the operation is carried out. Oak and pine are used for the shell, when cottonwood is not available.
The shell is placed in the sunlight and turned hourly to cure the
wood. Two holes are cut in one side of the shell to represent the eye
AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA
57
and mouth of the instrument. The eye is near the top and is smaller than the mouth, which is directly beneath it. The small tombes are referred to as “swift drum”
and the larger
ones are called by a name meaning “all over the world.” The heads for these two-headed drums are made from bull-hide from which the hair is carefully removed with a knife. The pieces of hide preferred come from between the shoulders of the animal. An entire hide is required for both heads and lacings. The heads are scalloped and laced across the body. The three-eighths inch wide lacing is cut from a single piece of hide. The hide is cut “round and round” beginning at the outer edge of the skin. The
Santo
Domingo,
Pueblo
Amerindian
of
New
Mexico,
place
two small objects inside the shell. One small ball represents the earth and is three-quarters of an inch; the other object cylinder, representing the universe, is three-quarters of an inch long and three-eighths of an inch in diameter. The ball representing the earth is painted yellow with two red dots. The universe is painted yellow but with red ends. When the instrument is played, the objects jump like Mexican jumping beans. A part of the lacing is used to make two handles, one directly above the other. The handle nearest the eye is used by the drummer. The other handle is only used when the drummer has assistance in carrying the instrument.
The height of the drummer determines the height of the drum. The instrument is carried without striking the ground so the lower skin comes to about the level of the ankles. The drums are designed and made according to tradition with _painted body and skins. Like most North Amerindian drums, they are tastefully decorated. Most of these drums are longer than they are wide. Among the plains Amerindians, this type of log drum is referred to as an Assiniboine drum and in the eastern part of the United States as the Seneca drum. The tombe lends itself to decoration. The drum heads are traditionally black or of a dark color and sometimes with a spot of another color added in the center. Very seldom are bright colors used on the wooden
sides. The decorations are usually dictated by the type of lac-
ing used on the shell. There are four general types of lacings: the perpendicular, angular, interrupted and the diagonal. The bright, natural
58
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
colors, favored by people who live close to the earth, are used for designs that enhance the lacing and the over-all picture. The tombes range in sizes from ten to thirty inches in height and six to fifteen inches in diameter across the head.
30.)
Pur-Shuk-Pi-Po-Ya
(Hand
drum):
An
(See Pl. XIV — No.
Amerindian
(Hopi
tribe)
drum. The shell is made from a decayed cottonwood tree trunk. This cylindrical instrument has two goat-skin heads which close the sound chamber. They are laced together with a continuous thong passing through a hole in the skin. A thong handle is provided for handling. The handle is an extension of the lacing. The head is often decorated with four animal figures. Its height is approximately three inches and it is sixteen to eighteen inches in diameter.
Tamoa — A Papago drum, which is a basket of medium size that could have also been in household use. It is inverted on the ground and struck with the hands. The average size is sixteen and one-half inches in diameter and five and onehalf inches deep. Prior to using the basket, it is dropped on the ground in such a manner as to cause an explosive noise. Three or more
men play this instrument at once, kneeling beside it and striking it with their hands. This drum and rattles are used in Limo and Bot dances. A stick can be used to strike or rub the surface of the basket, or even a knife.
Rubbing might be used along with the striking during the same song. The Papago use the basket also as a resonator for a scraping stick in some songs. Kampora — A Tarahumara drum made from a piece of ash wood from three to four feet long and four inches wide. It is bent into a circle and
fastened
together
with thongs.
The
heads
are of buckskin.
To increase resonance, a single snare of one string is passed over the head. Once the snare is placed, a couple of beads are knotted to the snare. They are beaten with one stick.”
MESO-AMERICA — MEXICO Three great civilizations emerged in the Americas before the arrival of the Europeans: the Aztec in the valley of Mexico, the Maya in Guatemala,
Honduras
and Yucatan,
and Inca in Peru
and Belivia.
The scene of the Aztec triumph was the central valley of Mexico,
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF NORTH
AMERICA
59
between the second century A.D. and the tenth century A.D. The Aztecs developed a civilization unique among the people of the world. They built great temples, computed and measured time and controlled a great empire.
Mexico today is a mestizo country, the product of a fusion of sev-
eral cultures, but there are still perhaps a million Aztec-Nahua speaking residents of Mexico, the descendants of the empire that Cortés first saw 440 years ago. Mexico has two distinct sets of musical instruments,
the pre-conquest and the post-conquest. The pre-conquest instruments include six types:
Rasp or Omitzi-
cohuastli made
from either clay,
from bone;
flutes or Tlapitzallis made
reed or bone; the marine shell trumpet or tepuzquiquiztli; ocarinas and silbatos or Huilacapiztli; skin drums; idiophone drums; and the ayacachtli or the maracas
(sonajas);
the cascabeles;
the tenabaris
(dried
butterfly cocoons worn on the ankles by the dancers). (See Pl. I—No. 1) These instruments were used as a part of the religious and civic ceremonies and to accompany native dancers. In the early century of the conquest, the Church militantly opposed ritual dances and songs. The dances and songs of contemporary Mexico are entirely Spanish in structure;
but, in their new
environment,
these airs have
tropical accent and other native variants. A typical Mexican
is composed clude flutes, We still occasions by
acquired
a
ensemble
of violins, guitars and harps and may be enlarged to inclarinets and trumpets. find some of the ancient instruments being used on special the Amerindians and classical musicians with the specific
purpose of reviving the old instruments and to give authentic color to
their symphonic works. Despite the vigilance of the Church, certain tribes, either belliger-
ently independent or isolated, continued to live as they had before the conquest.
Most of them accepted the new religion, but the new belief did not eliminate the old. Some tribes merely accepted the status and cthers added the Catholic saints to their roster of pagan gods and celebrated fiestas of both religions in their traditional Amerindian manner. Others observed two sets of ceremonials; one for pagan, another for Christian holy days. Still others disguised their pagan religion by substituting Catholic phraseology and nomenclature in pagan rites. This duality in religious practices and beliefs found its counterpart in music.
60
DRUMS
IN THE
In the agricultural state of Sonora, we find the Seris few
non-Christian
tribes)
and
the Yaquis.
We
AMERICAS
(one of the
find rituals, myths
and
music referring to the pre-agricultural period. For an example, the Yaqui Deer Dance, done in pantomime, is a drama of the hunt and capture of the deer. Although it is performed during Christian holy days, its origin is the pre-agricultural period. A single male performer sings to the accompaniment of two notched sticks and a water drum. In pre-Hispanic Mexico drums were instruments of prime importance around which were set the basic patterns of festivities. All parties started with drums and there were two types of drums used: the huehuetl and the teponaztli. Huehuetl: The name itself was a general term for a large drum used in a vertical position. The size of the drum seemed to match the length of its name.
Thus,
different drums
were
called “huehuetl,”
“panhuehuetl” and “tlapanhuehuetl,” depending on the size. Normally, the huehuetl was twelve to eigtheen inches in diameter. It was elaborately carved. These carvings were like codices and told when
the instrument
was
made,
the time
and
place
it was
to be used,
and the exact part it was meant to play in the ceremonial functions at which it was heard. They
also relate, in many
cases, the length of
time it was to have been sounded, the exact persons who were designated to play
upon
it, the gods,
the honored
house
in which
it was
kept,
ceremonial objects used with the drum along with the dates on which it was used. The huehuet! was formerly made from a tree trunk hollowed out, leaving a two-inch wall. They stood from thirty to forty inches in height and were sixteen to twenty inches in diameter, and cylindrical in shape.
The deer-skin head was glued to the body by heating. The huehuetl came in three general deer-skin head stood about three feet and was played with bare hands; the
panther-skin, was used to summon
and the instrument was tuned
types: the huehuetl with the high, was used for dancing tlapanhuehuetl, covered with
the warriors for battle; and the teo-
huehuet] was the drum of the gods and was sounded for human sacrifice. The Spanish invaders were introduced to the teo-huehuetl in 1519 by the Aztecs. This same type of instrument was used by the Mayans a
century before that time. With the coming of European culture, the importance of these in-
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA
61
struments declined. With the decline in the local culture, pride in dec-
orating the instruments
also faltered.
Therefore,
the modern
huehuetl
of Mexico is a poor sample of the earlier instrument. (See Pl. XII — No. 23.) A small portable huehuetl was carried under the arm for dancing and by warriors for signaling and directing the combatants. Teponazili: was
carved
from a
An
idiophone-type solid block
drum
of wood.
used
It was
in long,
ancient round,
Mexico and
open
at the bottom. In the top of the teponaztli are two longitudinal tongues cut to form an “H” opening. These tongues were struck with rubber or resin-tipped sticks. Each tongue had two tones, according to which end was struck. It was used only for dancing. The drums are still being used for special occasions in Mexico. The modern
specimens of these ancient instruments are very poor
versions. The importance of their use has faded with the years, as one can readily see from
their construction.
(See
Pl. I— No.
1, and
PI.
XXITI — No, 55.) The outside of the ancient teponaztli was elaborately carved; many of them were carved in the form of birds, beasts and grotesque human heads. Studies have shown that these instruments have been carved to sound a minor or major tone three, four or five intervals apart. The opening of the sound chamber is generally rectangular in shape and is raised off the ground with a stick or tripod arrangement to allow the sound to escape. The resin-tipped sticks are called “almsitl” and the gum or resin is called “ule” and is obtained from the sap of the ule tree. The tongues are referred to as sounding sticks or “chicahuaztli.”
The best specimens are today in the museums. The instruments are
still highly regarded and in many cases inlaid with precious stones.®
In Yuctatan the teponaztli was called “tunkul”; the Quiche Amerindians of Guatemala call it “tin.” Plate No. XXIII — No. 55 Museum of Art, October, 1963
(Courtesy of the Los Angeles County to January, 1964: Master Works of
Mexican Art from pre-columbian times to the present), shows a “Teponaztli drum,” in the shape of a coyote, with tongues. Teeth of bone on the back two tongues produce different sounds when beaten. The coyote was regarded as one of the “gods” of the mountains and, in this capacity, it evoked feelings of mystery and fear of the unknown. This particular drum is also associated with trees and falling stars and as a
62
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
malevolent god, with the mysteries of the night, carved in a trunk. The measurements of the Teponaztli are twenty-four and one-qaurter inches in length, and seven to eight inches in diameter. Tlapanhuehuetl
(The
large
Drum
of
War):
(Plate
XII
—
No. 23) “The bas-relief is divided into two parts by a band of entwined serpents. The top part has two main motifs: Nahui-Ollin, “The Sun of Movement,” and one other important person, which very well could be, and possibly is, the sun disguised as an eagle. On the sides are seen two warriors, one disguised as an eagle with a knife or flint, and the other as a jaguar,
representing
the
two
great
of the
Each
mouths
of both issues the war-cry, “Atl-Tlachinolli,” i.e. “burnt water,”
the material
of feathers,
orders
Aztecs.
symbolizing
of the warriors has a headdress
military
and from
and spiritual conflict, the dynamic
union
the
of
the two opposites. The bottom part consists of three-stepped supports and is decorated with an eagle and two jaguars emitting the same war-
cry. This instrument
is Aztec,
and is carved
from
a tree trunk;
stands thirty-eight and five-eighth inches and measures one-quarter inches in diameter.”
and it
nineteen
and
Matlazinca: A.D. 1324-1521. (Malinalco, Mexico). (Courtesy of the Museo de Arqueologia e Historia del Estado
de
Mexico, Toluca, Mexico, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, October, 1963 to January 1964, Master Works of Mexican Art from
pre-columbian times to the present.) Tortuga (Ayotl): A large turtle shell hung by a cord around the neck; it hangs waist high, with the ventral side up. The plates are struck with deer antlers. This
instrument
is found
in
Mexico,
Guatemala,
and
Brazil.
In
Mexico, it is generally accompanied by the huehuetl and the flute. Two
plates of the shell are selected with an interval of a fourth or fifth apart to be used as points of contact. (See Pl. XXI— No. 51.) Huehueil (or “timbal” De Barro): A Mexican water drum made of
clay and fashioned like two ceramic jugs, one large and one small, with
the bottom portions connected. One jug’s mouth is covered with skin on
which the drummer beats. An orifice in the large jug is left open to allow water to be placed in the instrument. (See Pl. XIX — No. 45.) Kayum:
Kayamor
timbal
(“one
who
dances
or
sings”)
—
A
Mayan water drum carved from a tree trunk. A part of the trunk which has a branch limb is selected, the trunk is cut about eight inches below
AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF NORTH AMERICA
63
the branch and approximately eight inches above the branch, and about
six inches of the branch is allowed to remain. The log is then hollowed
out to a thickness
of approximately
two inches, including the limb.
Monkey skins are placed on the bottom and top openings and retained
with rings of grapevine. The two rings are then lashed together directly across the body with thongs of leather. The heads are drawn taut by placing sticks between two thongs and twisting them together. Water is poured into the instrument through the branch opening. The drum stands approximately twenty inches high and nine inches in diameter with the bottom larger. It is played with the bare hands. Jicara De Agua: Two half-gourds floating in a basin of water, cut portion
Curacao.
down,
and
beaten
with
two
sticks. Used
in Mexico,
Cuba
and
(See Pl. XXII — No. 52.)
Tambor:
A generic term in Latin-American countries for a small,
two-headed drum played with sticks. The tambors of Mexico come in two forms, square and round. Both types vary in size, depending on the location found. The round one is found in northern Mexico and is approximately twelve inches in diameter and from three to four inches in height. It is beaten with one stick and held in the fingers of the left hand which also fingers a flute accompaniment. It is closely associated with the flute so it is generally
called “tambor y pito.” It is famous because it is used in the “Juego o
Danza de los Voladores,” which originated before the conquest. The “Juego de los Volardores” or “The Flying Game” is of the
pre-columbian era and originally used four flyers, symbolic of the direc-
tions. The Otomi tribe of Mexico today uses six flyers. A tall, stripped tree trunk from sixty to one hunded feet high is placed in the ground in the festive area. A small, square, revolving platform is built on top. Suspended from this platform by ropes is a flimsy square or hexagonal frame. Six flyers climb the poles and five mount the square; the sixth mounts the small platform and stands playing. There are coiled ropes on the square attached to the revolving platform. At a given signal, the flyers fling themselves backward into space with the ropes attached to their feet. The weight of their bodies causes the ropes to uncoil and rotate the square cap. The five flyers swing around in a wide circle as they approach the ground and continuously play the “tambor y pito”
64.
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
in this perilous position. This continues until they are a few feet from
the ground. The heads of the Tambor are made from goat-skin and are attached to a flesh ring. The flesh rings are laced to each other with a cord which also provides a loop for a handle. (See Pl. XVI — No. 36.) Tambores: The square tambores, which are very popular in Vera Cruz, are constructed from a small frame box with the top and bottom removed. The skins are placed on wet and laced close together with rawhide. When the skin dries it is drawn taut. The rawhide also provides a loop which is used as a handle. Huehuetls Tzatziles: A Mexican version of a European field drum.
They average about fifteen inches high and about eight inches in diameter. They are two-headed instruments. The heads are wrapped about a flesh ring. Two tension rings hold them in place. The two tension
rings are laced ““V” fashion across the shell carved from a tree trunk. The
tension lacings have
leather
ears.
If one
desires
to raise the
tone,
the ears are pulled down drawing down the heads. The drum is used
in parades and for secular events. Only
one head is beaten, with two
sticks. Kampora-Medio: It is simply a pine box, about twelve square, covered with wet buckskin and beaten with one stick. The Amerindians
of Mexico,
like the Amerindians
inches
of Canada
and
the United States, in many cases use European drums for their rhythms
along with their own idiophone and, in some cases, European melodic
instruments such as cornets, guitars, harps, marimbas, or violins. The Seri of Mexico
never had a drum, so far as we can determine.
They rely more or less on the rattle for instrumental music. Their rattles
are of the gourd-type on a stick, cocoon rattles and deer-hoof rattles.
6 INDIGENOUS DRUMS OF CENTRAL AMERICA Central
America,
composed
of Guatemala,
Honduras,
El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama, is occupied by many Indian ethnocultural groups. In Latin-American countries, where the population has a high percentage of Indians and mixture
(mestizos), the word “Indian” is not a
racial
for the purpose
term,
but
a cultural
one,
of deriving
economic,
psychological, political and social conclusions. There are variable criteria, both objective and subjective, in this term. The most reliable ob-
jective criterium for this classification is the language or mother tongue. Does the person speak Spanish or an Indian dialect? The subjective requirement with them by pathies and those of the
is that the individual feels he is an Indian. He identifies joining in their actions and reactions and shares their symantipathies. His ethical, esthetic and political ideals are Indian. MESO-AMERICAN
It is impossible to characterize Central American indigenous music;
recordings do not seem to be available. The present-day popular music of Central
America
is predominantly
music, except for the music of Panama.
a native
version
The native instruments common to all Central “gu” or “xul,” which is a vertical flute; a small wind “tzijolay”; the “chirimia,” which is the general name like wind instruments; “tun” or “teponaztli,” which drum;
and the “tot,” an encrusted shell.
65
of
European
America are the instrument called for the clarinetis an idiophone
66
DRUMS
Pottery or kettledrums probably
IN THE
AMERICAS
originated in this area, but were
replaced by a one-headed tubular type drum, open at the bottom. Container
rattles
of
gourd,
turtle
shells,
wooden
of horn are used as well as the jingle types.
tubes
and
Musical
hollow
pieces
rasps were
used
and the musical bow may have been pre-columbian in Central America.
Whistles and flutes flourished, the latter playing an important oficial and religious ceremonies.
part in
When water is used with the kettledrum, it is referred to as a “‘waler drum.” The water kettledrum in Central America appears in three general types: single-chamber, double-chamber and the idiophonic. The singlechamber is a simple clay vessel, covered with skin. The double-chamber water drum has two such vessels joined vertically or horizontally. Joined vertically, the top chamber is covered and the bottom acts as a water-sound
chamber
(having an orifice into which water is poured). If the chambers
are joined horizontally, only one is covered with skin, but both contain water, the uncovered chamber being used for placing and replacing the
water.
HORIZONTAL
VERTICAL
The idiophone water drum or “gourd drum” is composed of two halfgourds,
floating
in a container
of water.
It is played
and produces an unusual and surprisingly loud sound. No. 51) Timbal
De
Barro
(Clay
Drum):
A
with
two
sticks
(See Pl. XXI —
two-chambered
drum
of
Guatemala. A similar instrument in Mexico is called “Huehuetl de Barro.”
It stands about twenty inch wide superimposed
inches high and is made from two eightclay “bulbs.” The higher bulb, open at the
top, is covered with lizard skin. The lower bulb has an opening water. It is played with one light stick. Most timbales de barro
found in Central America, nearly always as water drums. — No. 45)
for are
(See Pl. XIX
Tun: A Teponaztli type hollow log drum, found among the Quiche” tribes of Guatemala. This type instrument is found only in Central America and Mexico. *Quiche: Mayan
Indians.
INDIGENOUS DRUMS
OF CENTRAL AMERICA
67
Isthmian: Rattle Drum: A rectangular frame, completely covered by two skins which are sewn together wet, enclosing several pebbles. The instrument
is held in one hand and struck with a stick. A calabash (gourd), with one or two stones inside and covered with snake-skin, has been found among
the Mosquitos of Nicaragua. This could be classified as a rattle or a drum. M:Drum (S:Durum): A Mosquito signal drum, it is a native version of the European field drum. Introduced in Central America during the eighteenth century, and it is played with two sticks, which are called “m:mihta”
or “s:tifmi.” This drum is also used in the drinking
bouts among the Mosquito people.* M: Kunbi (Kuribaya, S:paratan, Paritam) — A goblet-shaped upright drum, hollowed out of a solid block of mahogany or cedar, standing
right drum, hollowed out of a solid block of mahogony or cedar, standing about three feet high (including pedestal base which is carved from the same block of wood), with the smallest diameter just above the base. The
drum
means
of
funerals
head,
either
a strong
and
cord.
similar
deer,
iguana,
Played
memorial
with
toad
or tapir,
is held
taut
by
bare
hands,
it is used
only
at
ceremonies.
These instruments correspond to the huehuetl of ancient Mexico.
The
Mosquitos
shaman’s
also
use
gourd
rattles,
bamboo
one-tone
flute is six feet long), reed flutes, pottery
flutes
(the
whistles, conch
shells, jaw-harps, musical bows and, in modern times, guitars, accordions,
and
harmonicas.”
Bribri Drum:
Found
in Costa
Rica
is probably
the most
typi-
cal instrument of the Talamanca tribe of Central America. It stands three feet high or less and is five or six inches in diameter at the head.
Narrowing toward the foot or base, the greatest diameter occurs six or seven inches from the base then flares out slightly. Hewn from a solid piece of wood, it is fitted with a tight head of iguana-skin which
is shrunken over the larger end and glued in place with dried blood. The instrument is carried under the left arm with a fiber cord over
the right shoulder and played with the bare ments have been found in pre-historic graves. drum,
The Boruca, another the shell of which
*Mosquito: (Woolwa)
An Indian tribes.
hands.
tribe of the Talamanca, is carved from a piece
tribe, found in Nicaragua,
Similar
instru-
have a two-headed of cedar, balsa or
includes the Matagalpa, Sumo
and Ulva
68
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
palm trunk. The two heads are secured with a hide thong running across
the body. This instrument is also played with bare hands.” The native drums
of El Salvador
tribes are those common
of Central America, with the exception of the zambumbia,
a two-headed
snare drum, copied from the European field drum. or
The vertical flute, the chirimia
carimba
(a
type
of
used in Nicaragua),
found in The majority customs
(a primitive clarinet),
monochord),*
(the
and the marimba
same
as
to all
the caramba
the
Quijongo,
(type of xylophone),
are all
El Salvador. music of Nicaragua is predominantly Amerindian, though the of the population is mestizo (mixture). Native Amerindian and rituals are often combined with Catholic religious rites.
The folk music and folk instruments Quiche cultural regions of Central
are products of the Maya America. Some melodies
and and
rhythms peculiar to these ancient cultures still survive today in remote
villages on the coast. The only Nicaraguan instrument differing from those previously mentioned is the friction drum. Juco: A friction drum, thought to be be of African origin. The
mouth of a culinary vessel is covered with reptile skin. A string is pulled through membrane and tied. The skin vibrates as the string is pulled and released. The Indians of Panama seem to have lost interest in ceremonial
details of their obsolete aboriginal instruments: the hollow log drums, skin drums, and bamboo drums have completely disappeared.” CARIBBEAN
On the islands of the West Indies, where colonization was speedier
and more
devastating than in any area of comparable
size, the Amer-
indian, as a racial strain, disappeared rapidly, replaced largely by African slave labor. The gourd water drum found in the West Indies today
is probably
one
of the few
instrumental
traces of Amerindian
culture. It is known by several names. Evidence exists that the teponaztli, a hollow log type drum, was used in the Dominican Republic, and was called “Magiiay huacaén.”
The
Sihu
or “magiiey.”
drum
In Cuba
of Trinidad,
“La Jicara de Joba”**of Cuba Americans in those areas,
are
the
it was known
Bastel
found,
of
as “mayo-
of Curacao,
course,
and
among
the
Afro-
“Monochord: A one-string violin. **Jicara de Jobé: Also known in Cuba as Jicara de Moyuba, and in Haiti “Tambor de Juba.
7 AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF SOUTH AMERICA The
music
and
the musical
instruments
of the Indians
of South
America are quite different from what is found in North and Central
America.
America,
The
The
South
wind
instruments
dominate
the musical
scene
but in North America we find the rattles more American
rhythms
are
more
complex
and
the
single
sticks
are
in
South
in South
frequently. drumming
techniques by which these rhythms are produced differ. Single drumsticks are the vogue among the North American Indians, while two sticks,
bare
hands,
and
the
used
America.
Very few single-headed frame drums are found in South America. The two-headed frame drums, as well as the large two-headed drums, are
in wide
use. The water
is also found in Central America,
South rarely
drum,
found
frequently in Central America,
America, but the idiophone used in North America, are
drums, found ,in frequently found
in South America. In fact, the largest idiophone drums in the Americas are found widely dispersed along the Amazon
river. Close examination
of the drums of South America uncovers many copies of European military drums, often with names derived directly from Spanish or Portuguese. PERUVIAN The folk music of Peru is performed on “mestizo” or “chola” instruments. The majority of the population of Peru is Amerindian and
the instruments
used by the native performers 69-
are Inca prototypes.
70
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
The Incas include a large number of tribes inhabitating the Andean highlands and Pacific coast of Peru who were conquered and incorporated into the Inca empire. Originally, they were a “Quechua” speaking
people
who
lived
in the
southern
empire once stretched from what is now South
America,
through
Peru
and
Bolivia
Peruvian
highlands.
The
Ecuador, along the west of into
Chile.
It was
at its
height in South America about the time the Aztecs were ruling Mexico. The Incas were remarkably bridges, and irrigation ditches
great builders of granite buildings, and terraces, for they lived in a
mountainous area. They cultivated farms and gardens, domesticated animals, and were advanced in astronomy and metallurgy.
If the variety of instrumental types and skillful fabrication sufhciently index their musical cultures, then the Incas outstripped any of the aboriginal groups of Mexico and Central America.” The native instruments
include
the
“quena”
or
“kena,”
a vertical
flute
made
of
reed or the leg bone of the llama; “antara,” the panpipe; the “ayariche” or ocarina; the “aylliquepa” and the “tocko-ora,” trumpets made of
wood or baked clay; the “chil-chil”
(“onomatopoeia”),
the maraca;
the
“tinya,” a small drum and the “huancar,” a large drum. All “huancar” drum shells are made from a hollowed log with both ends covered with Ilama-hide and often painted. These vary from long war drums, about twenty inches in diameter, to a very small festival drum.”
Unu-Tinya: A two-headed Amerindian drum used by the Incas of Peru. The body is made of baked clay and shaped like an hourglass. The heads are sewn to a flesh ring and laced together over the box with a “V” type lacing. The skin must be wet before playing in order for the tanned leather from which it is made to be drawn tight. Only one head is beaten with sticks; the other head has a snare arrangement that resounds when the drum is played. “This small Peruvian drum is approximately five and one-half inches long, four and one-half inches in diameter and is generally used
as a ritual instrument. When it is used for this purpose, charms such as garlic, chili peppers, grass, and smoke are placed inside. Tinya:
There
is another
type,
used
by the
Incas, Amerindians
of Peru, called a “tinya.” It is a small, two-headed drum with a wooden
cylindrical body, about two and one-half inches high and four and one-
half inches in diameter. The heads are sewn to a flesh ring and they
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF
SOUTH
AMERICA
71
are laced across the body. It is beaten with a small, carved, painted gourd. (See Pl. XIV — No. 30)
The Incas also use three types of rattles: snail-shell rattles (also shell anklets), pods called “gacapa,” and silver and copper bells. The ‘Incan flutes (‘‘quena,” “quna,” “qina-qina”) are of bone or cane; trumpets are single-note of shell (“pototo”) clay, gourd (“waylyakipa’”), or wood; whistles are referred to as “timbrels” and the panpipes or “syrinx” are most interesting heard played with a guitar. The
Aymara
of
Bolivia
have
a number
of
musical
instruments,
each played at a limited group of dances and fiestas. Thus, the “qinaqina”
is the name
of an
instrument,
their instruments play
the
are not mixed
the
drum
with
same
sometimes
instrument.
is used
each man
a dance,
orchestrally —a
However,
all groups.
and a
one
fiesta. Generally,
group
combination
Sometimes
one
of men
large drum
plays a drum with his right hand
instrument with his left. (See Pl. XI — No. 18) Caja: A Bolivian drum made from a shallow,
will
is common—
is used;
and a wind
wooden
cylinder
with double rawhide heads, of which only the upper head is beaten,
the lower head being braced by a transverse rawhide thong to which short sticks are tied. As the drum is beaten, these rattle against the
lower head. The stick is a short pole with a stuffed rawhide head. Wancaja:
The
large
drum,
about
sixty
inches
in
diameter
and
up to eighteen inches high, used by the Aymara. Often, two snares with
small sticks through them are placed over the bottom head to augment
the rhythm and sound. The single padded drum-stick used to beat the batter head is called “haugafia.” The Aymara also use a laced barrel drum,
which
“tundiki.”
they
claim
they borrowed
Other instruments of the Aymara racket” and “timbrel” rattle); flutes flutes, “pinkilu” with the tone of clarinet-like instrument); trumpets
“charango,”
a three-string
guitar
from
the Afro-Bolivians,
called
of Bolivia include: rattles (‘“‘rasp(end flutes, duct flutes, large right a flageolet, panpipes, “tarka,” a of cow-horn; notched cane rasp;
made
from
the
“carapace”
of an
armadillo; whistles; flageolets; and small bells.
CHILEAN The music of Chile and the musical instruments are predominantly
European.
The Araucanian
Amerindians
of Chile have had very little
influence on Chilean music even though there are a great number of
72
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
Amerindians in the country with a rich musical heritage. Araucanian instruments differ in many respects from those of other Amerindians. The “trutruca,” a two-meter long reed pipe, capable of producing only one noie; the “pifullka,” a small reed pipe; the “kiinkiilkawe,” a double musical
bow;
the “wada”
or “huada,”
a fruit shell filled with
dry seeds; the “‘kiillkill,” an animal horn; the “pinkiilwe,” flute; and the “kultrum” are some of the instruments.
a vertical
Kultrum: A kettledrum, used by the Araucanians of Chile, with a head of horse or dog-skin stretched over a wooden, bowl-shaped frame that is neither very deep nor wide. When played by the “shaman,” it is held in one hand and beaten with a single drum-stick held in the other. Sometimes a layman may act as a drummer and when this occurs, two slender sticks are used. The
head
of the drum
is decorated
with curved marks that stand for roots of trees and other vegetation and by parallel lines crossing at right angles to form quadrants, each of which represents a quarter of the globe. A small square in the center is known as “rafinmapu” meaning the middle of the earth. To the Araucanians, anyone who does not originate from “rafifimapu”’ is a stranger.
The horse-hide head of the “kultrum” is kept taut by lacings that are passed through holes cut along the edge of the head and are located about five inches from the rim of the bowl, which averages twelve inches at the mouth and five inches at the base. The handle is made from the lacing and yarn. The single drum-stick is fourteen inches long and one-half inch in diameter and wound
in multicolored yarn, except
for five inches at the end to be used, which is left bare. The
two sticks
occasionally used vary with the height of the drummer.” (See Pl. XVIII
— No. 44)
The Tehuelche of the Pampean
they play with
grotesque forms.
two
sticks;
but
they
area have a similar drum which paint
the heads
of the drum
.
with
CHACO The instruments of Argentina are European (or European copies) and Amerindian. Even though the folk music and popular music have been profoundly affected by African rhythm, no drums of African origin are found in general use today. The Afro-Argentinian no longer exists; he has been absorbed, but his music has left traces stronger than
AMERINDIAN DRUMS OF SOUTH AMERICA
73
his blood. The influence is particularly heard in the milonga, the tango, and the zamba, as well as in the names themselves.
The
the
kettledrums
Choroti,
are
Ashluslay,
common
Lengua
to the
and
the
Chaco
Mataco
cultural tribes
use
area
where
them.
instrument is also found in other cultural areas in South America:
This
the
Borora of Goyaz, the Chiriguana and the Caripuna of Bolivia, the Tehuelche of Pampean, and the Araucanians of Chile. In North
America it had a wide distribution, being found among the Mandan, Seneca, Pawnee, Dakota, Cherokee, Iroquois, Naskapi, Yuchi, Menomini, Kiowa, Chichimacha, Havasupai, Yavapai, Navajo, Lacandones, and the
Mixes of Mexico.
Among
consisted
the Kiowa in the southern states the body of the drum
of a clay
vessel,
but
among
the northern
tribes,
the Ojibwa
and the Menomini, the body was made from a hollowed tree trunk. In both North and South America,
one stick is used. The Bororé of South
America is one exception since they use two sticks. The popular loop
stick, used in North America, is not known in South America, nor is the two-chambered kettledrum of Central America. The kettledrum has
a variety of uses in South
initiation
South
rites,
America
signaling,
it has
America:
death
been
magic,
ceremonies
associated
with
religious, love making,
and
others.
In
North
agricultural people.
and
The body of the kettledrum consists of a closed vessel made from clay or a hollowed tree trunk, with the bottom closed. The head, generally made of hide, is either glued or tied with a cord. When the body is partially filled with water, it is referred to as a water drum.” Huitsyuk (Pim-Pim): A small Mataco drum of Argentina, con-
sisting of a clay pot, covered with a goat’s or deer-skin and partly filled with water. Only one stick is used. This instrument is used for ritualistic or spiritualistic purposes to drive
away
evil spirits
causing
sickness,
drought,
hurricanes,
influence good spirits to bring rain and good harvests.
and
to
The Tobas use this instrument for feasts connected with celebrations of important milestones in the life of the male: birth, wooing, marriage, and passing from one station to another.”
Bombo: This instrument, used by the Amerindians of Argentina, is a bimembranophone, a copy of the European field drum. It measures twenty-four inches from head to head and the cylindrical body is fifteen inches in diameter. The sheep-skin heads are wrapped about flesh rings,
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
74
held in place by tension hoops. There are holes in the bottom portion of the tension hoops, and through these holes are laced leather thongs, running from one hoop to the other, in “W” fashion. Ear-loops are looped over the thongs and, when these loops are pulled toward the wider ends of the thongs, the skins are tensed. The body is carved from a tree trunk to a thickness of a half-inch or less. The instrument is rustic and unpolished and has a long thong loop, running from the top tension hoop to the bottom tension hoop, acting as a handle. The drum is swung over the right shoulder, rests on the left hip and is struck on only one head padded tip.” (See Pl. XIV— No. 30)
with
a stick with
a
Huankar (Hatun-Tinya): A two-headed frame drum from Argentina
which is called “tinya” in Quechua, “uancara” in Aymara and, in Span-
ish, is referred to as “caja y tambor.” This instrument (See Pl. XIV — No. 30) has a body four inches high and thirteen inches in diameter. The two heads measure fifteen inches each in diameter and are wrapped about a wood flesh ring. They are then laced zig-zag across the body with a continuous leather thong which also provides a handle. The three methods of playing this instrument are as follows: (1) The drum is hung from the thumb of the left hand, with a single stick held in the other fingers of the same hand. Drum is percussed by pulling back on the stick, leaving the right hand free to play the flute. (2) The
drum
drum
is hung
is held with
from
the wrist and
the left hand
struck with
two
sticks.
(3)
and struck with the right hand.
The
In Tucuman we find a square drum or “caja,” a square frame, cov-
ered with two skins, and laced together with an extra loop for a handle. This drum is held in one hand and struck with a stick in the other. The music and the instruments of Paraguay
are Amerindian,
but
showing European influence. The music is Guarany in type with little variety of rhythm, slow in tempo, and melancholy in mood. The in-
struments of the Guarani Amerindians* are: wind instruments (memby), made of wood and held together by cords and vertical flutes, made from
sugar cane. There are different types of membys,
depending
on size,
function and location, such as the “memby-apara,” “memby-chué,” “memby-guazt,” and “memby-carara”;
the “congoera,”
a rasp;
the primitive
and the drums.
*Guarani Indians from the Guarany Area in South America.
trumpet called “inubia”;
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
Trocano:
An
OF
SOUTH
idiophone
AMERICA
drum,
75
found
in
Paraguay
among
the
Guaranoca Indians, consisting of a hollowed log about eighteen inches long and fifteen inches in diameter. For playing, it is hung on a tree branch and struck with a mallet. A drum by the same name, but of different construction, is found in Brazil. Chorti (Ketiledrum): These are “magic”
instruments,
consist-
ing of an earthenware vessel or a hollowed-out tree trunk, partly filled with water and covered with a piece of skin. The skin is tied around the mouth of the vessel with a string of “carakuata.” The single drum-stick, usually carved and sometimes decorated with metal mountings, is generally used. When the drum is in use, it is usually mounted on a ring of straw which is placed on the ground. The Mataco tribe uses this same type instrument, but they place two parallel sticks in the ground to support it, stand,
method
and
beat it with
two
knobbed-end
sticks. This
is an
unusual
of playing because the water drum, in other places we have
encountered, it is beaten with only one stick.
The tribes consulted as to why water was used contended that the tone of the instrument could be changed by adding water or taking out water. The
drum
and
the
decorated
calabash
rattle
have
“magical”
characteristics; both are used principally at incantations and magic dances among the Choroti Amerindians of Paraguay.” EASTERN LOWLANDS Ouarara: In the northeast of Brazil, we find the Tupinamba tribe using a frame drum which they call the otiarara. As a drum substitute, they
also use a bamboo
tube, four to five feet long
and
five
to six inches in diameter, which still retains the sound of a drum. These
are open at one end and the closed keep time. Three types of idiophone drums plank drums, the simple hollow log Pl. XXI — No. 49) The slit drum is hollowed out small
and
narrow.
IJt is found
end is pounded on the ground to are found in South America: the drums, and the slit drum. (See
through an aperture that is quite
in South America,
from
the coastal
ter-
ritory of Venezuela to the south of Peru, and all along the Amazon and its tributaries. The slits in these drums vary within a tribe as well as from tribe to tribe.
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
a
76
Jival
WITOTO
ANDOKE
These instruments can be classified into two general slit types, one with two in the middle, with
a narrow
slit connecting
them. The
holes,
which are the first step in the hollowing-out process, vary in shape and size depending on locale; some are round, square, and even hourglass in shape. The other type of slit drum, the tongue type, is found in north-
eastern Peru among the Jivaros.
Some tribes such as the Witoto, Okaina, Bora, Muinane and Andoke use the slit drum in pairs and refer to them as “man” and “woman,”
the large being the female and the smaller the male. The Andoke and the Okaina carve the instrument in the shape of a man and woman, with
the slit running down the back. Usually, all slit drums of South America
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF SOUTH AMERICA
77
are hung up off the ground by either one end or both. The hollow log
drums are played with two clubs, except among the Jivaros and the Aueto who use only one. The clubs are generally tipped with a lump of resin and braided with thread. The drum is stuck between the holes on the edge of the slit each side of which has a different sound since one side is carved thicker than the other.
CROSS
SECTION
The teponaztli of Mexico and Central America differ from the usual slit drum in that theirs are carved from an opening in the bottom, are never
used
in
pairs,
are
much
smaller,
the
slits
are
“H”
in
shape,
they are never used for signaling, and they are all generally played
with two sticks. The slit drums of South America are used as signaling
instruments, with the exception of the Chocé tribes, who use them as magic instruments to frighten away evil spirits.” Trocano:
inches
long
A
and
massive
PARA log, approximately
fifty to fifty-seven
inches
thirty-nine
in diameter,
resonant wood, and used by the Amanaye Amerindians signaling.
to
seventy
of light and
of Brazil for
Three holes of about four inches in diameter are made in the log, connected by a slit through which the center is excavated by fire and chipping. The instrument is then hung on four poles with a hole six feet deep, dug under the drum to act as a resonator, and the drum is played with two large padded-tip mallets.”
78
DRUMS
IN
THE
AMERICAS
BOLIVIAN Anguahuasi: A single-headed cylindrical drum, approximately fifteen
inches high and eight inches in diameter, found among the Chiriguano of
Bolivia. The body is hollowed from one solid block of palm wood with a head of deer or cowhide, which is sewn to a skin ring fitting closely on the body, painted
with ornaments
and beaten with one stick.
On one side of this drum we find a small hole which has caused
much speculation as to whether this practice is pre-columbian or postcolumbian, since European
drums have this hole to cut down
overtones.
This method
of construction is unusual for South America,
since two-
with Mexico
and Central America.”
headed
drums
are the general
rule, whereas
it is mainly
associated
The Amerindians have never developed a drum language although the drum has been used for signaling predetermined signals. In Africa, however, some of the drummers
reproduce
conversational sounds where-
by they are able to carry on a conversation and even recite poetry. This is possible because of the fact that the African languages in these particular areas are tonal. The Amerindians did not accomplish this with their
drums,
but the Siriono
of Bolivia
do
not talk while
rather communicate with each other by whistling.
hunting,
but
So highly developed
is this, that they can carry on a limited conversation. Plank Drums: These instruments are planks under which a pit is dug and the plank itself is danced upon or struck. In South America it is found being used among the Arapai, a Carib tribe living north of the lower Amazon
river, the Waiwai,
Parikuta, the Oyana,
also a Carib tribe, and
the Arawaks of British Guiana who use the plank without the pit. In
the
Makuari
death
ceremony
two
drummers,
a
man
and
a
woman, squatted, chanted as they beat the plank with sticks two to three feet long, sometimes carved to represent a male and a female. In North
America the plank drum was used by tribes of California, the Maidu, the coastal Yuki, the Yurok, the Wintum, and the Pomo.™
Catuquinaru pit,
filled
with
JURUA-PURUS Signal Drum: This instrument various
sorts
of
materials,
into
consists of an earth which
a hollow
trunk
of hard palm wood is placed on end and partly filled with many different things.
AMERINDIAN
DRUMS
OF SOUTH
AMERICA vt ‘ tn
° Hite
HOLLOW
79 HARO
PALH
.
my t at
Ta " 1
WOOD
RUBBER
h
FRAGMENTS
oF wood, HIDE & RESINS
CROSS-SECTION
OF CATUQUINARU
85
A small space is left empty in the center of the trunk — the pit and the upper end of the trunk are covered with a slab of hard rubber
or rawhide which is struck with a large club. This drum, an idiophone drum which could be classified as a plank drum or a hollow log drum,
was used for signaling in northern Brazil, in the Amazon
basin by the
Catuquinard tribe, and is probably one of the strangest found in the Americas. LORETO Tunduli
(Tundui):
A Jivaro Amerindian
drum
of Ecuador, closely
associated with the spirit appearing in the shape of the great water boa or anaconda, made of a light wood called “shimuta.” This instrument is approximately fifteen inches in diameter and sixty-three inches in length, with a curved or serpent-like slit connecting four round holes forming snake-like figures, the handles representing the head and tail of the reptile. The hollowing out of the wood is done by fire; the wood is burned and scraped off with a snail shell or an iron instrument until the cavity is large enough. The instrument is suspended by wooden logs at each
end and is beaten with a short wooden drum-stick padded on one end. The drummer is generally a chief or an elder citizen of the tribe. When
he dies,
drum
the drum
is made
is buried
to accompany
was originally a strictly secular and religious.
with
him
and
with
each
instrument,
but
new
chief,
a new
him through his reign.” The ‘“tunduli”
religious
today
it
is both
Uchichi-Tambora: Another drum, a copy of a European type, also
80
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
used by the Jivaros of Ecuador. It is a bimembranophone
one head
covered
with
the skin
of a common
instrument,
night-monkey,
and the
other with the hide of the capuchin monkey. The heads are rolled on a
skin ring, laced to each with only one stick.™
other across the body
with cord, and
beaten
CAQUETA Tu:Tu:
A
bimembranophone
clearly of European
origin. The
drum
body
of the Tucuna
tribe of Brazil,
is a short cylinder of ambaura
wood from seven to twelve inches in diameter. Each end is covered with the skin of the guariba monkey or the surubim, held by flesh skin rings and secured by tension rings which are laced together across the body
with cord. A snare cord, stretched tightly across the drum
(sometimes
with
hums
the head
when
a bead
or a small
is struck.
The
piece
of metal
instrument
head
tied in the center)
is hung
by a loop
of
cord from the end of a dance staff or dangles from the left hand and
beaten with one drum-stick
(“tu:tu-nari-partj), about a hand’s breadth
in size, made of wood or bone. The rhythm is simple and measured, marking that of the dance but not that of the chant, which is carried on independently of the drum beat. Pa:Vi
(Tari):
A turtle-shell drum
also used by the Tucuna
tribe
on special occasions with the “tu:tu.” The shell is hung horizontally from the roof (about sixty inches from the ground), the ventral side up, and beaten on the plastron with one drum-stick wrapped in “tururi” bark cloth.” A similar instrument was found in Mexico. Dyadiko: This drum of the Witoto Amerindians is an indigenous
instrument, used only at special festivals. A slender log is hollowed out in a trough-like manner so that it becomes relatively flexible. A
water snake with butterflies perched on it is painted on the side of the
log; the bust of a woman is carved in relief on one end, and an alligator or lizard head on the other. The drum rests on two small logs, which,
along with the drum, are secured by “lianas” (ropes) to other logs driven into the ground. A pit is dug under the instrument and covered with planks to produce more resonance. Dancers stamp in unison on the log, driving the dancing log against the planks. This drum is related to the plank drums of California and South America — the Bora, neighbors of the Witoto, have a similar instrument.” Manhuare Signal Drum (Manguare): An idiophone slit drum
of
AMERINDIAN
the Bora
DRUMS
OF
SOUTH
AMERICA
Indians on the Putumayo
81
River, a tributary
of the Amazon
that forms the boundary between Peru and Columbia. Because they live between the Putumayo and the Caqueta rivers, whose courses are marked by severe navigational hazards, the Boras rely on drums rather
than canoes to send messages. The “manhuare” is a pair of hollow wooden
logs, from five to
made
giving
eight feet long and twelve to sixteen inches thick, depending on whether they are “male” or “female.” The wood from which they are is hard, fine-grained,
heavy
and
unblemished,
both
drums
a plain smooth finish, without appendages. The inside is hollowed out and burnt away by means of a slow fire directed by mouth blow-pipes,
through
a longitudinal
groove
two or three inches wide
and
approxi-
mately: two-thirds the length of the cylinder, and the inside surfaces are not smooth. On the bottom there are two breast-shaped protuberances
opposite the hourglass-shaped holes cut at both ends of the longitudinal
groove. The thickness is not constant because the instrument tapers. The “manhuare” drums are suspended, one by one end, at a thirtydegree angle and the other hung on a rattan crossbar. The instruments are set up parallel to one another in a gigantic conical hut in the community. A temporary short-range “manhuare” is sometimes carved from the “topa” or some other softwood tree by an unalterable secret formula handed down for generations. Two convex trunk sections, of unequal width and about forty inches long, are placed over a shallow
trough in the ground and beaten on the upturned convex side. The drum-stick tips are covered with rubber, and are about the size of champagne bottles, weighing from nine to thirteen pounds. Blows on the rim of the groove produce four different pitches that, when combined with varying sequence and intensity, can communicate simple
messages. The sound of the “manhuare” away,
and
messages
Witoto, Bora, Andoke,
are
carried
can be heard up to twenty miles
even
near the Bora, communicate
in this manner.
GUIANA In the Guianas we find the drums wanderers of the Caribbean Sea. Sambura
farther
by
relay
drums.
The
Okaina, Nonoya, Resigero and other tribes living
(See Pl. XXI — No.
of the Carib
tribes,
once
49)
the
(Tabulu): A Carib Amerindian drum cut from a nectandra
82
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
tree trunk from which the outer bark has been romoved and the inside hollowed out by chisels until one-half inch thick. The head of “akuri” skin is placed on both ends and held in place by skin hoops of tough
withes
bound
about with
Kraus
string
and
manigum.
The
skin rings
are then laced together with twisted Kraus fiber in the European manner, which may be tensed or loosened to tune. Either of the heads is struck. A double snare of Kraus thread, in which is twisted a small toothpicklike stick that vibrates when the instrument is played, is stretched across the silent head. For playing, the drum is held under the left arm and struck with two sticks. The left-hand stick strikes the periphery with short light strokes, while the right-hand stick strikes the center of the head vigorously. The instrument’s construction and method of playing would certainly justify it being labeled as of European origin. Similar drums
are used by other tribes and known by different names: “samur” by the Wapishana, “sambura” by the Makuna Amerindians.”! Carib Plank Drum: The Caribs living north of the River dig a pit in the ground, in an open space near monial house, and place arched planks over the pit, ground. The planks are danced and stamped upon. The dancer is held stiffly and only the right foot is used;
floor is a huge drum.
lower Amazon the men’s cerelevel with the left leg of the
thus, the dance
CARIBBEAN Caverre: A Venezuelan slit drum of Amerindian origin, hewn from
a log, and
used by the Cumanagoto
tribe. The slit is cut in the form
of a half-moon, forming two “lips” that produce two tones. The “caverre” is very large, from four to eight feet in length and two to three feet in diameter, and is beaten on the lips with a large resintipped stick. Bombo (Caja): The Goajiros use this large two-headed drum, carved
from
a tree section fifteen inches
in diameter
and twenty-four
inches long. Both ends are covered with uncured sheep-skin. The drum is
hung
from
rafters,
branches,
or even
from
the player’s
neck
and
is
beaten with two sticks. The skins are sewn to a wooden flesh ring and laced across the body. It is believed that this instrument is modeled after a European field drum.” (See Pl. I— No. 2)
AMERINDIAN Tortoise
DRUMS
OF SOUTH AMERICA
Tambor:
This Colombian
83 friction drum, made
of a turtle-
shell, is an old Indian instrument. The protuberances on the front and
bottom
of the shell
(previously
waxed)
are rubbed
with a moistened
palm, producing a rasp. It is also sometimes played with a loop of waxed cord pulled through the interior of the shell to produce the sound. (See Pl. XX — No. 47)
8 EUROPEAN-AMERICAN PERCUSSION “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send
these, the homeless,
tempest-tossed, to me:
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.” Emma
Lazarus
(The Great Colossus)
This quotation is found on the Statue of Liberty, in New York Harbor. The statute was a gift from France to the United States, but the thought holds true for all the Americas. The Europeans who came to the Americas and settled and founded new nations were all seekers of pirates, soldiers, farmers, bonded
some sort: adventurers, plunderers, servants or debtors, sailors, fortune
hunters, salesmen, trappers, and those seeking religious freedom.
We
must admit, many of them did not come from the most stable segment
of European society. After they had cleared their bonds, built their homes and supplied
themselves
with
the basic necessities,
they proceeded
to establish
trade
with Europe. Trade brought tax collectors and governmental representa-
tives. With the basic necessities satisfied, the development of leisure time
began
to increase
books, musical
the luxury
of nostalgic
urges.
The
instruments, latest-styled clothing, house
teachers for their children.
84
settlers sent for furnishings and
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
PERCUSSION
85
Drums seem not to have been used in Europe until the late Middle Ages, when they drifted in from Asia. In 1457, a party of Hungarian ambassadors brought the first kettledrum to France. Kettledrums were introduced to the Court of France in 1542. King
Henry VIII of England brought them from France to his court. By 1683, they came into general use as a cavalry instrument and as early as 1735,
instruction books were available for teaching. The drum became the sign of military and power in Europe. It was used for signals and keeping time, and was considered a great military trophy in times of war. when
The
Moors
brought
they migrated
the tabor and tambourine
to England,
these
instruments
to Spain, and later,
became
very pop-
ular. The drum has preserved its identity from ancient times—more than any other instrument. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Europe, the drum was a martial instrument, but from early times it has
been associated with religious ceremonies of many people.
The organ, from a very early period, has been the instrument of Christian temple worship. Much of the great music of Europe was used as a means of attracting people to the church, but not incorporated in the worship. Only in Abyssinia, the modern Salvation Army, and in sects among the Aframerican, has the drum found a place in Christian worship. The Hebrews do not appear to have used the drum in temple worship,
but
used
the
“toph”
or tambourine-type
drum
at weddings,
processions and feasts.% Frequently mentioned in the Old Testament, under the name of “tabret” or “timbrel,” is a drum that had no place in religious services of the tabernacle, or the temple. They were used chiefly by women for dances and public processions. They also appeared on Egyptian monuments and were called “timbrels.”* Western music is based on two great traditions: the music theories of ancient Greece
and the extension of those theories by the Catholic
Church. Europe does not have a great drumming tradition. To the European, the drum is an instrument for marking time, giving color and effect to their harmonious melodies. The European enlarged the instrument and improved its effectiveness and construction. There are two types of European percussion instruments: those which are incapable of giving a definite pitch, and those of a definite pitch. The kettledrums, glockenspiels and the xylophones are instruments of definite pitch. The
bass and small drums,
cymbals,
castanets, tam-
86
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
bourines and triangles are instruments without definite pitch. The kettledrum and the cymbals are the most important European percussion instruments.
European music makes very little use of percussion. It is used to assert the accent at special moments or reinforce a crisis. The drum is valued for the graduated intensity with which it points the rhythm, and seldom if ever used for cross-rhythms. The quality has no import-
ance. The pitch of the drum, except the “timpini” drum, which is tuned, is important only if it clashes with the pitch of other sounds. Percussion,
from
the
European
point
of view,
is not music;
it is
not a vital constituent of the harmony, which is almost invariably complete without it. Time
intervals of the drum notes reinforce, as a whole,
and
ends
those of the other instruments. Actually, there are only three types of European drums. The first is the “long drum” or “bass drum” with two heads. It is held laterally played
on
both
with
stuffed-knob
and
is used
by
the
in-
fantry or marching bands. The big drum or “Grosse Caisse’ of the modern orchestra is a modification of this drum. The second is the side drum; with two heads— only the upper one being played on by two sticks of wood; the lower head occasionally has strings of catgut stretched across its surface. The shallow, modern
snare drum is a modification of the “tabor.” The tambourine is a special
drum consisting of a single skin and is used only for special effects. The
third is the kettledrum,
introduced
in the modern
European
orchestra by Beethoven. It reached its highest development in Europe and as it grew in size, the acoustics were improved by experimentation; last, but hardly least, it was made tunable to a definite pitch. . The method of training of European drummers is highly organized and dates back to 1758, when Charles the First of England commanded that all drummers in the kingdom play marching beats exactly alike. In 1717, the military drum became an important part of the music and the military branch of America. The Prince of Wales’ Volunteers,
stationed at Annapolis,
Maryland,
had
a corps of fife, drum
and bugle.
This set the stage for the development of future corps in the Americas. The European-American drums were, as in Europe during colonial times, military instruments. They were used to indicate troop movements. The drum was taught by rote, using fundamental stroke combinations
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
PERCUSSION
87
which have come down to the present day as rudiments. Combinations of these rudiments evolved into set calls for troop or field movements. For many years there were several methods of teaching drums, and
a new technique
systematizing
was developing all the time. There was a need for
drumming.
In 1933, during the American Legion National Convention at Chicago, a group of drummers from all parts of the country met and discussed their drumming and bugle corps. From this group of thirteen
men, the National Association of Rudimental Drummers
(N.A.R.D.) was
organized. This organization was instrumental in developing a manual for
defining rudiments. Out of this effort came the twenty-six standard rudi-
ments accepted and used nationally today. The acceptance of these rudiments made it possible to standardize the training of all rudimental drummers in the Americas, as well as set the stage for national and international competition for “Drum and Bugle Corps.” Drum and Bugle Corps were important in colonial times militarily, but they flourish today as a peacetime leisure activity. These corps are promoted and encouraged to keep drumming traditions alive. World
War II created a new national interest in drum corps, and since that time there has been a steady increase in the number of high schools with drum corps and bands. Since the advent of the “walkie talkie,” the drum
has lost its status as a martial instrument;
but martial music has been
fostered in the Americas by a number of organizations or “aficionados” of the drum and fife, for purely entertainment purposes. The European-American tenaciously held on to his harmony, his melodies, and his instruments, but he accepted the Afro-American dances
and rhythms. The Afro-American and the Amerindian could not divorce themselves from their rhythms and dances, but they did accept the
instruments, harmony and melodies of the European-Americans. The European
all ethnic groups
bass, side, and snare drums have been adopted by
in the Americas.
These
European
instruments
are
being used to play Asian, African, Amerindian and European rhythms. They are also being used for folk, popular and, of course, classical music.
Most music falling in the classical category is European and is being played on European instruments almost exclusively. The European-Americans built great opera houses and organized great symphonic orchestras, importing from Europe the great artists for concert tours. They competed with the Europeans in all the arts.
88
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
In the shadow of these great edifices, dedicated to the perpetuation of European culture, there was developing a music that was as American as a Carib from Panama, or an Eskimo from Nome. It is neither “Afro,” Amerindian, nor European. It is “mestizo”; it is “mulatto”; it is the
music of the Americas. It is being played with all the instruments of its
people:
drums, maracas, claves, cymbals, guitars, cornets, clarinets, saxo-
phones, gitiros and marimbas.
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
PERCUSSION
PLATE JI — EUROPEAN AMERICAN Timpani
89
DRUMS
Cocktail Drum Scotch Bass Snare Drum (Side Drum) Bass “Flat Jack” Bass “Flat Jack” Tom Snared Field Drum Floor Tom Tenor Drum Bass Tom
9 EUROPEAN-AMERICAN In every country
the European
DRUMS
settled and colonized he gave un-
selfishly of his music and his musical instruments for all to enjoy. In some countries European music was accepted “en tod6,” whereas, in others, special elements were accepted. In many
cases, the instruments
were copies and used with the indigenous music. From other localities, we find a wedding of the indigenous and the European music producing a hybrid. Last but not least, we find in other areas people without the
advantage of western notation, training, and theory attempting to play
European music on European instruments. These areas have contributed much of the new music. European instruments are available and used in all urban communities in the Americas for classical and generally popular music. In some
areas,
the
acceptance
of European
instruments
has
been
at the
expense of indigenous or ethnic instruments.
Bombo: A large bass drum found in nearly all the Latin American countries. It is thought to be a copy of the European bass drum found in the Americas. This drum is used by all ethnic groups in their tra-
ditional ways. The two-headed instruments, with a few local variations, are easily recognized as copies of the European bass or side drums. They are used in both popular and folk music. They have the traditional two heads
wrapped about a flesh ring and held in place by a counter ring. The two
counter hoops are laced together across the body or box. They are tuned by a rope running transversely across the lacing or with “ears,” bolts, or nuts.
90
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
Caixa
(Taro,
DRUMS
Toral,
91
Tambor)
Set: The
“toral” is a small Brazil-
ian snare drum which is similar in all details to the European snare drum found in the United States. It is very popular in the carnival festival of Rio de Janeiro. It is a two-headed instrument played with two sticks, and usually played at the same time with the “surdo,” a large bass drum. The skins are attached to flesh rings and held in place by counter rings which are latched together across the shell by metal brackets. The skins are tensed by turning wing nuts which draw the heads closer together. It is fifteen to eighteen inches in diameter, eight to ten inches in height, and is used with the ‘“‘surdo” as a parade set in Brazil. (See Pl. IX — No.
14)
counter
to each
Surdo: This is a Brazilian bass drum of European origin. It has two heads, but only one is played with one bare hand and one padded drum mallet. The diameter of the heads is eighteen to twenty inches; and the body is unusually long — two and one-half feet in height. The heads are attached to flesh rings that are secured by counter hoops. The hoops
are connected
bolts and tensed with wing-nuts.
other down
the body
with long
It is very popular in parades
and
processions, and is most always used with “toral,” making a set. The bodies of both instruments are made of metal, and the set is used for
both popular and folk music. Parade Set: The drums used in the United States for parades, drum corps, drum and bugle corps, school bands, etc., generally form a set of three drums —
the snared field drum, the unsnared tenor drum,
sometimes referred to as a “tom,”
and the Scotch bass drum.
Field Drum-Side Drum: The snared drum* is a military or parade band instrument, used to sound calls and keep time for the marchers.
It is similar to the bass drum, but smaller. The side drum entered the
orchestra
drum.
at the same
time as the kettledrum, tenor drum, and the bass
It is swung to the side and played with two sticks in the same
manner as the snare drum. The upper head is referred to as the batter and the lower head as the snare head. The snares of gut or coiled wire
account for the specific rattling timbre of the side drum. The heads were generally made from calf-skin and the snares from lambgut. (See Pl. V—No.
stretched
is struck.
3)
across
The snares are several strands of catgut or steel wire
the lower head
which
vibrates when
the batterhead
*The term “side drum” came from the military use of this instrument. It was carried and played in. a sling to one side of the drummer.
92
DRUMS
The skin is tightened by metal rods and thumb
IN
THE
AMERICAS
screws attached to
hoops over both skin rings. In some models the skin is tightened by
cords drawn taut and by leather “ears.” This instrument was very popular, along with the fife, for military marching in the early history of
the United States. The field drums average seventeen inches in length and twelve inches in diameter. They have an indefinite pitch, but give brilliance to march
music. The
patterns
are rolls, flams, and
drags.
Tenor Drum: A two-headed European-American drum, which is the survivor of an eighteenth century instrument. It has a deep wood shell with cord tension for the head.*’ Without
“Rienzi,”
“Die
snares
this
Walkiire,”
instrument and
was
“Parsifal.”
employed
The
sound
by
Wagner
is much
in
duller
than the snare drum and without a definite pitch. The tenor drum is an in-between drum, as opposed to the bass and snare. It is played wth two sticks on the batter-head and is used in
military
bands
to sound
rolls. The
tenor
drum
entered
the orchestra
with the bass and the kettledrum and is similar to the field drum, also used in the parade group. Scotch Bass: A small bass drum used with pipes in Scotland and adopted for parade bands in the United States. It was reduced in size to make it more manoeuverable and spectacular. It is from twentysix to twenty-eight inches in diameter and eight to ten inches wide. It is held vertically by a body sling and played with two mallets on both sides. _ Flat Jack: A single-headed drum designed and manufactured to reduce the weight of marching drums. It is designed to be carried in a harness-type carrier with or without a spinner mechanism. The body is generally made of metal and finished in chrome. The base is twenty-eight inches in diameter and approximately
four inches
wide. The skin or head is suspended within the body, and tension clamps are provided. The heads are usually made of an all-weather plastic.
This type instrument comes in the marching snare drum which is sixteen inches in diameter; the baritone, twenty-two inches; and an
eighteen-inch tenor marching drum. Both sides of the head can be used. The advantage claimed for this type of instrument is that it can be stored in less space than the conventional type drum, it is easier to handle, and stronger. There ap-
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
93
pears to be no particular improvement or loss in tone quality. To date, the “‘flat jacks” are more or less confined to march bands; if they prove
their worth, we might find them eine Popula*Brum-Sei
chamber,
1
used _ generally.
TS eSaphe
Modern
(See Pl. II)
dance
bands,
roups, orchestras, and jazz groups from Nome to Buenos Aires
theaded drums in different combinations; the snare’the bass drum, the tom-tom, -and the coektail drum. (See Pl. X — No. 16)
‘Cocktail Drum. Set: This drum is a highly specialized instrument,
designed
to permit
the musician
to stand while playing. The ‘grouping
uséd>generally consists of two ‘cymbals, one snare drum, and the cocktail drum. | The cocktail drum
stands from two to three feet high and is six-
teen inches in diameter. The instrument is supported by four eightinch legs. It is beaten with the aid of an upbeat pedal. The linkage
causes the mallet to strike the underside of the instrument when the pedal is forced down. This cylindrical instrument has the auxiliary instruments attached to its body.
The cocktail drum comes with a single and a double head. The singleheaded instrument is played only with sticks and brushes. The head is snared from beneath the skin. This instrument “combos” — commonly in cocktail lounges. Tom-Toms:
term among drums. The come in two and the floor
is used
only
in small
The term “tom-tom” has come to be used as a generic
musicians. It represents all small, two-headed unsnared tom-toms used in the modern orchestra in the Americas types. The bass tom drum is bracketed to the bass drum tom drum sits on the floor supported: by, four adjustable
rubber-tipped legs. This cylindrical drum stands approximately sixteen inches in height and is fourteen inches in diameter. The bass tom aver-
ages about nine inches in height and thirteen inches in diameter. Tom-toms struments
are
are used.
generally Each
two
head
has
headed, its own
but
some
tension
single-headed castings,
in-
allowing
it to be tuned separately. The heads are lapped about a flesh ring. The flesh ring is secured by counter hoops, which are lashed to the body by self-adjusting tension castings. The upright instrument is beaten with sticks, mallets, and brushes for special effects. Snare Drum: A small, two-headed drum of European origin played
94,
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
with two sticks on one side; the body is less in height than the diameter of the head. It is often referred to as “side drum.” This instrument is used in folk, popular, and clasiscal music. It is popular with, and used by, all ethnic groups. It is probably the most widely known drum in all the Americas. Most scholars agree that this instrument is of European origin, but there is evidence that it also had a polygenetic origin. This drum takes its name from the metal strands or gut strung across its bottom head. These strands are known as “snares,”
and
rattle when
the instrument
is struck,
giving
it a characteristic
sound. The top head, or batter head, is the playing head. The modern snare-drum shell is- constructed of plywood; strongly:
reinforced with maple glued rings for additional strength. Tension castings are attached to the shell into which tension screws are threaded. Each head can be tensed individually. The wire snares can be completely disengaged or muffled. The snares are made of steel wire. There
are three distinct types of snare
drums:
the orchestra drum,
the band snare drum, and the street snare drum. The size for the orchestra drum
has a
shell of six and one-half inches in depth,
and
fourteen
inches in diameter. This size is very responsive to light strokes and has a sharp tone. Concert brass bands require a larger drum. The most popular is six and one-half by fifteen inches. The deeper shell affords more volume. A still larger instrument is used in the street drum, drum corps, or military bands — an instrument twelve inches by sixteen inches, which is ideal for adults. A rather tight batter head is desirable against a fairly loose snare head. The batter head is played with two hardwood sticks. It is recommended that tension not be relieved in either head after a performance. Tightening and loosening of the head shortens the life of the skin. Some of the modern snare drums have an all-weather plastic head, which was developed recently and whose popularity is growing.
Bass Drum (European): The bass drum is of meager musical value as compared with the “tympani.” It is well known because of its use in military and municipal bands— to mark the rhythm. When it is used in the orchestra, the music is written on the staff of one line. In the
classical orchestras, the bass drummer is generally provided with two sticks of different sizes. The large stick is used for accented beats and the small one for routines and rolling. The note for the small drumroll
is called
for,
the
kettledrum
sticks
are
used.
Another
method
is
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
95
the use of a double-headed drum-stick with a knob at each end. This stick has its stem turned up; and for the large one, down. When a is known by the French word for mallet, “maillacke,” and in old French,
“tampou,” or “plug,” or “stopper,” from “taper” to “strike,” “hit,” or “slap.” The stick is held in the middle, and the drum is struck on each end alternately. The instrument is thought to have been brought into Europe through Turkey. It was called the “Turkish drum” until the beginning of the nineteenth century. The drum is from two to three feet in diameter with
a wooden shell more than a foot in depth. It is dull, loud, and explosive — with an indefinite pitch. Mozart was one of the first to use the instrument in classical music about 1782 in “Il Seraglio.” Hayden employed
it in 1794 in his military symphony. This drum. originally had-a wooden, bedy and cord tension. The
modérn’
version
is made: from
brass
with: screw
tension bolts.
It
is
employed for exceptional power and energy and for mournful, mysterious effects. In the military band it is a pacemaker and is held in the vertical position and beaten with a padded stick. The two heads are attached to two flesh rings, held in place by two counter rings, laced across the body
with metal rods and bolts. “The bass drum has utidergone a great reduction in size, as used in
the modern jazz orchestra, making it easy to carry from one “gig” or job to another. This has been made possible by advance in the knowledge
of acoustics and availabilities of new materials. The bass drum in the popular music fields is a little larger than the old field drum.
(See PI.
X — No. 16) Pandeiro: A Brazilian tambourine or frame drum. The body is of wood and has a skin stretched over one side and metal discs (jingles) inserted in sides. The instrument is played with the fingers, the hands,
and also shaken. It is eleven and one-half inches in diameter and the body is two inches in height.
(See Pl. XII — No. 24)
Tamborin: A small Brazilian hand drum, approximately six inches in diameter, with body four inches high. This diminutive drum is made of both metal and wood and is played with one small stick. The instrument is held by the body with four fingers, with the middle finger free to control the sound. If the single head is struck with the middle finger depressing the head, a different sound is obtained than when it is struck with the skin free to vibrate. The middle finger can also shorten
96
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
the time of vibration. The rhythm patterns played on the tamborin are simple and syncopated. The calf-skin head is attached to a flesh ring which is tensed by a counter ring bolted to the small body, making it tunable. (See Pl. XII — No. 24) Tambourine
(Pandera,
Pandereta,
Tamborin):
A
single-headed
frame drum, with or without jingles. The jingles are metal discs strung on a metal wire inserted into slots cut in the body or frame. The
metal discs (jingles) rattle when the instrument is played. The body is made from wood or metal. The head is either tacked or glued to the
frame, or is wrapped over a flesh ring which is held to the body by a counter ring secured by tension brackets. It is thought by many authorities that the tambourine made its appearance quite independently in various parts of the world, but for some
reason the Basque people of Spain are given credit for the present-day instrument. It is called “tambor de Basque.” It made its appearance in Europe before the thirteenth century and was inherited from the Roman “Bacchus cult.” It was the instrument of the wandering musicians, showmen, jugglers, and gypsies. The tambourine was first used in concert music in Europe in the late Middle Ages. The tambourine is struck against the body, hands, fingers,
elbows,
knees,
head,
and
with
a stick.
It is also
rubbed
with
the fingers to produce a buzzing sound. This instrument is used by all ethnic groups. Today it is an instrument symbol of the Salvation Army.
In China, it is approximately nine and one-half inches in diameter
with four pairs of jingles and a head of snake-skin. In Persia, it is larger,
nineteen inches in diameter —- ornamented on the outside and furnished with bells and coins. Turkey has an octagonal-shaped tambourine. These instruments are found in all the countries of the Americas. The tambourine has reached its greatest popularity in Brazil, where it is called “pandereta.” In Puerto Rico, it is a popular instrument without jingles
used
to play
a rhythm
called “La
Plena.”
The
tambourine
in
the Americas takes on several sizes and shapes, from the Eskimo drum
of thirty inches in diameter, to the small four-inch diameter instrument
so popular in Brazil, and the four-inch by six-inch square tambourine
played with a stick, also found in Brazil. (See Pl. XII — No. 24) Tabor: A small, two-headed European hand drum generally hung
on the little fingers of the left hand, leaving the other four fingers
free to play a flageolet (a wind instrument, usually made of wood, with
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN DRUMS
97
three holes, two on the top, and one underneath),
while the right hand
strikes the drufn with a stick. This instrument, introduced into Europe by the Moors, has taken
on many
variations. Sometimes
the drum
is swung from the body, fore-
arm and wrist. It is popular today in England with Moorish dancers.
It is thought by many that the pipe and drum have a polygenetic
origin. The combination of pipe and drum was no doubt known to the Indians,
as it was
to the Europeans;
(“tamba
y chirimia)
used
in many
but the “tambor” parts of Central
and
“chirimia”
America,
Mexico
and South America, today resemble the medieval European “tabor” and pipe, rather than the original indigenous instruments. The pipe is the familiar European
one with two holes on the top
and one underneath so that it can easily be played with one hand. The “tabor” varies from a circular tambourine to a child’s toy drum and is used primarily, if not exclusively, to accompany Indian dances. English Tabor: This drum comes in three versions, one type being similar to the French “tambour provincial” and the “landsknecht-
trommel” of Germany. The instrument with a single snare on top of the
batter-head is called “tambour provincial” and without the snare it is referred to as the “tambourin.” It was also made to resemble the “Landsknechttrommel,” provided with snares on the snare head. The tabor and pipe appear in records of the eleventh centu’y in Europe. These instruments were later used in military operations. They became the instruments of the foot soldiers until the pipe was replaced by the flute or fife, in the late Middle Ages. During the seventeenth century, these instruments became very pop-
ular in England, and from England they were introduced in the Americas. The drum, pipe or fife, and the flag were famous symbols of the American
Revolution. With the mechanization of the Armed Forces, they now ap-
pear only occasionally on parade grounds. (See Pl. XVI— No. 36) Tympani (Kettledrum): A large cauldron of copper or brass covered
with skin and used by modern European orchestras. Tympani are generally used in pairs and sometimes in fours. This instrument is one of
the few drums of the world tuned to a definite pitch. It gives definite musical tone. Other drums more or less mark the rhythm, but the kettledrum is only used when the tones harmonize with the other instruments
in the group. Beethoven is given credit for removing the shackles from
the tympani by writing a solo part for its use. When two drums are used,
98
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
generally one is tuned to the tonic and the other to the dominant tone of the composition. In the year 1457, a party of Hungarian Ambassadors was sent to
France by their King to plead for the hand in marriage of Princess Madeline, the daughter of King Charles VII. Accompanying these delegates of King Ladislaus Pasthumus of Hungary were a pair of drums like big kettles, carried on each side of the horse’s neck. These drums had never
been seen before in France. They were played with such pretended luxury of style that those who heard them spread the word all over Europe. In 1542, they were introduced
at the court of France. King Henry
VIII of England sent to Vienna for a pair. By 1683, they seem to have come into general use as a cavalry drum. As early as 1735, instruction books were available for teaching the “Heroic and Musical Art of the Trumpet and the Kettledrum.”™
The history of the tympani in Europe is interesting. Du-ing the Baroque and Rococo periods, African drummers were imported to Europe,
both for their drumming ability and to add to the show of prestige. Gerhard Cromer of Munich in 1812 developed a mechanism to tune all tuning screws at one time. In 1890, G. J. Wunderlich improved them by putting the kettles on a revolving axle. Tuning by pedals began in 1872, with Peltrick and Queisser, both of Dresden,
Germany.
For maximum quality, the kettle should be as deep as one half of its diameter plus four inches. The rim of the bowl must be perfectly
round in circumference and absolutely flat on top.
Kettledrums
produces
consist
of three
sound, tensors—a
parts:
mechanical
and tuning. It is a matter of personal preference There are five general types: pedal-tuned, justable, cables or bicycle chains, universal Heads for the tympani are calf-skin — calves not more
kettle — resonator,
means
of retaining
head —
the head
as to which type is chosen. screw principle, crank adjoints. or slunk calf-skin. Hides of
than eight weeks old are best. Slunk, or unborn calf, is
better for the snare side of a snare drum. Today, modern machines re-
move
the excess flesh, after which the skin is washed and placed for
several days in a weak lime solution. The lime solution loosens the hair
and bleaches the hide. The skin is then placed in a neutralizing solution;
then it is washed, tacked onto a wooden frame, and allowed to dry under
controlled temperatures. It is then buffed to an even thickness.
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN DRUMS
99
Tympani sticks vary and their choice depends on the drummer and the locality. The whale-bone stick has a small wooden bottom; the ends are covered with a thin piece of sponge, and the felt knob is placed on a flexible stick. The two sticks chosen are struck one-quarter the distance from the rim. The instrument is used for coloring and special effects to which it lends itself perfectly.” The modern tympani is equipped with automatic foot-tuning pedals which take the place of hand-tuning screws. The use of the foot pedals frees the hands and makes it possible to play a clear chromatic scale. (See Pl. VII — No. 7) Zabumba: A two-headed Brazilian drum. It is a crude copy of the European bass drum. The heads are attached to flesh rings which are secured by counter hoops. The counter hoops have holes through which a rope laces the two hoops together across the body.!” The cylindrical body averages twenty-one and one-half inches in diameter and nine inches in height. The zabumba is played with one padded-tipped stick. Drums of Europe are called by different names in adjacent countries. For example, a tambourin may be a deep-toned cylinder drum played with one stick, while in another area it may be referred to as a tambourine,
identified as a small frame drum with cymbals. Since there is no standardization of European drums, it would be well to describe European drums from which European-American drums derived. Tarole
(Caisse Plate):
A small, thin, flat drum three inches deep
and approximately thirteen inches in diameter with eight or more snares generally of gut.
Caissee Claire: A regular orchestra snare drum. Originally, the French version had eight tension rods and a metal shell. It is six and one-quarter inches in depth and fourteen inches in diameter. It is called an imitation of the English or American small drum. Caisse Roulante: The French version of the field drum in the Americas.
It has four or more gut snares.
Tambour
four gut snares. Tambourin
Militaire:
Similar
(Tambour
to the caisse
de Provence):
roulante,
A deep
drum,
but with only snared
or un-
snared. When snared, the snares (two) are placed on the batter-head. The instrument is played with one short thick drum-stick directly over the
100
DRUMS
snares.
The
instrument,
referred
to as “sans
cordes,”
IN THE AMERICAS 2
is without
snares
and “avec cordes” is with snares.
Tarol Gregoire: A very old caisse claire with gut snares, five tension
rods, and
installed
on a brass shell, eight and
one-half inches
and fifteen and three-quarter inches in diameter. Grosse Ruehrtommel: Formerly a single-headed
without
snares,
it was known
about
the
size
of the
French
as ‘“Landsknechttrommel.”
century found this drum
German
tambourin.
With
in depth
drum, snares
The middle of the eighteenth
reduced in size, measuring twelve inches in
depth and sixteen inches in diameter with snares added and known by other names:
“Blaser Trommel,”
“Wirbeltrommel,”
and “Rolltrommel.”
During this period, metal bodies became the vogue and rope tension devices were replaced with threaded rods of metal. The Grosse Ruehrtrommel was replaced by the smaller German military drum. At the beginning of the twentieth century, another reduction took place and we find the “Kleine Trommel” or “Konzerttrommel”
was reduced again, and the (little jazz drum) of five and one-quarter inches in four inches in depth, with
(concert drum). This drum
concert drum became “Kleine Jazz Trommel” and one-quarter inches in depth and fourteen diameter. Today we find the “bop” trommedl, tiny snares.
English Tenor: A two-headed snareless drum, twelve inches in depth
and fifteen to seventeen inches in diameter, with a wooden body and rope or metal tension devices. It is played with heavy snare sticks or soft felt-head sticks. English Field Drum
(Parade drum, Street drum): A wooden shell
with two heads, gut snares, played with two sticks slightly smaller than those
used
for the tenor drum.
Because
this instrument
is used as a
parade drum and carried by means of a sling to one side, it is referred to as a parade drum, side drum, and field drum. It is from six to eight inches in depth and fourteen to fifteen inches in diameter. Gran Cassa: An Italian bass drum. “Cassa” and “Tamburo” are words used in Italy for drums (box or chest). Tamburo Rullante: Italian version of the French caisse roulante with or without snares.
Tamburo sticks.’
Piccolo: A small snared Italian drum, played with two
EUROPEAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
AFRO-AMERICAN
101
MUSICAL
UO PWONE
. Brazil
. British Guiana
. Surinam
. Uruguay
_ oso
ND
. Venezuela Honduras Panama
Cuba
. Curacao
and Aruba
. Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico 11. English-speaking Isles
12. Haiti and French West Indies 13. United States
Western
Hemisphere
AREAS
10
Part A
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN INFLUENCE Probably ninety percent of the Aframericans®* on the American con-
tinent are descendants of slaves brought
to the Americas;
but by no
means all, for the first Africans that came were not slaves. The heart of the area from which slaves were obtained lies in Nigeria, Dahomey,
Western Congo and the Gold Coast. Most of the African survivors found in the Americas can be traced to these main cultural-linguistic groups. The ancestors of these survivors came from an environment where the
music was organized and performed as part of everyday life. It is impossible to make a single description to fit all west African music, but
there are certain characteristics which are found in nearly all the countries of West
Africa,
such
as the dominance
of percussion,
or five-tone
scales. The music is generally polyrhythmic and polymetric — that is, having two or more rhythms or patterns played at the same time. The most common
time division is a combination
of 12-8;
3-4; 6-8; and 4-4
(to use western time signatures).
Often a bell sounds a recurring rhythm pattern throughout a dance
and the African might not single it out as the prime instrument on which
all the others depend, but it is in fact a time yardstick.
The African concept of rhythm is more complex than the European.
“The terms “Afro-American” and “Aframerican” are used interchangeably in this text to refer to people of African descent in the Americas who live in highly-concentrated societies with people of a similar heritage. In the United States this includes persons who are of African blood only by admission, but in other American countries the names are used only in reference to persons of obvious African background.
102
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
103
As a rule, in European music, different rhythmic patterns may be employed successively but seldom simultaneously. In African music, however, several rhythms may occur simultaneously. There are usually at least two or three patterns present, and often four or five, played by drums of different sizes. Confusion is avoided by the presence of a fundamental underlying beat that never varies. (If there are several drums, this reg-
ular beat is played by the small drum.) The diverse rhythms of all instruments will coincide with the first beat of the fundamental pattern. Rhythm
in African music, therefore, is a combination of patterns that
coincide only at a particular point. Africans use the drum not only to produce music but for practical
purposes as well. The drum has a social significance unlike any other instrument in African society; it is the very foundation of a wedding, a
beer drinking gathering, a legal heading, or a social occasion. In Africa today, most drummers
are professional musicians, that is,
they are paid for their services. There are several types: band drummers (popular or “high life”), Association drummers, and State drummers.
State drummers are required to be present These men are employed and paid by the master and secondary drummers. Secondary persistent contrasting rhythms, or underline
at all major state occasions. authorities. There are both drummers usually fill in with the basic beat and provide
the “ground” of the music. The master drummer conducts the perform-
ance of the whole orchestra. He calls for gongs to sound (by oral comments or a short roll or two), or taps out the proper drum beat on the side of his instrument. He is considered the most proficient. The drummer of the “talking drums” is the “creator drummer” or “divine drummer.” Drummers in the act of drumming are immune to law (by the Sacred Persons Law) and dancers are expected to contribute money for the services of the drummers.’” Duties of a drummer are passed from father to son. The Africans have a saying: “The bird is never the offspring of the crab.” If the father is a good drummer, so the son is expected to be. Young drummers are instructed
by trained
master
drummers,
and all drummers
live in one
compound. The chief concern of African music was to recite the past history of their people. In most areas, this was assumed by male and female
professional musicians. These professional storytellers, magicians, gossipmongers were trained at secret meetings.
104
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Ethnically the tropical and South African people are roughly divided among the Sudanese Negroes of West Africa and the Bantu of Cen-
tral and South Africa; with some Hamites or half-Hamites in East Central
and Hottentots in Southwest Africa. In religious beliefs there is great similarity between many parts of the continent that cut across racial origin, perhaps because of contact over the centuries. Millions of Africans have become Muslim or Christian, but the majority of Africans still hold to the traditional religion of their fathers. To Africans, the spiritual" world is so real and near that its forces intertwine and inspire the visible world that man has to reckon with. The beliefs of the Africans included a creator deity as first source;
“A myth of the first pair,” or twins; a concept of the “abysmal waters”
as the source of life; a pantheon of divinities representing the elements, or natural forces; a serpent as a major symbol; the worship of ancestral spirits;
a metaphysical
concept
of the cardinal
directions, i.e., of cross-
roads and of trees; a belief that psychic or cosmic forces are manifested
in the physical world; and a belief that a human being who functioned
simultaneously as priest, king, doctor, could manipulate these forces. Manipulations on the magical level involved fetishes that brought to focus metaphysical forces, and referred to either ancestral spirits or elemental forces such as rain or fertility. The relationship between humans and nature was expresed in the concept of metamorphic power, for example, the ability to change into an animal. Moreover, the worship of the metaphysical forces was ritualistic rather than meditative, involving the
idea that the energy of the metaphysical forces had to be sustained by feeding, or sacrifice, and their benediction maintained by propitiation. The major religious ordeal was related to fire and the service of supplica-
tion involved drumming
and dancing. Ritualistic accessories included
rattles, bells and drums.! It is probably correct to say that African religion has been more
misunderstood and misinterpreted by early writers than any other part of African life. Unhappily, old misconceptions linger with us still, and are mirrored in terms like Black Magic, Hoodoo and Ju-ju .
From these beginnings, the African cults were reformed on American soil. The cults were soon banned in many areas, not entirely because of
religious activities, but for fear of “subversive activities” as well. The
fear was well qualified, for as Herbert Aptheker has noted, some one *“Things invisible to mortal sight.”
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
105
hundred thirty major slave revolts occurred between
1663 and 1865.!%
Christian churches and other organizations were also instrumental in obtaining prohibitive legislation, much of which remains on Southern law books today. There were anti-superstition campaigns which attempted to outlaw the playing of drums and certain dances such as the Bongo Dance of Trinidad, and the Bamboo-Tamboo
Bands. The Obeah Cult of Jamaica,
the Nafigos of Cuba, the Voodoo of Haiti and the Hoodoos of Louisiana,
have had similar histories in this aspect.’ Drums
played with bare hands have come
to symbolize the Afro-
cult worship in the Caribbean and South America. The drummer is the
link-pin of all Afro-cult worship.’
Whenever
a state has attempted to
eradicate cult worship, they have begun by forbidding the use of the drum. The
African
cults
in these
environments
were
and
are
breeding
grounds for many outstanding drummers. The cults are almost pure African in character, and some even sing many of their songs in African languages. Harassed
by
both
Iberian-Americans
and
Anglo-Americans,
the
Aframericans concealed their religious practices in places inaccessible
to “profane eyes.” Part B AFRICAN THEOLOGY There
were no written theological
but where there was by which the rituals secret ritual language in some West African
texts to which
no literature there were passed from was employed for religious cults. One
men
could
refer,
was a common oral tradition one generation to another. A this which can still be found finds that this ritual language,
now not used for any other purpose, was the tongue of the original home
of the cult. The language has been retained with the conservation of religion. Most West Africans below the Sahara are monotheistic in that one supreme being rules their universe. However, there are many secondary powers which they worship. The relationship of these forces to God and to man can be expressed by the diagram of a circumscribed triangle in a square. The symbol itself, in a large sense, can also represent the attributes and manifestations of God and the secondary deities.
106
DRUMS
The supreme
being--God
appeal
may
The
final resort—the
who
directly or through ancestors, or minor
be
last Court
IN THE AMERICAS
of
approached
intermediaries, deities. God is
thought to be very remote and is appealed to directly in time of great stress. \
\
Deities or natural forces which must he propitiated lest they be-
7 come
angry
the seasons
at neglect
to fail.
and
cause
SKY The Supreme power from all life Hows and returns.
which
A Goddess a producer of food and the burying place for the dead. On the earth lives man and his chiefs and Kings are rungs in the ladder between himself and God.
/
/
N
/
Man
beneath
the sky
lives on
the
land, not in a void, but as a sovereign vital force. It is his duty
On one side of the triangle are the
to replenish
ancestors rising up in the hierarchy by their increased powers—Dead Kings and Chiefs or their leaders and potent to help or harm.
it. He able Gods, man
the earth, and
subdue
seeks the help of every availpower, the spirits and the which share this earth with as with their friends.108
The square or rectangle is symbolically male. The male factor of God
is the
fatherly,
the kingly,
“the
Great
Friend,”
“The
Dependable
One” or “the Reliable One.” The circle is the symbol of God as representing sanctity, wisdom and
purity. It also represents creation or the Sun as it travels and shines on everything allowing creation to take place. The triangle represents the female aspect of life as the symbol of God.
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
107
Below this God are several tutelary deities. “The people that never die.” They are said to be the “officers of the court of God.” Along the West Coast of Africa, there is one tutelary deity for each day of the week, Their duty is to help God in giving man destiny, just before birth. A child before it is born has already received his personality — his spirit. ual aspect— from his father and his material self from his mother, but there has to be some parcel from God. This parcel is the “Soul” which
returns to God.
It possesses power
of motion, free will, and ability to
differentiate good, evil and time. The officers of the court hold the child to receive God’s parcel and when they release this child he or she is born, the child has incorporated in his name the name of the tutelary diety for the particular day. For example, a male child born on Friday would be named
Kwa-afi or Kofi
(Kwa-male) (afi tutelary deity for Friday). The Africans with traditional African beliefs do not believe in heaven or hell, but hold that the parcel in man given by God returns to a place of people who have finished performing their destiny or the cycle of existense. The good they have performed follows them back to the cycle of existence; the things in the cycle of existence are shadows of the things of life. The people who are “ashamed of their past” delay their return by wandering between the cycle of existence and the earth. The traditional African religion also worships minor deities in certain phenomena and forms, rivers, rocks, trees, mountains and chairs or stools of the dead.
The European only observed African religion superficially, he did not actually worship a serpent, tree or stone; he did however attribute a significant interpretation to the principle represented by these objects. The spirits of ancestors are worshiped, and those who were most powerful in life are believed to have retained that power—for either good or evil ends after life. This leads to elaborate funeral rites, for it is thought necessary to appease the spirits of the departed and assure their gocdwill by these observances. This has had a marked influence on Aframerican customs in the New World, as in the New Orleans funeral marches that were the cradle of jazz. Fetishism is the belief that possession of the charm, and observance
of the rituals and taboos associated with it, can procure the help and protection of the spirit that it represents. The charm itself, as a material object, is simply the symbol of a supernatural power. The fetish charm, in addition to doing good for the wearer, or owner, can also work harm
108
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
upon his enemy. Hence it becomes an instrument of so-called “blackmagic.”
Fate, theological — nothing is believed own case,
or destiny, is extremely important in relation to the African view. Fate rules the universe — everything is predetermined happens by chance or accident. Nevertheless, the individual to have a fighting chance to alter the course of destiny in his provided he can be forewarned in time to invoke the super-
natural intercession of some
deity to whom
he has duly worshiped.
If
one is a faithful follower, and observes all the rites of the cult, one may perhaps obtain “a better deal” from fate. Because of this belief, the art
of “divining”
(foretelling the future)
The Voodoo
is of the utmost importance.
of Haiti, to the average American, conjures up visions
of a frenzied jungle ceremony where at least one unfortunate human will have his blood spilled at the altar of some grinning pagan god, to the
thunderous accompaniment of crudely made drums. In reality, Voodoo is a West African religion, and not necessarily a rationale for murder. Hoodoo, like voudou or voodoo, is an all-embracing term which includes not only the African gods, but all rites, practices, priestesses, priests and the people who obey its teachings. Hoodoo refers properly to the Afri-
can cults that existed at one time in the United States. It is said that the first gathering place of the Hoodoo in New Orleans was an abandoned brickyard on Dumaine Street. In 1817, the Municipal Council of New Orleans issued an ordinance
forbidding slave gatherings for dancing, or any other purpose, except on Sundays and only in places designated by the Mayor." Congo Square
(today known as Beauregard Square) was established as the recognized place for such dances but only under police supervision. The slaves met there each Sunday afternoon for more than twenty years. At these meetings, a Hoodoo Queen was always present. George Cable, in his “The Dance in Place Congo” tells us that the instruments consisted of a large skin drum hewn from a solid log open at one end, and beaten with shank bones of sheep; a small drum called a “bamboula,” made from joints of bamboo; and empty keg barrels and rattles. The drums were laid along on the ground and the drummers bestrode the drums,
beating with hands,
bones, and feet. Other musicians
sat alongside, beating the sound chamber with sticks or turkey bones. The music was in a 5-tone scale, with a duple beat and accent on the
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
109
off-beat. The crude drums have long since been discarded, but the rhythm
still remains in the music in Louisiana.™ African cults worship a pantheon of gods of African origin and
identity. These gods are often associated with the saints of the Catholic Church, and in popular designation their names may occur interchange-
ably with Christian equivalents. Each cult group bears the name of what — in the idiom of cult worship — is called a nation, actually an African region from which a slave population was brought. A number of these cults have retained practices so close to the original that it is possible to identify the area of origin of the people. Each God has a certain day of the year when homage is paid him with song, rhythm, and ritual dance. The word “Yroco” in English means
silk cotton tree, which, in Lucumi, is the allegorical symbol of the “Santo
Shang6,” known
as the harvest warriors— the Lord and Master of fire
and war. Shangé is always represented as a powerful arrogant king, a fine
dancer, indefatigable, and respected in heroic feats and battle. In the Afro-Catholic Society, Shangé is known as Santa Barbara, the Patron
Saint of thunder, lightning and storms, as well as of the warriors and soliders. Damballah-Wédo is a benevolent snake spirit, who haunts the springs and climbs the trees in Haiti. Originally, in Dahomey, he was
described by the clergy as one of the many manifestations of Da, who is
less a divine person than a force, controlling all life and motion. St. Patrick, whose image is depicted with serpents, is thus associated with Damballah. Moses is held to be the “father of Damballah,” because of the
miracle he performed before Pharoah when he threw down his staff on the ground and it turned into a serpent. The different “tribes” or nations have tended to keep their traditions apart and distinct. Each cult had its own specific ritual language. The Congos, Araras, Lucumis,Macumbas,
Candibles, Shangés and Vou-
dons are first African and then American.!” One of the most striking elements in cult worship is the manner in which the gods are said to “possess” their devotees. Possession is actually an auto-hypnotic state in which the worshiper becomes highly
emotional, hysterical, and assumes strange patterns of behavior. “In the
United States we find this phenomenon
in some Aframerican
Protes-
tant, and white fundamentalist churches, where it is sometimes referred
to as ‘shouting.’ There is nothing singular about these crises, other than
110
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
the frequency and stress placed on them in cult worship. Similar cases are recorded again and again in the history of Christian mysticism. The scope of this work does not include judgment on the right or wrong of what is related, but one cannot fail to reflect. There is very little so bad
that something good does not come from it. This is also true of cult worship, in spite of the many attempts to eradicate it from the American scene. The cult offers the Afro-American peasant something to which he
can attach his hopes. No poverty-ridden society, if it is to preserve its
mental health, can omit this escape from reality.” On the surface “African Theology” might appear insignificant in the Americas, but in reality, it brought to life African music, song and dance
on American soil, and in time changed much of the music and dance of the world. It brought European music and dance in direct contact with those of the African, and produced a mulatto hybrid of rumbas, jazz, chacha-chas, sambas, plenas, merengiies, spirituals, charleston, gospel songs,
congas, sons, pachangas, and many other rhythms, songs and dances. The slaves worked together in the fields, singing their songs and the songs of their fathers and grandfathers. They used the new language perhaps, but the meanings were all ancient. They sang to the old deities from Dahomey and the Congo."* Music, dance and religious beliefs and practices seem to be the phases of African culture that have left the strongest traces in the New
World.
Music and dance, indeed, are often closely
allied with African religion. A knowledge of the religion of a people is
indispensable to an understanding of the indigenous mind and is fundamental to an understanding of their reactions to nature and man in the intense drama of history.
Part
AFRO-AMERICAN
C
DRUMMING
There are three drumming traditional styles found in the Americas: the European, the Amerindian and the African. Of these, the African style, without a doubt, has had the greatest influence on American music
as a whole. The traditional African style of drumming can be seen in brilliant
and virile form in Haiti, Surinam, Venezuela, Uruguay, Brazil, Trinidad,
Jamaica and other islands of the West Indies.’ It has survived in these areas, because of the continued cult worship in which drums played an essential part. Cults, or religious sects, were organized and derived from
AFRICAN AND AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
111
a background of African theology and ceremonialism. These societies actually were continuations of organizations existing in Africa. While we refer to these organizations as cults or religions, to the Africans they represented both and more; they were a way of life." Having been reduced to servitude, his gods had been offended and he feverishly set about making retribution. At the beginning he practiced: privately, but gradually developed a social fetishistic ritual, and thus established one of the most precious aspects of his life. The last stronghold of pure African rhythms in the Americas is relegated to cult worship, although even this tends to be corrupted more every day. cult
Drums, iron implements and rattles are indispensable to the modern dance.
The
drums
used
are the hollow-log
African :type, played
with hands and sticks, in batteries of three. The iron implement usually consists of a hoe blade, plow share, or bell struck with a large spike. The rattle is a calabash containing seeds or pebbles. The iron, or bell, sets the basic steady beat around which the more complex drum rhythms are played. The smallest drum takes the beat from the iron and the rattle. Next comes the medium-tuned drum, which plays a counter. rhythm to the
small one. The deep-tuned tinually changing patterns.
Cult drums
dance;
drum
is the solo instrument,
are not casual and incidental
they are a vital elemental source. The
playing con-
accoutrements
“power”
of the
of the drums
is
conferred upon them by means of painstakingly performed rituals. They
are baptized to dedicate them to particular Gods. Each is given a godfather and godmother, and a proper name.'” Each year the drums are dressed, “fed” and reconfirmed, so they will not lose power. The food used in feeding the drums is blood, palm oil, honey and purified water.
It is the practice to dress and put the drums in the place of worship the day before the ritual. After the ceremony of the drums is performed,** the food is left and candles burn all night in the room. Drums that have been consecrated are not generally loaned and their sale is not permitted. Not only have the African drums persisted, but even the sticks and auxiliary instruments are almost identical in shape and technique. Goatskin headed drums are played with hands, and cowhide drums with sticks. The practice of drumming with drums between the legs and beating *a. In Brazil this baptism is done with the holy water from the Catholic church.
112
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
the head with bare hands is considered to be of African origin, and all
the cults in the Americas use this method in one form or another.*> The “Shango” cult of Trinidad carries the name of the African lord of thunder and lightning —- the cult derived from the beliefs among the people of Nigeria, particularly the Yoruba and fused with Catholicism. The Priestesses are called “Mambas.”!"* A Shango feast in Trinidad today will likely be set in the backyard of a Mamba’s house. The drummers
are seated
behind
a set of three ritual drums,
Ogun,
Omele,
and
Shango. Nearby are drummers who will replace the tired ones, and young
boys who are fascinated by the drums but not yet skilled enough to play at a public rite. On the ground, there is in front of the drums, a lighted candle. This candle is extinguished by each devotee who in the first throes
of “Possession” comes to dance before the drums. The candle is relighted each time by the Mamba. The lead drummer, who plays the deep-toned
drum, responds to the rhythm called for at a particular time by the Mamba or indicated by the pantomime of the dancing devotee. The atmosphere is hypnotic and watched over by the keen eyes of the Mamba, who continually seeks out signs of possession, as hour after hour, she never al-
lows the excitement to lag.
Legal sanctions against the drum produced, throughout the Americas,
a host of subterfuge methods to obtain the same rhythmic effects. Handclapping and foot-tapping in spirituals and “sankeys”; shouting in
churches, as a substitution for “possession”; inverting an empty basin or calabash over a tub containing water and beating out tempos on a legally accepted vessel. In Trinidad unsuspected joints of bamboos were used for percussion and an “orchestra” was built of several joints of bamboo, cut to various lengths for tonal effects, and called Bamboo-Tamboo, from
the French “tambour” or Spanish “tambor.”
The presence of so many African instruments used in the Americas
is tangible enough evidence of residual African cultural traits: the use
of the giiro, claves, bell, or iron, log drums, marimbas, gourd (cabaga), jawbone (quijada) and sticks (palillos), is part of the evidence we find
in the Americas. In the dances we find: the Conga of Cuba and the Palapala and Chacarera of Argentina; in languages we find words like mambo,
rumba, gumbo, yam, etc., and in the work habits, the carrying of objects on the head (allowing the hands to hang free), and chanting at work.
*b. It is an incontrovertible fact that the present-day bare hand drummers have been, and often still are, in some way connected with cult practices or trained by cult drummers.
AFRICAN
AND
AFRAMERICAN
INFLUENCE
113
Gradually, the African element participated in American life— on farms, as servants in city homes, as laborers in the streets. Subtly their influence began to be felt and soon their contributions started to filter through. European-American popular and: classical music accepted syncopation. Clapping of hands on off-beats as, for example,
is
quite
common
in
North
America
today,
is
still
foreign
to
the
European tradition. With the beginning of the move for liberation, the Aframerican on the other hand, aware of his new position, gradually started to abandon his old ways and to take on those of the European. SUMMARY: No one would deny the influence of Aframerican rhythm in the music of the Americas, or the extraordinary vitality with which it has survived in different forms of folk and popular music, both religious and secular. The Aframerican element can be clearly discerned in such examples as the Cuban religious music, the work and the dance song and the “son,” the Trinidadian’s music for the Shango cults and even the Calypso;
the North
ragtime and jazz; the Candombe
American’s
“shout,”
spirituals, blues,
and Milonga of Argentina; the Samba
of Brazil; the Bomba of Puerto Rico; the Bamboula of the Virgin Islands
and also the religious and secular music of Surinam — all are strongly
marked with the African influence. The obvious relationship to West African music found in the Charleston and Ragtime rhythms of the United States, cannot be ignored. The relationship is sometimes so close that we
find identical
features
in different
countries.
Many
of these
dances and rhythms have retained their African names, for example: Batuque,
lambo,
Conga,
Macumba,
Rumba,
Yambii
Somba, and
Bomba,
Samba.
Fandango,
Candomblé,
Ma-
114
DRUMS
PLATE ItI — AFRO-AMERICAN DRUMS Congas Quinto Cota Bata Pilén Tamba Bongées Bata
IN THE AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Conga
115
PLATE V, #1— CUBAN BATTERY Timbales Giliro (Reco-Reco)
PLATE V, #2— PETRO Ti-Baka
Juba Asson
DRUMS
(HAITI)
Gras Baka
Bongés
IN THE
DRUMS
116
ie
PLATE V, #3 — PARADE
Field Drum
Scotch
Bass
DRUM
(COURTESY OF DRUM CITY)
PLATE VI, #4— MYDOL Signal
Drum
DRUM
SET
Tenor
SET (JAMAICA)
Festival Drum
Flute
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE VI, #5— CUBAN CONGA DRUM SET Quinto Tumbador Conga Mambisa
PLATE VI, #6 — CUBAN BATA SET (LUCUMI CULT) Amelé Itétele Ateheré (Cabaca) Iya
117
118
DRUMS
PLATE VII, #7 — TIMPANO SET Pedal Type Hand Type Screw Type (COURTESY OF DRUM CITY)
IN THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
119
PLATE VII, #8 — SHANGO DRUM SET (TRINIDAD) Chacha (Maracas) Bembo Congo Amalie
Saka-saka
PLATE VII, #9 — SURINAM Apinti Loango Dra (Snake Giiiro)
BATTERY Kauna Dra
120
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE VIU, #10— EARLY AMERICAN INSTRUMENTS (U S.A.) Courd Rattle Harmonica Sheep Shanks — Banjo Tom-Tom Bel Tambouye (Quijada) a Jaw Bone = Jew’s Harp Bone Flut i Quills ws ones Comb Triangle
PLATE VIII, #1) — PANAMANIAN DRUM SET Repicador Pujador Requinto Guachara (Reco-Reco)
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
121
PLATE VIII, #12— RADA Segonde
Bula
DRUM
Manman
SET (HAITI)
122
DRUMS
IN THE
PLATE IX, #13 — STEEL DRUMS OF TRINIDAD Ping Pong Second Pan Guitar Pan
PLATE IX, #14 — BRAZILIAN
Tarol Surdo Ganza
Botija (Botiiao)
PARADE
Zambumba Queixada Chocalho
DRUMS (Quijada)
AMERICAS
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE IX, #15 — ATABAQUES (BRAZIL) Rumpi Le Rum Frijideiro Pitodo Agogo
123
124
DRUMS
PLATE X, #16 — MODERN Floor Tom Bass
Snare
JAZZ SET
Bass Tom
IN THE
Top Hat
Cymbals
(COURTESY OF DRUM CITY)
PLATE X, #17 — NANIGO DRUM BATTERY (CUBA) Ekue Kuchi yerema Eribé Enkrikamo Obiapa Binkomé Bonké Ekuenén Empeg6
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE XI, #18— BOLIVIAN PARADE (LINARES) “Cajas” and “Panpipes” on parade
PLATE XI, #19 — PASADENA PARADE (PASADENA, CALIF.) Tambourines in parade
125
126
DRUMS
PLATE XI, #20 — WONTEVIDEO Chico
Snare
IN THE AMERICAS
PARADE (CARNIVAL MONTEVIDEO, Repique and Piano
PLATE XI, #21 — MARINE Tom Drum Tenor Tom
PARADE (US.A.) Cymbals
URUGUAY)
Scotch Bass
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE
127
XII, #22 — GIANT Cumaco
DRUMS
N. Assotor
(IN-THE AMERICAS) Assolor
128
DRUMS
PLATE XII, #23— TLAPANHUEAUETL (TOLUCA, (COURTESY OF EL MUSEO DE ARQUEOLOGIA E HISTORIA DEL ESTADO DE MEXICO)
PLATE XII, #24— FRAME Pandero
Tamborin Pandereta
DRUMS
IN THE
MEXICO)
Tambourine Sewyak Pandeiro
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
129
PLATE XIII, #25 — SINGLE-HEADED DRUMS Curbeta Banjo Drum (Viola) Gumbe Maracas
PLATE XIII, #26 — SINGLE-HEADED DRUMS Cajero Ka Catalier
130
DRUMS
PLATE XIII, #27 — SINGLE-HEADED Mellicin
Tumbilla Balcié Tambi
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
131
PLATE XIII, #28 — SINGLE-HEADED Tambi
Boku
PLATE XIV, #29 — TWO-HEADED Tambora Caja Tambor Guayo
DRUMS
Matrimonial
Rabardage
DRUMS Tymale
132
DRUMS
PLATE XIV, #30 — TWO-HEADED Tombe Tinya Maracas
AMERINDIAN Bombo Caja
PLATE XIV, #31 — Pang Kou
Tao Kou
Dak Kou
Pang Kou
IN THE
DRUMS
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
133
PLATE XV, #32 — TWO-HEADED Tang Kou Tibet Trumpet
Uchiwa
Pahuiti
Tau-Kou
ASIAN DRUMS
Dedjeridoo
Odieko
PLATE XV, #33 -- DREAM
DANCE
DRUM
134
DRUMS
PLATE XV, #34— POW
PLATE Triangle
Musik
WOW
DRUM
XVI, #35
Di Zumbi
Benta
Cachoe
IN THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE XVI, #36 — TAMBOR
135
AND PITO (MEXICO)
DRUMS
136
PLATE XVI, #37
Taikos
Chang Ko
Ok-tsusumi
PLATE XVII, #38 — Kubu Dhol
Bongo
IN THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
137
PLATE XVII, #39 Laced Square Drum
Tambor
HAND
DRUMS (AMERINDIAN) Chippewa Medicine Drum Sioux War Drum
PLATE XVII, #40 — Sioux Hannd Drum Ground Rattle
De Tloxcula
Deer Hoof Rattle
138
DRUMS
Musiic Sticks Bullroarer
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE XVII, #41 — Pahu (Oceanic Kettledrum) Puili
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE XVIII, #42 --OCEANIC KETTLEDRUMS Puhi-Hula Puhi Puniu
Tasa
PLATE XVIII, #43 — (Trinidad) Tasa (British Guiana)
139
140
DRUMS
PLATE XVIII, #44—AMERINDIAN Kultrum
(Araucanion)
PLATE XIX, #45— WATER Timbal
DRUMS
de Barro Peyote
IN THE
KETTLEDRUM Chaco
(AMERINDIAN)
Potawatomi
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
141
‘a PLATE XIX, #46 — (CURACAO) Bastel (Drummer) Chapi (PHOTO BY VAN F. FISCHER)
(Player)
PLATE XX, #47 — FRICTION DRUMS El Coco de Efik Obutén Ayotl
142
aera
DRUMS
|
PLATE Kinfuiti
XX, #48 — FRICTION
Furruco
Cuica
Basse
Puita
DRUMS
IN
THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN
THE
AMERICAS
PLATE XXI, #49 — SKINLESS DRUMS Tambor Semeistico (Manhuaré) (COURTESY OF PERUANESTICO)
143
144
DRUMS
a
any
1) arty pp
oer
hak
vy
LL
Ted,
ay
hd bdls
|
775
; dan dt Lbi dian
‘
M14a 144 Add.
iis: LDP
ae
My
7,7
vy
PLATE XXI, #50 — BASKET DRUM
IN THE AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
145
PLATE XXI, #51 — Concha de Tortuga Bastel
PLATE XXII, #52 — Jicara de Agua Signal Horn Flute
Raspador
146
DRUMS
Quinto Box
PLATE XXII, #53 — Bongon Bombam Bamboo
Tamboo
PLATE E] Cata
Tatu
Cajita
XXII, #54— La Guagua
IN THE AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
147
PLATE XXII, #55 — TEPONAZTLI (TOLUCA, MEXICO) (COURTESY OF EL. MUSEO DE ARQUEOLOGIA E HISTORIA DEL ESTADO DE MEXICO)
PLATE
Tullis
Lali
XXIII, #56 —
Touette
Ipu
148
DRUMS
PLATE XXII, #57 — MOKUGYO
PLATE XXIV, #58 — Stamping Tube Ipu Hula
IN THE
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
PLATE XXIV, #59 — KALOOKOCK (BOX DRUM) (COURTESY OF NOME MUSEUM)
149
150
DRUMS
Pechu Di Calumba
PLATE XXIV, #60 — Tambour Maringouin
IN THE AMERICAS
(Mosquito Drum)
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
PLATE
Chocalho
151
XXV, #61 — DRUM
Marimbula Sansa
Atcheré
ACCESSORIES
Cabaca
PLATE XXV, #62 — Stamping Tubes
(Mbira or Thumb
Piano)
Flute
Asson
Vaccines
152
DRUMS
IN THE
PLATE XXV, #63 — Claves Akoge
Brake
Chapi
Drum
PLATE XXVI, #64— San Martini
Gangarria
Gonkogui Agan Cymbal
Agogos
Triangle
AMERICAS
THE
AMERICAS
cal
IN
ng somone
DRUMS
PLATE XXVI, #65 — DRUM STICKS Asian-American European-American Aframerican
PLATE XXVI, #66 — AMERINDIAN
DRUMSTICKS
Lo4
DRUMS
PLATE XXVII, #67 -— RATTLES Rattles
Turtle Shell Rattle Maracas
Cha Cha
IN
THE
AMERICAS
UARISISOUCEOR GSE CRICASSRLORANCOUURACa sc c ae saeauaaacaecai aa ccacseecni i
etneaecncunenina
DRUMS IN THE AMERICAS
Guayo
PLATE XXVII, #68 — Wiri Reco Reco Giiro
155
Rasp Sticks
156
DRUMS
Ndango Ngoma
Ngalabi
Ndere
IN TIE
PLATE XXVIII, #69 — (Harp) Bambala (Flute)
Ndingidi
(Fiddle)
PLATE XXVIII, #70 — Tamalee Brekepe Dundun
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
157
PLATE XXVIII, #71 — Odomankoma Atsimevu Mpentima
Turu
Bongon Ser Tehen Mbira
(Banga)
(Sansa)
PLATE XXIX, #72 —
Ngoma
Darabukkas
Trough Zither Gwa-Ini Abyssinian Kettledrum
158
DRUMS
PLATE Lujongo
Pedi Moropa
IN THE
XXIX, #73 —
African
Mortar
Haitian
Mortar
Acoli Lace Drum
AMERICAS
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
PLATE XXIX, #74— THE NTUMPANE
159
(TALKING DRUM OF THE ASHANTD)
11 AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
African rhythms are the most obvious contribution made by the Afro-American to American jazz, popular and folk music. However, African
they
may
be,
it is no
less true
that
Afro-American
rhythm
patterns have been thoroughly conditioned by the dominant culture in which they have developed. Thus calypso patterns differ from samba, rumba, and jazz patterns, and so forth. Most Afro-American societies use hand-clapping
and foot-tapping,
iron rattles, bells, spoons, brake drum, and hoes as common accompanying instruments. Most of the drums are barrel-shaped, single-headed instruments played with bare hands, but two-headed instruments do exist and in some areas sticks are used as well as hands. All those countries having African drumming traditions favor drum-sets and batteries. A set consists of two or more drums, generally three drums, one to carry the basic beat, one to play a counter rhythm, and one to improvise in free rhythm. . Drums within a set differ only in size: the diameter of the head and foot, and the thickness of the head. Otherwise, they are the same. The
difference within a set is to allow different pitches (the larger the opening the thicker the skin of an instrument, the deeper the tones). The Afro-American drums are not definite pitched instruments, but they are played within a tight tonal range, which differs from one area
to another. This range can be altered by heating, wetting or tightening and loosening the head. 160
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
161
Besides drum “sets” we find Afro-American “batteries,” a mixture of different types of drums. In a battery, we find two-head drums used
with single-head instruments of different sizes and shapes. The Afro-American
subcultures divide into thirteen musical areas.
The unique acculturation process occurring between the cultures involved affects the music and the instruments in each. The areas are designated
as Brazil,
British
Guiana,
America;
Honduras
and
Surinam,
Panama
Uruguay,
and
Venezuela
in Central America;
in South
Cuba,
Curacao
and Aruba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, the English-speak-
ing islands: Haiti and the French West Indies in the Caribbean; and the
United States in North America.
BRAZIL Brazilian folk music is of great brilliance. Even though its music
has attained an original ethnical expression, its sources are of foreign
derivations — it is Amerindian, European, and African. Its drums and rhythms are predominantly African in origin. The Batuque, the Coco, the Samba,
the
Congada,
the Jongo,
the
Lundi,
the
Maracatd,
and
many
other dances are from African dialects rather than from any European or
Indian source. Most of the dances mentioned stem from fetishistic ritual of Macumba, also known under the name of Candomblé, Babacué, Catimbé,
and Pagelanga. These dances and paganism establish the link between
Africa
and
Brazil.
Brazilian
Folk
orchestras
possess
a rich choice
of
indigenous instruments, but the greatest part of the native orchestra consists of drums, shakers, and scrapers of African origin.
Afro-Brazilian drums, three in a set, are the traditional Afro-American types. Drums sometimes bear different names in different regions of Brazil, such as the tambi or tambor, the caxambi (bass-drum), the tabaqué or atabaqué (high drum), the trocano (the jungle drum made out of a hollow tree trunk). The
cults
of
Brazil
are
Orixds and the Candomblés,
dances,
are used.
the
Alufas
Cambindas
of
Mohammedan
or Macumbas.
origin,
the
In all of them,
songs, and characteristic instruments according to the rituals
Atabaqués — Brazilian Cult Drum Sets: Atabaqués or tambaque is the generic term for barrel-shaped drums in Brazil. The Candomblés of Bahia use a group of three for their cult dances. The Macumbas of Rio de Janeiro are the counterpart of the
162
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Afro-Brazilian cult of Bahia and use the same instrument in their worship.’”° The rum or ilu is the largest drum of the atabaqué set of three. It is a single membrane instrument about thirty-one inches long, twelve inches in diameter
at the head,
and nine inches
in diameter
across the
base. It is barrel shaped and made from staves. The cowhide or deer-
hide is folded around a wire flesh ring. Just below the belly of the drum,
a body ring is placed to fit loosely. The skin and the flesh ring are laced
to the body
ring.
To
tune
and
secure
hand
stick. Originally these
the head,
wedges
are
forced
between the body ring and the body. The instrument is used to beat the rhythms of cult dances and contact the divinities. It is played with one and a
instruments
were
hewn
from
logs,
but today they are made from barrel staves. The method of attaching the head to the body differs in various localities depending on the practice of the cult. The wedge-tensed drum is referred to as “cunha type.” When
the skin is attached to pegs they
are called “de torno types.” The atabaqués are held in a tilted position between the legs and played with the drummer (alabe) seated. The rumpi is the second instrument of the trio or “terno.” Its construction is the same as the rum, but smaller in diameter, the mouth about eight inches in diameter and the foot six inches in diameter
across. Occasionally, the height is slightly less than the rum. The rumpi carries the counter beat. The lé is the smallest of the atabaqué “‘terno.” It carries the basic rhythm and is played with one hand and one stick or two sticks. These instruments, as a rule, are sanded and varnished;
carved,
but sometimes
found
painted
with
they are seldom
symbols.
(See
if ever
Pl.
IX —
of Brazil —a
small
No. 15) The rumpi and 1é are generally played with two thick sticks. Cuica
(Omelé):
A cone-shaped friction drum
instrument with a shaft connected to or piercing the head. The shaft placed in the body is pulled by the drummer with a resin rag in his hand. The other hand is used to support the instrument and dampen the head when necessary. The skin is nailed to the body but in recent years tension brackets have replaced the tacks, thereby making tuning a simpler task. This instrument was called “puita” in Africa, and “zambomba” in Spain and Puerto Rico. Zambomba
is an African word and many claim
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
163
that it was brought into Spain by the Moors. The “cuica” is very popular in Brazil for marking the Samba rhythm. (See Pl. XX — No. 48) Friction
Drums
—In
the
Americas,
the
friction
drums
are
those instruments whose heads or bodies are set in motion by rubbing with the hands, fingers, or some mechanical intermediate
device, like a cord, stick, or reed. Non-friction drums are struck. The stick, reed, or cord may
pass through the skin; or it may
be only connected to the skin; or it might be contacting the membrane or body causing the instrument to vibrate when the stick, cord, or reed is rubbed with resinous fingers. In some
cases, the
skin is rubbed directly with resinous fingers. Most of the friction drums are modified membranophones, but we do find idiophone friction drums. The modification comes in
construction and methods of playing.
In many cases, these drums are associated with fertility and initiation rites. The friction drums come in various shapes and
sizes and are found in Europe and Africa as well as in America. Probably the four most popular friction drums in the Americas are the “furrucos” of Venezuela, the “cuica” of Brazil, and the ‘“‘basse”
and the “mosquito” drum of Haiti — generally referred to as a ground harp, which is plucked as well as rubbed. Most of the friction drums in the Americas were of African origin with a few exceptions. The turtle-shell friction drums are thought to be of Amerindian origin. BRITISH GUIANA (GUYANA) On the northeast coast of South America
between
Venezuela,
Suri-
nam and Brazil we find the only country where English is the official language in South America. It is a land of approximately a half million
people, Africans, Amerindians,
Chinese, East Indians, Portuguese, Euro-
peans and mixed people. Culturally, they are associated with the British speaking isles of the Caribbean. They have much in common and this is particularly true of their music. The Afro-Guianese are the largest ethnic group with the East Indians crowding them a close second. Musically, the greatest influence
has been the Europeans and Africans. The Guianese do not have a great drumming tradition but European, Amerindian, Asian and African drums are prominent. There are
164
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
two festivals held in British Guiana that revolve about the drum:
the
tadjoh festival and the cumfa ceremony.
The cumfa dance or ceremony is held on the first of August. The
cumfa
ceremony
has been traced back
to the Kromanti
African
tribe
ritual of moon worship. Locally the cumfa is attributed to being the same as a spirit seance or invoking of the spirits. Musical instruments and song play a great part in the ceremony
as well as dancing, which is the most intriguing with foot stomping by
most of the men. Five or six drums are used with a lead drummer setting the rhythm. Cumfa
Drum
single-head
instrument
Congo —- The
Set:
smallest
inches across the head.
of the cumfa
standing
about
set. A
twenty
small
inches
barrel-shaped
high
and
eight
Bongo — same type instrument as the congo but two inches higher.
Bam-benga (or the tutta) — Stands just under thirty inches and ten inches in diameter. Cut drum — A long slender thirty-two-inch barrel with an eightinch head. Jaw drum—A single goat-skin head drum with a fourteen-inch head and a twenty-inch high body.
All five drums and the sixth which duplicates one or the other of the
regular set are played with bare hands. Either drum
solo instrument; drummer
can be used as a
it depends on the rhythm and which drum the lead
is playing when a
solo is desirable.
SURINAM The Afro-Americans in Surinam can be divided into three groups. One group is found in the urban areas. They use different instruments, have
a different way
of life, and
their music
reflects this. The
two
re-
maining groups are found in the bush. There are two tribes, the Djuka and Sardmaka; both began during slavery. They are descendants of
runaway slaves, who banded together and resisted all outsiders, develop-
ing their own culture and way of life. The outside world culture has affected their cultural patterns very little. The
city
dwellers
have
retained
many
of their
Africanisms,
but
have developed differently due to the foreign surroundings which their kinsmen of the bush have rejected. Even with these differences, musical instruments and rhythm are similar.
their
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
165
Surinam Batteries and Sets: Drums are the most important
instrument
culture in the small country of Dutch Guiana
in the all Afro-Bush
(Surinam). The virtuosity
of performance and intricacies of rhythm indicate long practice. The drums have more than a musical significance. They are used to summon
their gods, their ancestors, and to articulate the messages of these supernatural beings. They are also used to send them back to their habitats at the end of the ceremonies. One of their most important expressions of worship is dancing. The dancers move toward the drums in recognition of the voice of the God or ancestor within the instrument.” “The Afros” of the bush of Surinam have several types of drums: The Apinti Set: This drum is the principal ritual instrument. It is a single-headed, footed, wide-bellied drum. The head is made from goatskin and sewed to a cord flesh ring. This flesh ring is laced to pegs inserted in the body of
the instrument. By knocking these pegs down, the skin is tensed. The body is hewn from a log carved with a snake design which has ritualistic significance. The head measures eight inches, across the belly twelve inches,
at the
foot two
inches
in height,
and
four
inches
in diameter.
The apinti drum comes in three sizes. The small one is called Bolula and the medium-sized Apinti is referred to as the Nanda, and the large
one, Apinti. (See Pl. VII — No. 9) The natives of the bush retain jealously the customs of their fore-
fathers and practice an African religion referred to as Kromanti,
or
Winte. It is similar to the type of practices found in Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, Trinidad and Jamaica, with, of course, its own peculiar local variation.
African drums as well as other African paraphernalia are also found in these areas. The Winte cult orchestra is made up of an iron (a kind of
triangle),
a Kwakwa,
two
Apinti
drums,
a Podya
drum,
and
Mandra
(Man drum), and a large Agida drum, accompanied by singing, clapping and dancing. The drums
of the city dwellers are not identical
to those of the
bush people; this is mainly due to materials available, and the traditions of the urbanites against the country people. The Djuka’s apinti drum is not carved, but is similar in other respects. With the left hand carrying an irregular motif used to confound the uninitiated, the right hand carries the message. The drums will carry for two or three miles
166
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
when the wind is right, and can be relayed from village to village. A code pattern is used of long and short beats.” It is also the solo instrument, sturdy, strong, and unique in design in the Americas.
The Yorubas of Nigeria have a set of drums called Apinti almost identical with this instrument. They use it for dancing and talking. They are used in sets of three:
Lya Ilu keeps played.’
on
talking
the Lya Ilu, the Emele, and the Agago. The
in proverbs
when
dance
music
is being
Agida Drum — The Afro-Surinam bass drum dominates the rhythm
of the Surinam battery with a steady beat after it has established and held the basic rhythm. This drum is sacred to the snake deities and is used to call them. Agidas are usually large, about six to eight feet long and twleve to fifteen inches in diameter. They are played with one hand and one crooked stick and have a one-piece body made from a
log. They
are cylindrical
and
without
decoration.
The
goat-skin
head
is secured to a cord flesh ring which is laced to a body ring about eight
inches from the top. Wedges are used to tense the skin, and the agida is
placed on the ground lengthwise for playing. The Loango Dra or Long Drum — This is the medium-sized drum of Surinam, used by the townspeople. It stands thirty inches high, with an eight-inch head, a five-inch foot, and tapers to a four-inch diameter foot. The membrane is secured to a cord flesh ring which is tied to pegs inserted in the body. It is placed horizontally on the ground and played
with sticks on the head. Padya Drum — A peg-headed drum similar to the Apinti, but the body has a different shape. It is hewn from a log; the base tapers slightly to form a foot. It is used in Surinam by the Kromanti and is about third in size in the five battery orchestra. (See Pl. VII— No. 9) Kauna Dra: A two-headed drum found in Surinam. The box is hewn from a log. The heads are lapped over a flesh ring and secured by a rattan counter ring. The two counter rings are laced together across the body in a “W” form. It is played hung from the neck with the
left hand playing the left head and the right hand the right head. The instrument is eight inches in inches long. Kwakwa: An idiophone drum made from a the only drum women are permitted to play in
playing with a stick on diameter and eighteen
hard top bench, and is the Surinam Kromanti
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
167
group. It is played with two sticks and with the agida drum, the rattle, and the iron (a kind of triangle) set the rhythm for the music. A man of the bush has to have the proper spirit before he can address the god of the tree from which the drum is to be made. When
he has felled the tree, he cuts off the part he desires to use. Over it he pours the blood of a cock and sweet rum. When the body of the drum has been fashioned, the people gather and sing. When the drum is completed, the maker sings his song alone.
URUGUAY The music of Uruguay is European with very little Amerindian of Afro-Uruguayian influence reported, but we do find Amerindian and Afro-Uruguayian instruments.
Chico, Repique, Piano Set: These are three single-headed congotype drums of Uruguay. The heads are made from cowhide or goatskin and are tacked to the body, which is made from staves. These barrel-
shaped drums stand from thirty to and one-half to nine and one-half to seven and one-half inches across hand and one stick. The left hand against the body and head with the
thirty-six inches high and are seven inches across and five and one-half the foot. They are played with one strikes the head and a stick is used right. The shells are brightly painted.
These Afro-Uruguayian instruments are very prominent nual carnival in Montevideo. (See Pl. XI — No. 20) Aboriginal Amerindian,
VENEZUELA Colonial
Spanish,
during the an-
and the Afro-American
make up racial ingredients of Venezuela’s musical folklore. The folk music consists of two distinct types. The coastal music has a predominant Afro-Venezuelan influence characterized by a great variety and complexity of rhythms, preference for a minor mode,
simultaneous
use of
duplets and triplets, etc. In the plains we find music brought by the Spanish colonists. Venezuelan rhythms, designed for dance, are kinetic and its melodies intriguing. An Amerindian as well as an Afro-American drumming tradition exists. Cumaco Drum: A Venezuelan instrument taking its name from a Carib word meaning ant —a
kind of ant found in the tree from which the body of the
drum is made.
The body is five and one-half to six and one-half feet long. The head is nailed to the body and must be heated for tension. The drum has to
168
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
be laid horizontally when played, while the drummer sits astride, extending the head out between his legs.!"* One drummer plays the head with bare hands, another drummer plays upon the body with sticks. The cumaco is commonly played in conjunction with a small drum and maracas, and one or two singers. This instrument is found in the countryside more frequently than in the towns and is thought to be Afro-Venezuelan. It is similar in construction
and in methods of playing to the mula of Cuba and the agida of Surinam. (See Pl. XII — No. 22)
Curbeta Drum Battery — The basic rhythm keeper for the “Big Drum Golpe.” The curbeta is a three-footed cylindrical drum, hewn from a log found in Venezuela. It has a single head of goatskin and is played with the hands. Occasionally, it is played with the cumaco or the mina drum. These drums are generally played in pairs, one large and one small. The unusual thing about this instrument is the method used to tense the skin. The skin or head is attached to a flesh hoop or rope. The flesh hoop and skin are laced to knobbed pegs, which are inserted in square holes in the body of the instrument. On both sides of the pegs, wedges are placed; forcing them down the pegs in turn tense the skin. The curbetas range from twenty to thirty inches in height and nine and one-half to twelve inches in diameter. (See Pl]. XIII—
No. 25)
The songs and principal beats accompanied by drums are referred
to as “golpes,” by the Afro-Venezuelans.
These golpes have their own
popular names by which they are distinguished. In Barlovento, the central zone near the Venezuelan coast, the “golpe” of the round drum, and the “golpe” of the big drum or “mina” drum are found. On the coast, in and around
Caracas,
in the State of Aragiia,
and the State of
Carabobo, there are “golpes” whose names are derived from the words used in the song or chant; for example: “Maria estaba lavando,” (The Virgin
Mary
was
washing),
“El
Alabado”
(the
Sainted
one).
There
are many other types like the “sangueo,” used for religious processions in the State of Aragiia.’*
The golpe of the big drum is executed on two types of drums or a battery; a large dug-out log, called “mina” and a fairly small drum called a “curbeta” or “curbata.” Both drums have dried skin heads.
The mina when played is supported on two sticks crossed in the form of
an ‘X’ and the curbata is placed beside it standing on its own three feet which form a triangle. A third percussion element is produced by beating
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
169
the held has the
“mina” with two small sticks called “laures.” The basic rhythm is by the curbata which is constant with very few breaks. The “mina” complete freedom. The singer adds to the flavor with the playing of maracas. Redondo Drum Set: There are three round drums in this Venezuelan set used for golpes of the round drum; the “corrido” maintains the basic rhythm while the other two, called “cruzao” and “pujao” or “curbata” are played with full rhythmic liberty. The instruments are from one-and-a-half to two feet in diameter, and from ten to eighteen inches in height. The two dried skin heads are laced across a wooden body, and the drums
are played with sticks.’ Furruco: A friction drum of Venezuela. Of Afro-American origin, it is a three-footed instrument hewn from a log. The laced head has three strings running diagonally and loosely over the head.
The external friction stick is looped by the three strings running across the head and held in the upright position in the center of the
head. The small thin-jointed reed used for a friction stick is rubbed down by right and left hands alternately. The hands are dampened or resined to make the friction more effective.
There are two types of furrucos found in Venezuela. Both types have
external
friction
sticks,
but
in
one,
the
reed
is attached
to the
head, and in the other type the friction sticks are in contact with the head.
The furruco averages twenty to twenty-five inches in height and
eight inches in diameter. The head is laced to a metal body ring nailed to the cylindrical body about seven inches below the mouth. The head
is generally made from goatskin with hair only partially removed. In Colombia, a similar instrument is referred to as “casuco.”
—No.
(See Pl. XX
48)
Mayer or Arriero
(Respondén Set):
The largest of a set of three drums found in Venezuela. The body
is hewn from a solid log and is covered on one end with a skin wrapped
about a flesh ring. The flesh ring and the skin are laced to a body ring
of rope a few inches from the bottom. The hemp-cord lacing starts with the body ring and passes up under the flesh ring and along the top
170
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
of the flesh ring for four inches, then down behind the flesh ring to the body ring where it is looped up again. In order to tune the skin, wedges are forced between the body and the body ring. It is played with one bare hand and a cylindrical stick. The
head is made from deer-hide, and mayor comes in three sizes: Medio Mayor. The mayor is approximately mouth, about thirty-two inches in base. The media golpe is similar in twenty-five
inches
high,
seven
the body is made of balso wood. The Golpe, Segundo Tambor Mayor, and ten inches in diameter across the height, and seven inches across the construction, but smaller. It is about
inches
in diameter
at the mouth,
and
five inches across the base. The segundo tambor mayor is approximately twenty-seven inches high, nine inches across the mouth, and seven inches across the base, and
constructed similarly to the other two. Requinto: The requinto is similar to the mayor, except the lacing and the sizes differ. The goat-skin head is attached to a flesh ring. The flesh ring is held in place by a counter hoop of half-round rattan. This counter hoop (tapdron) is laced to the body ring of sisal around the lower end of the instrument. The requinto comes in three sizes. The requinto stands thirty-four inches in height, ten inches in diameter across the mouth, and eight inches across the base. The next size is thirty-one inches high, nine inches in diameter
across the head,
and six inches in diameter across the base. The requinto entero is twenty-nine inches in height, eleven inches at the head, and has a seven-inch base. The medio requinto is ap-
proximately thirty inches in height, nine inches in diameter at the head,
and six inches across the base. The requinto is played with a thin rattan stick called Camuri and
one bare hand. The mayor,
requinto, tamborita
or tambor,
and clarinet
are used together in the Feast of San Benito in Venezuela.
Tambora:
two-headed
proximately
A generic term in Latin-American countries for a
instrument played with sticks. In Venezuela, twenty-seven
inches
in
diameter,
nineteen
it is ap-
inches
in
height, and the skins are attached to a flesh ring. The two heads are held in place by a counter ring laced across the body. In
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
171
Panama, the flesh ring is made from rope and laced across the body. In the Dominican Republic (Santo Domingo), the flesh ring and counter ring are made
from half-round rattan.
This instrument, in most cases, has a head with a diameter less
than the length of the body.
(See Pl. XIV—
Juan
del Instituto Cultural Venezolano-Bri-
Liscano,
in the Boletin
No. 29)
tanico of August 6, 1942, summed up the interdependence of the Indian,
Spanish, and Afro-Venezuelan
influence in Venezuelan
music in the fol-
lowing words: “Between the Negro and the Indian there was a history of blood and extermination. Between the Negro and the Spaniard there
existed a renaissance of artistic and social forms. Our music is the daughter of Spain and Africa. Like our soil, it is rich and dark. It stems from the Spanish guitar and the Negro drum.”!5>
HONDURAS The Black Caribs of Honduras are a hybrid people who emerged as an ethnic group in the early eighteenth century on one of the Windward Islands, St. Vincent. They are a mixture of Arawak, Carib Amerindian and African. The Black Caribs were deported by the English in 1797 to the small island of Roatan, one of the Bay Islands of Honduras. Along with Red Caribs, they fought the British continually. They were deported
because the British were afraid they would lose control of the Island.
The Spanish later invited them to the mainland to secure their own
waterfront.
Even though these people are a distinct ethnic group with their
own oral tradition, their music is African. Their instruments are African,
their bare-hand style of drumming, their rhythm patterns, are the call and response-type singing, clearly retained “Afro” chacacteristics. Their drums are the barrel-shape types in sets of three. Tuba Bass Set: A single-headed Black Carib drum found in Honduras. It is the
largest of three drums used in a set. The body is hewn from mahogany
covered with antelope hide. This two-foot diameter drum is played with bare hands. The skin is tensed by turnkeys connected to cords running from the bottom of the instrument to the counter hoop holding the head. The tuba bass, which carries the principal rhythm, is used with the tuba segunda and the tuba primera.
172
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Tuba Segunda — A drum eighteen inches in diameter with a snare over the single head. It is played with bare hands and carries the counter rhythm of the tuba bass. Tuba
Primera — The
smallest
of the single-headed
Carib
drums.
It is one foot in diameter. This is the solo instrument of the trio. PANAMA The Republic of Panama occupies the neck of land connecting South America with Central America. Panama’s population of about 600,000 is composed of a great variety of people: Amerindian, AfroAmerican, and European Americans. Panama’s music is racially differentiated depending on the region studied. On the coast we find Afro-European music; in the jungle or interior, it is Amerindian; and in Panama City it is as international as the port which services the world. The most characteristic Afro-Amer-
ican rhythm found is the Cumbia.” Caja (Box) or Tambor de Panama Battery: The caja is a double-membrane drum played with two sticks, and used along with the requinto, repicador and the pujador in Panama. It is very similar to the tambor of the Dominican Republic. The body is hewn
from
a solid log. The
skins
are looped
around
a flesh ring
of
rope, and the two flesh rings are laced together across the body. It is
placed on the ground and held in place with one foot with the skins in a vertical position, so that both heads can be played at the same time. The tempo and rhythm are set by this instrument. The heads are made
from cow or mule skin and are tensed by running vertical cords through the lacings. The instrument is twenty inches in length and fifteen to eighteen
inches in diameter across the heads. (See Pl. VIIJ — No. 11) Requinto drum: The requinto is twenty inches in height and six
inches in diameter— constructed in the same manner as the repicador and the pujador. The only difference in the instruments is in the size and in tuning. They are also played in the same manner. In many parts of Panama, the requinto is not used; only the repicador and the puja-
dor, along with the caja
The
caja
(box).
tamborito orchestra
(box),
and singers.
the repicador
of Panama
is usually composed
(picker), the guitar, hand-clapping,
of the maracas
Repicador drum (Picker): This is a single-headed, long-type drum
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
173
with a head of goatskin, played with bare hands. The musician holds the instrument between his legs and raises it slightly while playing. The skin is lapped over a rope flesh ring and pulled over the conical shell about four inches. The flesh ring is laced to the body ring of rope, approximately one third of the distance down from the top of the shell.
It is believed that this instrument is African in origin because of
the way it is constructed, laced, and played. Wedges are placed between the body and the body ring; by forcing the wedges down, the skin is tensed. It stands from twenty to twenty-five inches in height, and eight to ten inches in diameter
diameter across the bottom. Pujador
Drum
across the skin and
(Pusher):
The
pujador
six to eight inches
is twenty
to twenty-five
inches in height and ten to twelve inches in diameter across and eight to ten inches in diameter at the foot. The pujador is used to produce the richness of the bass the beating of the other drums. The tone can be modulated or lowering both knees which are holding the drum, but its configurations are limited. The caja
(box)
or tambor
de Panama
in
the head
effect on by lifting rhythmic
is the lowest pitched and
is capable of producing two distinct timbres, one from the skin and another from the body. The player of the repicador (picker) is considered the virtuoso musician. A good repicador player in the interior of Panama enjoys the same fame as a fine pianist in the city. CUBA The popular music of Cuba was the first of the Latin-American and Caribbean music to spread to Europe and North America. Two racial strains combined to produce Cuban popular music, the Spanish and the African. Little is left of the pentatonic melos of the aboriginal Amerindians. The European rhythms are characterized by the combined six-eight and three-four time, while the Afro-Cuban type found in the urban areas is marked by syncopation in two-four time. Cuban rhythms are punctuated by a variety of native percussion instruments. The basic rhythm is usually given by the claves, the sound of which
is described
by
Fernando
Ortiz
as, “the
most
profound
emo-
tional expression of Cuba’s soul.!”” The drumming of Cuba and Haiti reaches its greatest development
174.
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
in the Western hemisphere. Without a doubt, the greatest variety of AfroAmerican drum is found among the Afro-Cubans.
Cuba has several well-organized cults, Arard of Dahomean
Lucumi
of the Yorubas,
the Abakwa,
and
the Kimbisa.
Their
ments, music, and rites are distinctive and individualistic. Many
thythms have been used for popular secular music.
Cult life is stronger in Cuba than in Haiti in many
origin, instru-
of their
respects. The
different cults have tended to keep their traditions apart and distinct. Each cult has its own specific ritual language. The various cults have their own peculiar musical idioms and special constellations of musical
instruments.
Arara Drum Set:
The Dahomean
cult drums of Cuba are very similar to the Haitian
Rada drums. The Arard cult of Cuba uses four or five drums in an orchestra. They are highly decorated and show that much care has been given to their making. There is a wide range in design, from a cylindrical, slightly tapering form at the base, to drums with a full belly terminating in a foot or narrow base. These instruments are usually
carved
or painted
with
symbolic
cult figures. The
heads
are
mounted in two ways: pegs are pushed through slits in the skin into the shell; and, the skin is attached to rope hoops, which in turn are fastened to the pegs by cords. The pegs are used for tuning. The shells are often found hewn from a solid block, but staves are also used in making shells. The Arara drums or “huns,” are the “hu-gin” (the largest), “xumpé,” “hun-hogulé,” and the “huni.” The technique of playing is similar to the Haitian technique. A mallet-shaped or hooked stick is used on the “hu-gan,” on the body and the skin. The drummer is called the “huntér.” Bata — Lucumi Drum Set: The Bata drums are two-headed, hour-glassed-shaped instruments used in the Lucumi rites in Cuba. These are the most unique cult drums found in the Americas. The skins are mounted on hoops which are held in place by thongs laced from one head to the other across the body. The thongs are drawn tight by interlacing
another
thong
circumferentially
around
the body
near one head or both. The surplus thongs are wound around the middle of the instrument.
One mouth of the shell is larger than the other. Occasionally these
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
175
instruments contain a large nut. The nut is called “coco-Africano,” and
is placed inside for “magico” religious purposes. The three batas are of different sizes. They are from eighteen inches
to thirty inches in length, carved from a solid piece of wood. The large bata is called “Iya.” The large head, “tcha or ent,” is played with the right hand and contains a circular patch of red resin applied near the center. This patch is called “ida” in the Lucumi idiom,
or damper. The red spot on the skin is thought to have originated with the ceremony of rubbing the blood of the sacrifices upon the parchment. In Africa, this has a ritual significance. Near the large head of the “iya,” there is a belt of harness-type bells which is called “tchaworé.”!* The second drum is called the “‘itétele” and the smallest is called “omelé”
and
sometimes
called “Konkolo”
or “Okénkolo.”
The
sacred
name of the Lucumi drums is “afia” and the profane name is “ili. ” Bata drummers are always men. Their techniques and secrets are carefully guarded. Each bata is held on the lap of the drummer by a cord or “orlori” passed around the knees. The iya drummer, or “kpuarm
99
taki,” is the chief drummer.
The classical bata drums are made from a single length of log, but
the stave
is widespread
in Cuba.
The
stave
drums
are straight with
sloping sides. In the province of Matanzas, Cuba, barrels are used without the lacing; the heads are tacked on. Since the Spanish-American War, Aframerican cult festivities of every kind have virtually been outlawed and are now referred to by the European-Americans
as “bembé.”*
This
is still in effect, though
not
universally enforced. Ceremonies take place with the permission of local
police. During carnival and designated feast weeks, the cult’s activities
come out in the open. The bata drums are the main liturgical drums of Cuba. The trio form a sextet of drums; three drummers beat six surfaces, and each skin
affects the other, making it complicated for the drummers. The maker of the bata drum must be a sworn priest in the cult. He first selects a cedar log biock with very few knots of sufficient size and length, and a consecration ceremony is performed. Two others are performed later; one when they are finished and one sacramental rite. *Bembé
is a derogatory term used in Cuba referring to Afro-Cubans who have cult parties
where there are rum-drinking, drumming and dancing. drumming).
(In Africa, it is a type of royal
176
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
The instruments must be carved by hand with African tools. The iya is twenty-seven to tweny-nine inches long, twelve to thirty-three
inches in diameter across the “end” or wider head, and eight to nine inches in diameter across the “chacha”* or small head.
Itétele is twenty-six inches long, ten inches in diameter across the large head, and seven-and-a-half inches across the small head.
Okénkolo or omelé is eighteen inches long, eight inches across the
large head, and six-and-a-half inches across the small head. Special grease
is
used
to
dry
the
inside
and
outside
of
the
drum.
To
ritual drums in Cuba, either snake oil (aceite de la culebra Maja)
grease
or a
certain palm tree oil (manteca de corojo) is used — this is supposed to give power to the drums to reject all evil. The skin used is either goat or deer-hide. The skin is soaked for one day in water prepared with charcoal and then placed in clean water for one night. The hair is removed with a brick and the skin is washed with pure water. It is then placed in the shade for twenty-four hours. A ring of metal or rattan is covered with cloth having the colors of the deity or saints. (Each saint has a favorite color.) The size of the
ring should just fit the mouth or butt of the drum. Heading the instrument requires two men. The wet skin is placed over the opening of the shell and pulled tight by one man on each side. The flesh ring is placed and the excess skin pulled up. A counter rope is placed on the skin, holding it and the flesh ring taut. With an ice pick, eight small holes are put in the “end” just outside the counter rope and seven holes in the “chacha” or butt.
Strands of leather three-sixteenths of an inch wide and eight to nine feet in length are laced through these holes to the opposite head, drawing them tight on the shell. With the strands or “tina mali” taut, the drum is placed out to dry. The next day the wet transverse tensors or “tina 6wo” are placed on the drum and wrapped around the body over the “tina mali” and again placed outside to dry. This is all according to the ritual. Occasioally,
the
instruments
are
dresseed
with
a banté
or
apron,
and the aprons are decorated with beads and shells. The iya is always dressed with bells. (See Pl. VI — No. 6)
The bata drums were presented publicly in Havana in 1936 through
*“chacha” means skin in the Yoruba idiom.
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
177
the efforts of Dr. Fernando Ortiz. The songs, dances, and playing of the bata drum belong to the religious rites of the Lucumi or Yoruba cults of Cuba. It was necessary for Dr. Ortiz to go through a ritual so the Gods of the Lucumis would grant him permission to have the sacred drums played in profane surroundings. Thanks were given to Chang6, the “Deity of Storm and Lightning.” There have been many public performances since that date, but very few orthodox performances due to the scarcity of artists of this drum.
The
They
have
priests
of the
cult,
or
“olibata,”
are
consecrated
musical
ministers and do not respond to the mercantile appetites of outsiders. music;
an
and
extensive
then,
too,
rhythmic
there
are
divulge or expose to profane eyes.!” The Yorubas
of Africa have
and
melodic
cult
secrets
repertory
they
identical drums,
do
which
of liturgic
not
want
to
are referred
to as talking drums. Most African languages are tonal, so the African: are able to speak and recite poems on their two-tone drums or on two drums. The African set consists of four drums: (1) emele abo, (3) the emele ako, and (4) the kudi.
the iya ilu, (2)
the
The iya ilu bata, though suited for talking does so with some difficulty — being a stammerer. The two membranes are played simultaneously to produce a tone; the right membrane is played with the palm of the right hand, and a leather strap is used with the left hand in playing the left membrane. The bata is so talkative that even in playing dance music the iya ilu keeps on talking, and the emele abo keeps on repeating what it is saying.!° Bembé — Afro-Cuban Drum Sets: These are used in a set of three. Bembé
drums are single headed
and tacked to the shell. The heads require heating before using. The head is cut from the neck of the ox. These instruments are played with sticks and hands. The largest of the three is the “Ilamador” or caller.
It is always placed between the other two. The smallest one is called
“salidor”
or opener,
because
it begins
the rhythm.
The
middle-sized
drum is called the “repicador” or picker. Bongo: Small twin drums
similar to Yoruba
drums
of Africa. They
were
probably introduced by the Nafiigos into Cuba. The drums are tuned
178
DRUMS
about
one-fifth
apart.
Each
drum
has
a single
IN THE AMERICAS
head,
and
the
two
are
permanently constructed together and held between the legs and played
with the fingers. The two drums are generally carved from a solid block of wood and attached together later.
(See Pl. V— No.
1)
They are called mellicin in Peru and with a conga and the timbales, are one of the most widely known Cuban drums. They come in varying
sizes, but the average size is six to eight inches in height, six to eight inches across the top, and four to six inches in diameter at the bottom. The two skins are very thin and goatskin is preferred. The right drum, or the deeper-tone one, has a slightly heavier head which produces a deeper tone. The heads are tacked to the shell or attached to a flesh ring. A counter ring is placed over the flesh ring and the flesh ring is bolted to the shell. By tightening the wing nuts on the bolts, the counter ring is pulled down against the flesh ring, tensing the skin and raising the tone. If the head is tacked to the shell, the instrument has to be heated to
raise the tone.
The high-pitched skin is referred to as the male skin, “macho” or “repicador,” because it generally carries farther; and the deep tone side
is referred to as female, “hembra” or “tumbador.” The basic bongé pattern is referred to as the “martillo” or hammer. The instrument is
capable of many tonalities, and a good bongé player (bongosero) takes advantage of this flexibility. The sound of the bongé is that of a skin sound rather than a box sound, or sound chamber.
When the bongés are played with sticks, they take the place of the timbales in Latin American groups. Some think that this instrument originated with the Egyptians because they have an instrument called terbuke,
tarabuk,
or
darabukke,
which
is quite
Turkey,
Palestine
similar,
but
is made
of clay or metal — there is a resemblance also in the playing technique. Today
it is found
XXIX — No. 72)
in Greece,
and
Syria.
(See
Pl.
The word Bongé can be found among the “bantu” as a reference to certain
drums.
The
bongé,
as we
find it today
in the Americas,
Cuba
in particular, is different from any other drum of this type. Dr. Fernando
Ortiz believes this drum was born in Cuba by a synthesis of Afro ele-
ments and mulatto factors. In any case, it is a mulatto
ing both African and European characteristics.
instrument, hav-
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
179
Conga Drum Set: This is a single-headed Afro-Cuban drum. The conga dance is thought to have given it its name. The body today is constructed from staves
held by steel rings, like barrel staves. The body is cylindrical with a slight bulging belly below the middle. Its average height is approxi-
mately thirty-one inches.
There are three types found: the hollowed tree trunk type, the cylindrical, and the barrel-shaped type. The heads, up until about 1950, were
tacked
to the body;
but today
most
of the conga
drums
have
tunable hardware to raise the tone. It was popularized in the States by Chano Pozo and is used today, generally, in night clubs and cabarets.
The
set in Cuba
consists
of the
tumbador,
Ilamador,
conga
mambisa,
and quinto.
It is generally played in the sitting position with bare hands, while
the feet are used to raise the instrument, in order to get more volume in the low tones. Normally, it is tilted against the thigh to produce more volume. It is also used effectively from a conga drum stand.
Conga is a generic term generally applied to all drums of this type. Many authorities believe this drum was brought to the Americas by the Congolese slaves for they have a similar drum they play in the standing position, with the instrument between their legs, strapped to the waist and tilted forward. These instruments in the States are very highly finished and the newest ones are made of plastic, one-piece shell. The diameter at the top averages from six to twelve inches; at the foot it is from six to eight inches. This is probably the second most
internationally known drum of Cuba. With the bongé, it has become associated with Afro-Cuban music all over the world. It is played in Europe, Asia, the Americas, and now has returned to be played in
Africa. (See Pl. VI— No. 5) Ekue:
A friction drum used by the “Abakwa” cult in Cuba. This Nanigo drum is used only in the secret chambers of the cult. It is single
headed, with three feet to support it in the upright position. is sewed to a rope flesh ring which is in turn laced to the head is tensed or tuned by forcing wedges down between the the body. The conical body is fourteen inches high and eleven
The head body. The lacing and
inches in
180
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
diameter and is generally hewn from a log. The sound is produced with a stick called a “yin” nineteen inches long. The “yin” is pressed against
the left the the
skin and released. The motion of the hands is downward with the hand following the right, alternately gripping the reed shaft with thumb and index fingers which are wet with sugar cane juice or blood of a cock in Nafiigo rites to promote adhesion between hand
and friction reed.
(See Pl. X — No.
17)
El Boku: A single-headed drum from the Oriente province of Cuba. The head is nailed to the body, which must be heated for tuning. It is made from
staves which are held in place by steel rings, or glued. The body is long,
thin, and conical. It is played with bare hands; the instrument is carried by a sling over the right shoulder and used for playing comparsas for carnivals and festivals. It is approximately forty inches long, the diameter at the mouth is eight to ten inches, and the butt is about six inches in diameter.
(See Pl. XIII — No.
28)
El Coco de Efik Obutén: A skinless friction drum used by the Nafigo cult of Cuba. It was
seen only by the inner core of the cult.
The “El Coco” is a ritual drum made from a coconut shell. The shell was cut off one inch above the bottom and three legs are fashioned in the shell. On the outside surface of the shell are painted symbolic ritualistic designs called “ferma.” A
bamboo
stick (giiin) is rubbed
across
the
shell,
producing
weird, hoarse, raspy sound, which added mystery to the sound coming
a
from the secret chamber. It is used for effect rather than basic rhythm in the cult music and dances. (See Pl. XX — No. 47) Kinfuiti or Manfila: A Cuban friction drum made from a wooden barrel. The body or
box stands twenty-three to thirty inches in height and fifteen inches in diameter. The bottom of the barrel is left open and the top is covered with calf or goatskin. A rope or a reed is secured to the center of the head from the outside extending inside the barrel. Pulling on the rope
and allowing it to slip causes the head to vibrate.
The kinfuiti is traditionally used in June for the Saint Anthony and Saint John feasts, and also for cult funerals. (See Pl. XX — No. 48)
La Ranita: (The Frog): In Cuba this drum is made from the top of a glass bottle covered
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
181
with a chicken craw or crop, or a pig bladder. A horsehair is knotted and run through the skin from the under side. Pulling on the horsehair and allowing it to slip through the fingers produces a frog-like sound. This instrument is more of a toy than a drum, but it is used in some rural areas of Cuba as a friction drum. La Gud-Gud:
(The bus):
A felled avocado tree trunk is laid horizontally with the center re-
moved and three holes about three to four inches made in one side, in a row.
The holes are covered with tin, nailed on four sides. The three pieces of tin give three distinct sounds when struck with sticks. This instrument sounds like a three-tone gong, but is used as a drum substitute in Cuba. (See Pl. XXII — No. 54) “Ndnigo” Drums or Abakuds Drum Battery: The Nafiigo drums are the instruments used exclusively in the rites of Abakua,
secret fraternities or societies of Cuba. These
societies were
founded at least a hundred years ago or more, by the slaves. The functions of the groups, lodges, etc., are referred to in Cuba as Nafiguisms. The “Nafiigos” have rites in which singing is supported by an orchestra
of seven instruments, in which the drums predominate. Four drums are used. They are conical in shape and narrower at the bottom, generally
made of cedar."*! The shell is hewn from a solid cedar log; it is unpainted and undecorated. The skin is attached to the body by laced cords. Wedges are placed between the body and the lacing cords. The
skin is tensed
by knocking these wedges down. One large drum and three small ones are used. The largest is called bonké enchemiyé; the three small ones are called obiapa (opener), kuchi yerema (repicador), and binkomé. The small instruments are played with the fingers and palms of one hand. The bonké is played with hands only, never with sticks. The obiapa is the base tone and opener. The tone of the kuchi yerema is a medium tone. The binkomé has the high tone. The method of playing these abakud drums requires four drummers and a complete complement. The three small ones are held under the left arm and played with the fingers of the right hand. The bonké is played in the sitting position with bare hands. The rhythms of these drums are
as follows: Binkomé — one beat, open hand in the center of the skin and one on the edge of the drum with the tip of the index finger; Obiapa
182
DRUMS
—two
beats
with
closed
fingers,
one
open,
and
IN THE AMERICAS
one
closed;
Kuchi
Yerema — three beats on the edge with closed fingers one open, one closed, and another open; Bonké — one beat with the right hand cupped in the center of the skin, and the second
The
sounds
of
all
synchronized
on the rim.
into
a
harmonious
hold.
The
bonké is a very resonant drum, approximately thirty-nine inches long
and conical, and approximately eight to ten inches in diameter. It is placed between the legs of the drummer at a slight tilt and played with
bare hands. There are four symbolic abakud ritual drums: the empeg6, ekuefién, enkrikamo, and the eribé. These drums have to be baptized before they are used
in the cult. All these drums
are of the same
wedge
structure,
execpt the eribé. They are ornamented with tufts of feathers of different colors. These tufts of feathers are called “mufén” stump. The eribé has four stumps and the others, one each. The feather
sticks represent a spirit. Three of the drums have a fringe, except the
eribé. The fringe is referred to as “beleme.” The symbolic drums do not have musical value, but are sounded as
signals for ritual procedure.
The sound
of the eribé is never used;
it
remains on the ritual altar as a venerated symbol, representing the Holy Sepulcher. There are three types of eribé used: the so-called African form which has an open bottom, the cup-form with a closed bottom and a carved base, and the flat tambourine type. The heads of the fafiigo drums are prepared from virgin goat-hide and all are attached to the body by means of hemp strings or cords. All are tunable, which is accomplished by a belt or “Enkomo,” or “Enko.” Sticks or “palitos” are used on the body of the bonké when it is played while marching. The tyo or abakua-friction drum is played inside the lodge hall and is seldom seen publicly. The binkomé is the largest of the small drums ten inches high and eight inches in diameter with tapering sides. The bonké is the largest; it ranges from thirty inches to three diameter. (See Pl. X — No. 17)
feet in height
and
ten inches
in
Timbales: Twin drums of Cuba placed on a tripod stand and played by a stand-
ing drummer with one bare hand on one drum and a stick in the other to
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
183
strike the body of the high-pitched drum — and a stick is always left in
reserve to alternate with, or replace the use of the bare hand. This instrument is unique to Cuba and more than any other drum demonstrates the blending of African and European characteristics in its methods of playing and construction. This instrument always has a bell as
a part of its accessories. The
bell, the skin, and the sides of the instru-
ment are all struck. The bodies are made of metal with an open bottom and the tops are covered with calfskin wrapped about a flesh ring. The skin and the flesh ring are held to the body by a counter hoop bolted to the body by adjust-
able bolts and nuts. One drum is tuned one-fifth from the other. The left hand carries a straight syncopated beat, while the right hand pattern is altered to fit the
arrangement. The Timbales are the time-keepers and rhythm markers for
the Latin Conjuntos or groups. (See Pl. V — No. 1) Yuka Set :
An Afro-Cuban, single-headed drum used in sets of three: the yuka or caja (box), the mula (mule), and the cachimbo (pipe). The box is
placed in The which is available.
shell wet;
the middle, the mule to the right, and the pipe to the left. shells are generally hewn from the trunk of an avocado tree, ideal because it has a soft center. It has no taper and is easily The ox neck is preferred for the head, which is tacked onto the a sling is attached
to the bottom
and top, making
it easy to
carry. It is approximately thirty-nine inches long and from fourteen to sixteen inches in diameter. It is played with bare hands in the standing position, with the drum inclined and straddled. Two players are required; one uses a stick on the body and is called the “cajero,” and the other uses his hand to play the skin and is called the “guagiiero.” The cachimbo and the mula are smaller and are played similarly. The Dominican mayor (big stick),
Republic (Santo Domingo) drums are called palo palo segundo (second stick), and palo auxiliar
(helper), and are very similar to the Yuka
Set.
Quinto Box: A Cuban box with two sloping sides to form a wide slit opening in the body. The instrument is held between the knees and played like a bongé. The flat top side is struck with the fingers and bare hands. In Cuba,
the quinto box is the solo instrument for the rumba,
yambi, and the danzon.
conga,
son,
184
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
The quinto box has two sounds. When the instrument is struck in the center, the tone is low, but when it is hit near the edge it gives a much higher tone — it is similar to the West African signal drum which is played with sticks. (See Pl. XXII — No. 53) CURACAO AND ARUBA Today the Dutch hold Curacao and Aruba, but nearly all ethnic groups are represented in the islands. There are descendants of slaves,
East Indians, West Indians, Portuguese, Venezuelans, and Dutch, and all
with high standards of living. European influences are strong, but not overwhelming. Every nationality has contributed something of its cultural heritage.
The largest single racial component in the population of Curacao and Aruba is Afro and Mulatto. The music and dances of these two Netherlands West Indies are predominantly African. There are no religious cults to maintain African tradition. Drums have always been considered undesirable instruments, so they were banned and destroyed whenever possible. Several interesting drum substitutes and homemade instruments have appeared. One of the most unique instruments is the bastel or seoe. Bastel (or Seoe): A half-gourd,
floated in a washtub
and
struck with
bare hands
is
used in Curacao as a drum. In some areas, the half-gourd with the hemispherical bottom up is played with two sticks instead of with bare hands. The bastel originated in Curacao after the tambi or skin drum was outlawed for the slaves. All tambtis were confiscated by the masters
when found. Even though this drum is used by the Afro-Curacaoans, it is thought to be of Indian origin. The bastel is usually played in conjunction with the chapi (a hoe blade played with a nail), which is used to keep time on a constant pattern configuration. This instrument is called “jicara de agua” in Mexico. (See Pl. XIX
—No. 46, and Pl. XXII — No. 52) — Musik di Zumbi: Big Drum
A copy of a European bass drum used on the island of Curacao. It has two heads of goatskin, and the box or body is constructed from staves. The heads are wrapped about two flesh rings which are held in place by two counter hoops laced together across the body with rope. The
instrument
is tuned
by wooden
ears
connected
between
the
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
185
lacing which runs across the body. By sliding the wooden ears, the skins are pulled closer together, thus tuning the instrument. The “Musik de Zumbi” is played in a vertical position with one head to the right and the other to the left. Both heads are played with padded sticks — one in each hand. (See Pl. XVI — No. 35) Tambu: Originally a hollow tree trunk covered with a sheep-skin. As this was very time consuming in the making, and heavy to carry around
to parades,
harvest
feasts
and
the like, a small
wooden
barrel
was substituted. Plate XITI — No. 28 shows a modern tambi, eighteen inches long and ten and one-half inches in diameter. The sheep-skin head is wrapped
about a wooden flesh ring and held in place by a counter ring, forced over the head, locking the skin, which is then nailed to the body through the flesh ring. The instrument is held under the left arm or between the knees and played with the bare hands.
Other folk instruments, also found in Curacao, are the benta, a mouth bow; agan or “héroe” (iron), two pieces of iron or steel; cachoe, a cow horn; maraka (maraca); the matrimonial, a dressed plank with metal
discs nailed to it and
Italian organ; the triangle THE DOMINICAN The Island of Puerto Caribbean. It is the most cupies about 3,435 square though
Puerto
used
as a rattle;
wiri, a friction
iron;
the
and the chapi (hoe), another type of bell. REPUBLIC AND PUERTO RICO Rico lies between the Atlantic Ocean and the European of the Caribbean countries. It ocmiles, 95 miles long and 35 miles wide. Al-
Rico is part of the United
States, it is culturally con-
nected with the Latin American world through common Spanish American ties.
The Dominican Republic is a small country of 20 thousand square miles, occupying two thirds of the island known as Hispaniola or La Espafola in the Caribbean. It is the oldest European settlement in the Americas. Spanish is the official language and no other countries in all Latin America have so consistently maintained their intense cultural attachment to Spain. This partly explains their national attitudes to their own folk and ethnic rhythms and music.
Even though Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic are mulatto countries, generally things related to African culture are rejected. In
186
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
contrast to the situation in Cuba, the Afros have not retained any tribal or religious homogenuity. About all that is claimed of African dances
can be seen in the movement of the body and the foot-pattern style. There are African instruments used in both areas. The African drums found no longer furnish the ceremonial rhythms for dances of the deities; these rhythms have disappeared
come recreational.
or have be-
Bomba: A single-headed drum made from staves and played with bare hands. It is found in Puerto Rico and is used in folk groups for
folk music and semi-popular music. The diameter of the head is eight inches and the body, made from a keg, is approximately twenty inches in diameter. It is thought to be of African origin. The bottom of the instrument is open and is played
between the knees or under the armpit, with fingers and palms of the hand. It is used for a group of rhythms by the same name (bombas). The best exponents of this dance are found in the village of Loiza Aldea, where groups of pure or almost pure Afro-Americans live. The drums are played in pairs, one being pitched higher than the other.
The
dancers
direct
the
drummer,
rather
than
vice-versa.
The
bomba rhythms are excellent examples of African tradition. Where the Dominican Republic is a poor country from a musical and rhythm standpoint, there are many varieties of drums of African descent, Puerto
Rico,
on the other hand, is rich in music
but short on
instruments.
Both the bimembranophones and membranophones are found in the Dominican Republic. Generally three are used in a set or a battery. The heads are found to be attached in four ways:
nailed to the body
direct; attached to a skin ring with a counter ring laced to the body direct; the third method used is when the head is attached to a skin ring which is held in place by a counter ring, then is laced down the shell to a body ring. The head is tensed by forcing wedges between the shell and the body ring. The Brazilian atabaqués, the Tamborito drums of Panama, and the Chimbangiieles del Zulia drums of Venezuela have similar type tensing mechanisms. No.
15)
The
fourth
type
head
(See Pl. VIIE— No.
attachment
used
is the
11 and Pl. IX flesh
ring
and
counter ring with wing bolts for tension. (See Pl. XII] — No. 27) The drum battery generally consists of two or more atabales
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
187
(palos), a large and a medium
instrument, and the alcahuete, a small
two-headed drum which is used to start the beats. These drums differ in the construction depending on the areas. In some cases, they are conical
or semiconical
stated previously.
with
the heads
attached
in different
ways
The bodies or shells were carved from logs as well as made
barrel staves. The carved shells are made
as
from
from avocado, yagrumo,
a
hardwood, jabillo, or dry oak.
The drums in the Dominican Republic are played with the drums standing between the legs, with a sling, or placed longwise on the floor, and straddled.
The drums are generally headed with cowhide and the palo mayor or large drums average sixty inches in height and eleven inches in diameter. The medium drum averages thirty-four inches in height and nine
inches in diameter. Balcié: A single-headed cylindrical drum found in the Dominican Republic, played with bare hands. It is constructed in two ways: some are hewn from a log and others are made from staves. The head of the log-type is attached to a flesh ring and laced through the body of the instrument. The other type, as shown in Pl. XIII — No. 27, is made from
staves, stands twenty-nine inches in height, eight inches in diameter across the head and six inches across the foot. The skin is wrapped about a metal flesh ring and held secure by a metal counter ring, then bolted to the body through the braces and bolts. It is tuned by tighten-
ing the bolts.!* The instrument is tilted between the legs of the musician in the upright position to play. The balcié is a popular instrument used in small groups along with a guayo, a serrated metal cylinder, and accordion and a pandereta or tambourine.
(See Pl. XIJI — No. 27)
Palos or Atabales Drum Set: A set of three drums found in the Dominican Republic (Santo Domingo) and used by the folk bands. Palo-Mayor — A single-head Afro-American drum played with the hands in an upright position. The body is made of staves, and the sheepskin head, wrapped about a flesh ring, is held in place by a counter ring bolted to the body with metal brackets. It is found in the rural areas and played in concerts with the Palo Segundo and the Palo Auxiliar. The palo-mayor is the solo instrument, or has freedom of rhythm.
188
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Palo Segundo — The medium-sized instrument, constructed and played like the other two members of the trio. The palo segundo carries the counter rhythm; this drum is also referred to as “alcahuete.”
Palo Auxiliar — The smallest drum of the trio. It is played with
two small sticks. (Palitos.)
All three of these drums are used in the ritual dance,
“Fl Baile de
los Palos.” These instruments range in size from three to four feet in height and ten to twenty-two inches in diameter across the head. Tambu: A four-footed tube drum found in the Dominican Republic (Santo Domingo). It is played in the upright position with bare hands. It stands twenty-four inches in height and is eight inches in diameter
across the foot and mouth. The head of goatskin is wrapped about a flesh ring of metal. A metal counter ring is braced to the body and is used to tense and hold the head. It is used in the small popular bands in
the cities. (See Pl. XIII — No.
27)
Zambomba: A friction drum reported in the rural areas, corresponding to the furruco of Venezuela, the plena in Puerto Rico and the cuica in Brazil. It is made from a gourd; a goatskin is glued over the opening with a stick attached which is rubbed to produce the sound.™ ENGLISH In Jamaica,
the Virgin
SPEAKING Islands,
ISLANDS:
Carriacou,*
Trinidad,
and the Ba-
hamas, English is the official language and the populations are predominantly Afro-American. The music and the instruments used are
similar. In all three areas, the skin drums are being replaced by steel drums for popular music. Most skin drums seen today are copies of European drums. All of the
islands
have
forms
of music
resembling
Calypso. All are the products of the intermingling
Trinidadian
of European
and
African cultures, but their individual differences have manifested themselves in music and musical instruments. JAMAICA
Jamaica, although eighty percent African, does not have a great drumming tradition as compared with Cuba and Haiti; it is better known for calypsos and steel bands both imported from Trinidad, and its Mento rhythm. Most of the drums used in Jamaica are either Ev.;opean *A sunny windy island lying in the Grenadines, between St. Vincent and Greneda.
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
189
or copies of European
ments
drums.
are sometimes African,
The methods
but the rhythms
of playing these instruplayed
upon
them
are
Jamaican.* African rites in Jamaica are known as Obeah. Not only is Obeah a religion, but its reverse side includes trickery, sorcery and necromancy. One of the most elaborate Obeah ceremonies is known as “Pocomania.” Pocomania is a half-Christian cult of African origin, to which over the years has been added an increasingly deepening facade of Christi-
anity in mixed denominational forms. The secular side of Pocomania is
called “Mydal.” Like Obeah, it is practiced to cast meeting place is secret and often changed to avoid music are always a part of the ritual. Many ceremonies, particularly those associated continue for days. Dancing is almost continuous, sessions”
and
trances.
In
the
usual
ceremony,
or remove spells. Its arrest. Dancing and
with the death rites, punctuated by “pos-
the
crowd
gathers,
the
drums beat, and singing begins in a pseudo-Christian atmosphere. As more rum is poured and as the night goes on, hymns change to chants, usually phrases sung by a leader and answered by a chorus of voices. The drumming becomes wilder and more frantic.
The casting of spells is greatly feared in Jamaica and a special sect claims to be able to remove spells of Obeah. Dances called “mydal” are performed to summon or to “lay the duppies” (ghosts of the dead) who are thought to be responsible for the evil concepts of the Obeah. The dancers form a circle about a tree and beat the earth with stones in rhythm to songs. Sometimes two or three drums are played as well. On this small island is a tribal group called Maroons.
During the
slave period, the rugged terrain made possible the escape of many slaves. Never recaptured, they gathered and formed their own government,
waging
periodic war
against the hated white
authority
until their in-
dependence was granted by treaty. The original settlement consisted of some thousand Arawak Amerindians who harbored the runaway slaves. The population grew to over six thousand and much of the Amerindian tradition was adopted. It is believed by many that the Obeah in Jamaica and the Petro cult in Haiti have many contributions from the aboriginal Amerindians. 1
*The rhythms are built around this basic patter. J d J J t J J t The Jamaican rhythms including mentos, are slow and repetitive like the Cuban rumba, the calypsos and digging rhythms.
190
DRUMS
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The governmental suppression of the practice of African religion has induced the spread of Revivalist cults, especially in the urban districts of Jamaica. Every Sunday night, meetings for worship are held. Services begin with drumming, using two snare drums and one bass; polyrhythms are furnished by tambourines, rattles, clapping and foottapping. The sermon is interrupted by singing, possession, prayers, and finally by mass dancing. These meetings are in effect very similar to Afro-ritual ceremonies, but are legal. Ras Tafari is a cult organized to take Jamaicans back to Africa and glorifies the African past. It is also semi-Christian in nature. Cumina
bands,
a secular
organization
whose
music
is considered
to be pure African, are also a part of the musical picture of Jamaica. The group uses two drums, rattles and a scraper. Rhythms are quite different from those the revivalists use for songs and dances. These rhythms are enhanced by hand clapping and body swaying. Besides cults and other religious movements, certain traditional festivals also add to the drumming tradition of Jamaica. The ‘John Canoe” masquerade dances are held during Christmas season. The name is thought to have been derived from the French words “Genie Connu.” In Nassau,
a similar
festival is known
as “Junkanoo.”
drum
like the quinto in secular music
The John Canoe festival affords an opportunity for taking out of hiding all the forbidden drums (although prohibited, it is evident they have been practiced all year). Gumbe — Gumbay: The Gumbe is a single-headed goat-skin drum resembling a bench. (See Pl. XIII — No. 25) The head is tacked to a square wooden frame with four legs. The skin is tensed by means of a second square frame telescoped inside the skin frame. Each of the legs has a slot cut in the middle, halfway down. Wedges are pushed into these slots forcing the tension frame against the skin, tightening it. The instrument is a solo much
of Cuba, that is, the drum-
mer is not restricted to any particular pattern, but must fit his rhythms between the basic patterns. The Gumbe is played bare-handed in conjunction with two other drums.!* John Canoe Drum Set: The
composed
John
Canoe band, which
furnishes music
for the dancing,
of two John Canoe drums, a fife, and three scrapers
scraped with a metal strip).
is
(a grater
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
191
The instruments are snare drums. One is large, fourteen inches in diameter and eight inches in height; the smaller one is constructed like the larger. Both are played with sticks. The bodies are made of barrel staves.'* Kbandu Drum Set: Kbandu
is a Jamaican
Cumina
cult drum
made
from
a keg and
covered with a single goatskin. The Cumina
cult is an Afro-religious
maracas,
the
group of Jamaica, which uses two drums a triangle,
and
a Shakka
instrument
is used with
(Kbandu
to furnish
and Playing Cast).
music
in their cere-
monies. The Shakka is a coconut grater, scraped with a metal. The goat-skin head is attached to a flesh ring which place by a counter ring. The counter ring is either nailed to or bolted with iron clamps. The instrument is held between and played with both hands. This
another,
similar
piece of is held in the body the knees
in construction,
but
smaller and called “playing cast,” which is the solo instrument. It is less than a foot in diameter and two feet long. The instrument is straddled and the skin is played with bare hands, while another drummer called
“Catta’tick”* sits and plays the box with two sticks. The goat-head skin is nailed to the body. The head is tensed and tuned by heating.
Signal Drum or Sounding Drum: A small, two-headed drum is used in Jamaica in Mydal — a form of African cult practiced by the inner circle of members of some Pocomania groups."” One of the most secret ceremonies of Mydal is the “Ground Table” — a ceremony held deep in the jungle at night, where the participants are the “shepherd” [or high priest] and the top officers among his “flock.” When the shepherds decide to hold a Ground Table or any other Mydal ceremony, they beat a signal or “sound” on the signal drum, at different periods over three days and nights. The call is heard by those who know it; they inform others who are out of “ear-shot.” Soon, all the required cultists arrive at the shepherd’s camp or headquarters and are informed of the time and location fixed for the ceremony. Separately, the cultists journey to the spot. They form a circle around the spot where the ceremony will be held, spreading out from 100 to 350 yards from the actual center. Everyone, including the shepherd in the center of the circle, carries out his or her own portion of the rites, but no one is *Catta stick.
192
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
able to see the other. When the shepherd wishes his followers to join him in the center of the circle for the carrying out of the chief rites of the ceremony,
he
beats
on
his signal
drum.
These
rites accomplished,
the shepherd’s followers return to their original positions. When at last the spell is cast or removed, the shepherd again beats on his signal drum, and each cultist slips away separately into the darkness to return to his
home.
The signal drum is a metal lard can eight inches in diameter and
seven inches high. The bottom skin has two snares stretched across the
head. It is played with sticks. The goat-skin heads are lapped over a sisal cord or flesh ring, secured with a rattan counter ring. The two counter rings are laced together across the metal body. No. 4.)
(See Pl. VI —
Festival Drum: The festival drum is the largest and the chief drum of the many played at the festivals held by Pocomania, as well as Maroon groups in Jamaica. It is played on those occasions by the leader of the drum band, who thus controls the tempo of the whole festival. In the Pocomania cult, there are several ceremonies that are full of gay and tuneful choruses; happy and vigorous dancing also occurs. This is also the case among the Maroons, although their festive functions are less frequent than those of the Pocomania. Whenever a ceremony is performed with a background of singing and dancing, it is the Festival drum that comes into play. The opening of a festive ceremony was on one occasion held
up for over two hours because neither drummers participate until the festive drum arrived.
nor dancers would
The Festival drum looks very much like a copy of a European drum. It is sixteen inches in diameter and thirteen inches high — the
shell is made from a section of a barrel. It is played with a padded stick. The two goat-skin heads are tensed by tightening the lacing across the body with a vertical running cord. Kitty-Katty: A Jamaican board drum. A hole fifteen inches wide by eighteen
inches long, and eight to ten inches deep is dug in the ground, then a
wide board is placed over it lengthwise.The drum is then played with
sticks,
or stomped.
It is called
“kua-kua”
in Surinam
and
in Angola,
Africa, it is called “kas.” In Surinam, it is played by both men and
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
193
women, and a bench is occasionally substituted. A similar drum in Cuba is called “tingotalango” or “tumbandera.” Zion Bass Drum: (Battery) A Jamaican copy of a European Bass drum with two heads of goatskin. It is played with cloth-wrapped sticks. The heads are attached to flesh rings which are secured by counter hoops. The hoops are laced across the box, and by tensing these lacings the instrument is tuned. It hangs from the shoulders and is played on both sides— it is used in the
Zion
cult ceremonies
along
with
a kettledrum — for mourning,
soliciting supernatural aid, and thanksgiving. The body is made from a keg, fifteen to twenty inches in diameter and fourteen to eighteen inches in height.
The
Zion
band
is composed
of a triangle,
a tambourine,
a
set of shakers (maracas), a bass drum, and a snare drum. VIRGIN
Ka:
ISLANDS
(Tamboure)
The ka drum was reported in the Virgin Islands, Brazil, Haiti, and
even in New Orleans as late as 1880. It exists only in Martinique today. It is a large barrel with the bottom removed
and mouth
covered with
skin. The skin is nailed to the body or laced to pegs inserted in the body. The instrument is played by two musicians. One straddles the drum, allowing the head to protrude between his legs, while playing it with bare hands. The second drummer
sits to the side with two small light
sticks and plays a counter rhythm on the body of the drum. It is used for Bambula
dances,
a sensual dance
of the West
Indies.!”
The Ka has had probably the widest distribution in the Americas of any Afro-American drum. It was being transplanted in most areas where the African was being removed and re-established. CARRIACOU
Carriacou-Bass: The Carriacou bass drum is a two-headed drum laid on the lap and played with one stick and one hand. It is approximately two feet long and fourteen inches in diameter. The drumstick is padded on the hitting end with strips of sewed cloth. The two calf-skin heads are wrapped about a flesh hoop which is held in place by a counter ring. The two counter hoops are laced together over the body with a cord in an “N” fashion. The Carriacou Band is composed of a tambourine, triangle, bass drum, and a fiddle. It plays quadrilles, reels and merengues to which are
194
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
set topical words in Creole (a mixture of French, African, and English). These
some
of
instruments
the
“nations”
are also used of West
in dances bearing the names
Africa:
Ibo,
Cromanti,
Temnee,
of
and
others.!”
Cutler or Kupe:
(Carriacou Battery)
A single-headed drum found in Carriacou — the Cutler is made from
a small keg covered over the top with a tacked goatskin. The ment of a Carriacou battery, is high pitched and played with Its beats are eccentric, improvised to the steady beats of the drums usually played with the Kupe. It averages eight diameter and twenty-four to thirty inches in height.
solo instruthe hands. two “Fale” inches in
Fale Drum: The
Fale
drum
is Aframerican,
and
this
instrument
is found
in
Carriacou. It has one head of goatskin tacked to a barrel body. It stands thirty inches high and is fourteen inches in diameter with a cord snare across the head. Two
Fale drums are used in pairs along with a Kupe
drum. The higher pitched Fale drum carries the basic rhythm and the lower the counter beat. TRINIDAD The cultural and racial heritage of Trinidad is similar to that of Jamaica. The major part of the population is Afro-American which includes the lowest economic stratum. Folk music and folk instruments always stem from the lower classes of society. The music and musical instruments of Trinidad are African or Afro-American. The instruments can be divided into two major classifications: instruments associated with African religions in Trinidad, and those now considered traditional and secular. Since the principal manifestations of African religions are the drums of the dance, the European colonists restricted and prohibited the practices of African rituals, and as a result these practices went underground."*! The majority of the African slaves brought to Trinidad were Dahomean or Yoruban. In Trinidad, the two religious sects did riot merge, but formed two different societies. Yoruban
cult is Shango, and the Daho-
mean is Rada. Their instruments as well as their practices are distinct. The Trinidadians’ popular music and instruments have won international acclaim. The Calypso music, indigenous to Trinidad, has been
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
195
heard around the world. Steel band music is replacing more conventional musical groups throughout the Caribbean area. Rada Drum Set of Trinidad: There
are certain
consecrated
drums
and rites of the Rada people. Towonde
Drum:
in the religious
ceremonies
It is a single-headed peg instrument used in a
battery of three. It is the main drum, played by the lead drummer. It oc-
cupies a central position drummer uses one crooked The drum is held between the calf- or deer-skin head sewn to a flesh ring and angle. This thirty-inch
between the other two drummers. The lead stick fourteen inches long and one bare hand. the legs at an angle, allowing the sound from to escape from the footed shell. The skin is laced to pegs inserted into the body at an
body
is cylindrical in shape and twelve
in diameter across the mouth. The companion drums of the Towonde Hwen’domasu,
which
are smaller
and
are the Wyande
inches
and the
of a higher tone. The
Wyande
is played with two eleven-inch sticks. It sits to the right of the Towonde
and carries the counter rhythm. The Hwen’domasu, the third member of
the battery, is made from a barrel. It is played with two thin sticks twenty-seven inches long. The head is folded around a flesh ring and a counter hoop of rattan nailed to the body holds the skin and flesh hoop
secure.
This
instrument
holds
the basic
weaves the more intricate rhythm.
pattern
while
the Towonde
Kionu or Sihu Drums:
Kionu is a ritual for the dead held nine days after death for highly
placed members ritual,
for they
of the community.
are
only
used
The
in death
drums
are named
ceremonies.
One
after the
of the
drums
is an earthenware jar covered with deer skin and beaten with one hand
and a leather thong. The other Kionu or Sihu drum is a gourd (calabash) drum consisting of two half gourds floating in a wooden tub. The inverted gourds are beaten by sticks, and a special repertoire of funeral chants are sung.’ The Shango Cult Drum Set: The Shango people of Trinidad use three drums for their “feast,
99%
they are all two-headed, but only one side is beaten. They are called,
Bembo
(mama);
Congo
(papa);
and
the Amalie
*The Shango ceremonials are called “feasts” or “sacrifices”.
(baby).
The
skins
196
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
are attached to a skin ring and then laced together across the body.
The instruments are held between the knees and played with bare hands or with one bare hand and a stick. (See Pl. VII — No. 8)
Bembo, the largest of the set, is the improvision drum, and it is the solo instrument responsible for bringing on “possession.” The Bembo stands twenty-two inches from mouth to mouth, and is ten inches in diameter. Congo
is the middle-sized
instrument.
It is twenty-two
inches
in
height, and eight inches in diameter. This is the drum of the Shango set that holds the counter rhythm. Amalie is the smallest of the Shango cult drum set. It is also twenty-two inches in height, but only seven inches in diameter. This baby drum is the one responsible for holding the basic rhythm pattern. Before these instruments are dedicated, fetish objects are placed
inside, which keep up a steady rattle when played. The instruments are tuned by running a vertical cord between the lacing, drawing the head tighter and closer together. An identical type of lacing is found on the Tambor of Panama. Some of the fetish objects placed inside the drums are grain, stones, pieces of cloth, and shells. Steel Drums — Tune Booms — Pans: The steel drums of Trinidad are an innovation in the folk music of the Americas, developed largely after World War II. In 1937, a law was passed in Trinidad outlawing skin drums and bamboo rhythm sticks. This left a people bereft of instruments which had been part of their heritage. (The population of Trinidad is 30 percent East Indian and 50 percent Aframerican.) It was from this background that the steel drum was developed. This instrument has been called a pan by the natives of Trinidad, gong by some musicologists, and a drum by others. There are several reasons why the classification is difficult: in the first place, the drums are constructed from fifty-five-gallon oil drums without skin. Small sections in the top or face of each drum are “tuned” to definite pitches from one to three octaves in variation.
Today in the Caribbean Islands more people dance to the music of the oil drums than to any other instrument. They are trimmed with
chisels and tuned with sledge hammers,
but have muted,
bell-like tones.
An ensemble of these instruments is called a steel percussion band. Each
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
197
pan is carefully designed to fill a particular role in an ensemble. There are soprano,
tenor, alto, and
bass pans. The
“ping-pong”
pan
carries
the melody, the “tune boom” pans make up the harmony section and the “bass boom” pans are rhythm instruments. The bass pans stand up on the ground waist-high, while the others are hung by straps from the shoulders of musicians. The drum sticks are wrapped with discarded inner-tube rubber. The oil drum is laid on its side and cut from four to fifteen inches from the bottom, depending on what type of pan is being fabricated. The cut is made with either a hacksaw or a cold chisel. The section is then heated, allowed to cool and placed on the ground with the closed end up. The top is hammered down, forming a smooth concave surface. The center of the pan is now about two inches below the rim. With chalk the pan is faced or sectioned off in a scalloped petal-
like manner. These markings indicate where the notes will be. The number of scalloped sections marked off depend on the pan. A center punch and hammer
are used to form permanent sections
indicated by the chalk marks. This prepares the instrument for tuning. The interior of each section is knocked forward until the correct pitch is reached. These sections may be knocked back and forth while all
sections are checked with a tuning fork.
The first record of a steel container being used as a musical instrument in Trinidad was in 1945. The boys from the streets of Port of Spain, Trinidad, were beating a little bamboo—according to Austin Simmonds,
author of Pan and Panmen.
One
of the bass bamboos
burst
and there was a resulting gap in rhythm. The gap was filled with an old gas tank. May 6, 1945, the night of victory in Europe, added another
chapter to the story of the steel band. Carnivals had been discontinued for the duration of the war. When the sirens blew the news of peace,
a huge crowd gathered around the portals of Hall Yard, traditional headquarters of the tamboo bambooists of downtown Port of Spain, Trinidad. They came to collect their equipment for the fete, but were caught unprepared. The bamboo was not cut or cured. Not to be outdone, they took pots and pans and started the rhythm. This was the true birth of the steel band. The first real “pan” to be used was an empty biscuit container. It
198
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
was played with the fist and the edge of the open palm—the “whoompwhoomp” was the main sound. The next development in this exciting period was the discovery that when one hammers a paint pan, leaving the indentations of the hammer, different sounds could be obtained by striking different sections. It was not long afterwards that the ping-pong pan or melody pan was developed as we know it today. Bands soon began forming, developing new sounds and new pans. One of the boys (Scribo Maloney of Bar 20) hung a sawed-off pan around his neck waist high, and with a pair of drumsticks, rolled his famous cut and tumble beat. It was a new advance for the steel band.’* Ellie Manette from Port of Spain, Trinidad, is given credit for bringing
the steel band
from
social
ostracism
spectability. He wrapped his drumstick with the top of an oil drum off at a length of about or “seamed” his pan with a number of radii, other. He found that by tapping these areas, With all the notes emanating from a common a rubberized
drumstick,
the sound
was
liquid,
to the threshold
of re-
strips of rubber and cut eight inches, then marked equi-distant from one anthe pan could be tuned. center and produced by sensuous
and
rhythmic.
Ellie and his brothers, who had been immortalized in calypso and steelband folklore, gathered a group and taught them Ellie’s technique. This band became the famous Invaders’ Steelband.
(See Pl. IX — No. 13)
Tamboo Bamboo: When all skin drums were outlawed in Trinidad, the islanders took to bamboo as a substitute for drums and formed tamboo bamboo bands.
The musicians of these bands made rhythmic music by knocking together pieces of bamboo in a truly startling symphony of sound to
the remarkable
merrymakers.
accompaniment
of the chanting
and
singing
of the
The instruments of this band are of well-cured lengths of specially cut bamboo. It is said that they had to be cut in the full of the moon and the owners were as proud of them as Heifetz of his violin. Each has its own pitch, ranging from the long, wide, and heavy bass bamboo to the small, light strips known as cutters. A full tamboo bamboo band was comprised
of at least five basses, three chandlers, seven fullers, and
four cutters. (See Pl. XXII — No. 53)
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
199
BAHAMAS
Tambu - Set: A single-head cylindrical drum made from a wooden keg found in the Bahamas. The music of the Bahamas is more or less drawn from the United States. But the drumming is clearly noncontinental in inspiration. Their drumming tradition is African drawn from other Caribbean islands and South America. Two or three drums are used. The
head
of de-haired
high,
thirteen
cowhide
is tacked
on and
ornamented
with a ring
of plaited sisal cord. The instruments are played under the left arm or from the ground in a squatting position. They stand twenty inches inches
in
diameter
across
the
head
and
sixteen
inches
in diameter across the bottom. The painted body is held together with two metal bands. The instrument is played with bare hands and accompanied by the claves (“cleavers”) and the saw as a scraper. The saw teeth are scraped with a knife, and the saw is flexed to produce different tones as though it were played with a violin bow.
It is interesting to find African-type drumming surviving where the cohesive force of African religious practice has been reported absent. African-type drumming ability, in other areas where the African religion
has disappeared, has been lost. (See Pl. III)
HAITI AND THE FRENCH WEST INDIES Haiti is the first African Republic in the New World. Although she
is part of the western world, her roots extend back into Africa. Linguis-
tically and culturally, Haiti belongs to the French colonized areas of the world.
Haiti has provided inspiration for sensationalists of all kinds. The
bleody
violence
of her
revolution,
the
denial
of white
brooding, forbidding mountains where drums never have made Haiti a country of mystery and intrigue.
supremacy,
sleep—these
the
all
The overt manifestations of Voudoun, the word used for African religion in Haiti, are the drums and dances that are a basic part of
religion. To dance is to dramatize the metaphysical beliefs of Voudoun. The form and the rhythms of the drums are determined by the religion. Assotor Drum: The
Assotor
or Assortor
is a Haitian
drum
connected
with
the
Dahomey’s rites. It is generally five-and-a-half-feet or taller and from
fifteen
to eighteen
inches
in diameter
across
the head.
It has
small
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DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
windows in the foot allowing the sound to escape without tilting the instrument.
It is generally known for its careful construction. It is said the Assortor is so sensitive that a breeze will cause it to vibrate like a violin. Its huge shell is hewn from a tree trunk. The membrane of calf is attached to the body by means of seven pegs and rope lacing. The drummers use a crooked drumstick to hit the skin. The height of the instrument necessitates a platform being built, or the drummer jumps up and strikes its head. The Assortor is the king of all the Voodoo drums; a special ceremony is given in its honor on Christmas eve. Before
the drum
is used, it is dressed
and
decorated,
handkerchiefs of the various colors of the loa (Voudoun
mainly
with
deities). The
worshipers execute the dances, such as the Mayoyo and the Nago. No other instrument of the Voodoo cult of Haiti is so sacred as
the Assotor drum.
It is beaten on solemn
occasions only. Most
Assotors disappeared during the anti-superstition campaign;*
they are not easy to come by. The sacrifice to, with, and of the Assotor drum, comprises
of the
therefore a whole
assortment of ceremonies in honor of various deities. So sacred an essence is attributed to this instrument that it could almost be called an idol or a fetish. It must be hewn from the kinds of wood laid down by tradition, particularly from mahogany wood, which is thought to have much blood. It must be cut in the full moon. The head or membrane which covers it must be placed as mid-day approaches, according to Jacques Roumain’s work.'!4 The first ceremony which the Assotor undergoes is the baptism. This
ceremony
installs
the
soul
into
the
drum.
Seven,
or
three
times
seven Godmothers and Godfathers are chosen for these rites. This is the song that is sung on the occasion:
“‘Assoto Micho We call Jean Jean Assoto we call you So we may baptize the Assoto
God the Father, God the Son,
God the Holy Ghost.
“The
church
and
government
periodically
campaign
to
campaigns are referred to as anti-superstitions campaigns.
eradicate
cult
rites
and
these
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
201
” After the good God I baptize you You left Guinea To come and see the Creoles We are glad to see you Assoto Micho I baptize you Assoto”! After the ceremony, several others are held honoring various deities: Legba, Ayizan, Loco, Ogu. An animal—a black or a white goat or a russet-colored ox—is sacrificed to the drum, according to a subscribed ritual. The Voodoo priest traces a cross on the Assoto which is then beaten alternately by several priests dancing around it. If any one of them fails to take his turn, misfortune is thought to befall a member of his family. The ceremony ends with the sending back of the spirit of the instrument, and the breaking of the skin. Some cooked and some raw food is placed in a basket by the priests along with needles, cotton, linen, pipe tobacco, matches, spoons, knives, forks, money, plates, and all sorts of blood known as tchiman-
assoto. All members of the family sign witness papers to the effect that
they have made an offering to the Assotor, guaranteeing his eating and
also his departure until the next ceremony. The document is also placed in the basket. Two strong men are chosen; one is appointed to protect the basket-carrier from the gods’ wrath. The basket-carrier and his guard cart off the basket to the sea or forest to dispose of it. The drum is then beaten by seven priests or hunsi with a special stick with a nail at the end, until the membrane is burst. Then the Assotor is retired. This instrument is then considered as a sacred idol like the Maya Tunkul, the Orinoco Bo-tu-tu, and the Quajum—the singing god of the Lacandon, and other drum idols in the Americas. (See PI] XII—No. 22)
Bambula Set: A
popular
drum
in
French
Antilles,
that
was
once
known
in
Louisiana. This instrument was originally made of bamboo, from which
its name was derived. Later, it was constructed from a solid log and finally from barrel staves. A small Bambula is known as Babula. The
Bambula in Martinique measures about three or four feet long and from fifteen to sixteen inches in diameter,
It is a single-headed instrument, with the head generally attached to pegs which are turned and inserted in the shell of the drum. By
driving the pegs into the body, the skin is tensed, therefore raising the
202
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
tone of the instrument. The Babula is approximately eight to nine inches
in diameter.
The Bambula dance takes its name from this drum which was used
to accompany the dancers. The instrument is straddled and played with one
bare
hand
and
a drumstick,
or two
bare
hands.
Occasionally,
the
skin is heeled with the foot to give a different tone. The musician who played the Bambula in Louisiana was called the “Bel Tambouye.” The instrument was a keg with a cowhide head nailed to it. It was played
with two
other drums,
the Tom
Tom
and the Ka;
the Bambula was the smallest of the three.!*6 Occasionally, the Ka had a string stretched across its head with bits of bamboo and feather stems tied to it, giving it a different sound.
The Louisiana battery of three drums is shown in Plate VIII — No. 10.
The Ka was straddled and the head played with bare hands, while another drummer beat on the body or box with two sticks. The Bambula was played in a cobbler position with bare hands. The Tom Tom was squatted upon and beaten on the head with two sheep-shank bones. Basse (tambourine):
The Haitian tambourine is called basse. It is more or less a friction
drum because it is known and admired for its “ciyé.” The “ciyé” is the
sound obtained from rubbing the head of the instrument with the fingers. The word “tambourine” in Haitian creole designates a tiny drum used
in secular dances.” The basse is a tambourine, or frame drum. A thin piece of wood about four inches in width, four feet long and one-eighth
of an inch in thickness is placed in water and allowed to soak. When it is soft enough
to bend,
hoop, just large
enough
it is bent
in a circle, lapped,
and nailed.
A
nail is driven through the branch to prevent its slipping out. The greenbranch section is a fraction larger than the hole and must be whittled for a perfect fit. The branch section is approximately six inches long. The five inches extending from the frame as a handle are three-quarters of an inch in diameter. Sections are cut in the frame into which are inserted jingles made from flattened soft-drink caps. The jingles are held in place by thin nails placed through the frame and the center of the bottlecaps. The dehaired goatskin is wrapped about a quarter of an inch vine flesh to fit around
the frame
or body.
A
counter
hoop wrapped in skin holds the skin in place. The counter hoop is laced through holes made in the bottom of the frame. The lacing is
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
203
continuous from the handle in “V” fashion, around the frame. The instrument is approximately thirteen inches in diameter and four inches
high. (See Pl. XII — No. 24)
Congo Drum Set — Haiti: The Congo orchestra consists of three drums
of different sizes
called Manman, Tymbale, and Ti Congo. They have cylindrical shapes,
double heads, and are European in style, or copies of European drums. Tension is obtained by two wooden rings. The Tymbale is held horizontally on a chair or some other support. They are played with sticks; a small board is often fixed to its casing and serves as a percussion
instrument. The tymbale is the solo instrument.
Djuba: A single-headed, Haitian drum played by two musicians; one plays the skin with bare hands and the other taps out his rhythm on the box. It is generally a small keg with one end open and a laced goatskin head on the other.
The instrument is laid on its side and straddled by one musician. It is used in a ceremony which the Peasant God Zaka demands via
the mouth of someone possessed. The Djuba dance is named for this
instrument.
Juba or Martinique: The Juba or Martinique is a short, wide-bellied instrument. It is laid on the ground and straddled by one drummer playing the head with bare hands and occasionally the right heel. A second drummer, the catalier, beats the body or box with two sticks. The Juba belongs to the Petro family of drums of Haiti. It is hewn from a solid log and has one end covered with parchment. This instrument in Martinique, Virgin Islands, and the southern part of the United States is called a Ka. (See Pl. VIII — No. 10) Petro Drum Set: These are associated
with
the
Petro
cults
rites
of Haiti.
These
rites are traditionally played with two drums.’ They are constructed
similarly are laced from the quarters
to Rada drums, hewn from solid logs, but the goatskin heads to the body by cords and not to pegs. The lacing cords run counter ring in a Y fashion to a body ring of sisal cord three of the way down the shell. The flesh ring is made from a
running vine, and the counter ring, also of vine, is wrapped in goatskin
204
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
hide. The larger of the two drums is called Manman or Gros Baka, the smaller one is called Pititt or Ti Baka. The Gros Baka is played with bare hand and holds the most important role in the duet. The
sound
of Gros Baka
is called “ralé,”
and
the slighter sound of the Pititt is referred to as “taille.” These instruments are also associated with secular dances and are frequently employed as work drums in combites, agricultural societies or work groups. They are favored in Saturday night bombaches—social dances. The
drums
are unpainted
and undecorated;
generally
used by
Tiroro, the most famous drummer in Haiti, in all secular appearances. The instruments are tuned by tightening the ropes by hand, wetting the rope lacings causing them to shrink, or forcing wedges between the body ring and the body. The Pititt, like the Gros Baka, is played with
bare hands.
Petro drums are made in two other variations. One is the Loangue or Loango, a long drum about three and one-half to four feet long and
about eight inches in diameter across the head. The other is the Juba or Martinique. The
Petro
drums
are
used
for Kitta
Bumba,
Salongo,
Bambarra,
Congo, the Loangue and other dances. In religious dances of the Petro cycle, two of these drums with one
or more
chestra;
and
rattles,
an
ogan,
occasionally,
(See PI. V— No.
2)
one
and
an
asson
or more
are
bamboo
used
to form
an
or-
trumpets—vaccines.
Rabardage: The only Afro-Haitian drum played by women. It is a single membrane, miniature drum and is held in the armpit to play. The coneshaped
body is carved from a log and covered on the large end with
goatskin. The head or membrane is wrapped about a flesh ring made from
a running
vine. The
head
is held
in position
and
tensed
by a
rattan counter hoop wrapped with hairy goatskin. The counter hoop is laced down the tapering body to a body ring of sisal. This instrument, which is played with the fingers and hands, is approximately six inches in diameter and eight inches long. (See Pl. XIII — No. 28) Rada Drum Set: Rada is a term used to denote a native of the French West African Protectorate of Dahomey. According to the late Dr. Melville Herskovits,
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
205
the term itself derives from Allada, an early capital of the Dahomean
Kingdom.
The Rada ritual drums of Haiti are made like the typical African
Dahomey type; the shell is carved from the trunk of a tree, cone shaped.
The skin is stretched by means of pegs braced with cords. The shells are carved or painted with bright colors that symbolize the Patron God of Sanctuary. The difference between the rituals is reflected in the diversity of the rhythm, in the drums, and the instruments which are used with them. Rada groups are prominent in Cuba, Haiti, Trinidad, and Brazil. The Rada drums of Haiti are played in groups of three, identical in shape, but different in size. The largest, Adjunto or Manman; the second, Seconde, the middle-sized instrument; the smallest, the Bula.
The Manman is played with a wooden hammer-type stick and is struck on the head or the side of the shell. It is tied to a chair or to the body at an angle to the seated drummer. The
musician
who
beats the Seconde
is seated, with
the instru-
ment held firmly between the legs, striking the instrument with one bare hand and a forked stick or a small bow agida. The Bula is always vertical and is struck with two sticks. The Ogan is a metal bell rung with an iron rod. This instrument
sets the rhythm followed by the Bula, Seconde, and Manman. The Manman dominates the group; its freedom and intensity stand out clearly
from the sonorous background. It is the solo instrument and is supposed to produce “possession.”* The Manman is called in some areas the Hountor or Hountogri— mama drum. It averages between thirty-two and thirty-six inches in height,
and
ten
to
twelve
inches
in
diameter,
and
is headed
with
a
cowhide, generally. The Seconde is known as gronde, Mayen, and papa drum. It averages between
twenty-two and twenty-six inches in height and eight to
nine inches in diameter. The Bula, or bebé, stands between eighteen and
twenty inches and approximately eight inches in diameter. These instruments are tuned approximately one-fifth apart and are
tuned by pouring water into the shell with the instrument standing on
its head. After the drum stands for fifteen minutes, the skin and pegs *The congo rites call their drums maman, gronde, and katabou.
206
DRUMS
become damp; the water placed on its foot and the tune, the pegs are simply are generally headed with The
districts from
IN THE AMERICAS
is then poured out of the drum and it is pegs driven in a little. If the drum is out of driven in a little farther. The Rada drums goatskin, bull or ox cowhide.”
which
these
drums
originated
drums,
Ogan,
and Asson.
are identifiable
by the carving in the foot, and the method used of inserting the pegs. The Dahomey—(Vadoun) or “Voodoo” Group—This orchestra consists
of three
Rada
The
Asson
is a dried
gourd, around which is wrapped a string of snake vertebrates and beads. The beads are painted the colors of the deities to which the instrument is dedicated. A small bell is attached to the end of the gourd. (See Pl. XXV — No. 61) The Rada orchestra plays for both religious and _ recreational dances or “rests.” The drummers sit together on a bench or chairs at the edge of the dance area. The player of the Manman is considered the leader of the orchestra and sits in the middle. The Bulatier (player of the Bula) is responsible for the basic rhythm of any song introduced by the singers and is the first drum to begin. If the Bulatier is not sure of the beat, he signals on his drum and the chief drummer
answers
or gives him a sign on his drum or a verbal imitation of the correct rhythm. Occasionally, one finds a Rada drum with an eye carved or
painted on the body. This eye represents the All-Seeing eye of God. This eye is considered to be most potent—it is feared and, at the same time, considered lucky.
All Rada ritual drums and some other instruments are baptized in
the name
of the “loa,”
(Haitian
cult name
for deities)
to which
they
are especially dedicated before they can be played at a rite. This requires a special ceremony, and these instruments are thought to be a means
of communication
between humans
and spirits. Only after bap-
tism are they used for sacred rites. It is necessary that the musicians hired be professional, but they are not indispensable. The power of communication with the spirits is only conveyed by the instruments of sound, not by the musicians.
(See Pl. VIII — No. 12)
Tambour Maringouin (Mosquito Drum): A Haitian instrument classified by Curt Sachs as an earth bow,
but classified by others as a friction drum. A cylindrically shaped hole is dug in the earth ten to twelve inches wide and covered with a large
sheet of leather or bark of the palm or banana tree, held in place by
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
207
an arrangement of pegs. A cord is attached to the center of the bark through a hole. The cord is drawn taut by a green sapling whose thicker
end is buried in the ground at an angle—giving the appearance of a bent fishing rod. The instrument is then played by rubbing and plucking the cord with one hand and adjusting the tension in the sapling with the other hand. The sound is a humming mosquito-like sound. A portable model is made occasionally. The cord in this case is attached to the top of a can through a hole in its center. The can is nailed to one end of a board and the sapling is nailed to the other end of the board. The mosquito drum is played as an accompaniment to the rattle
and the “cata” at Easter time. The cata is a hollowed cylinder bamboo or wood, used as a timekeeper. (See Pl. XXIV — No. 60)
of
In Haiti, the drum is an integral part of the people’s life. It expresses the heart beat of communal living. Drums lead inevitably to dance, so that truly astounding repertoire of drum rhythm and dances have accumulated over the centuries. Drummers are generally members of the cults, and they are responsible
for
the
sacred
rhythms
and
the
sacred
instruments.
They
regulate the tone and the pace of the dance, and decide when it is appropriate
to introduce the breaks, or changes,
in rhythm, which so
often induces “possession.” Drummers become one with their drums, and drums come alive. People move and sing and vibrate with nature, and dance with each other, with their ancestors, and with old African
gods they have never forgotten.’ The training of a cult drummer requires more preparation than that of any other ritual activity. He has to be able to play the rhythms of the different cults as well as to dances
to deities. He
is generally
hired and paid on the basis of his experience. These musicians are not sacred, but their instruments are. When
salutations are addressed toward
the drum it does not include the drummer, who might be beating the drums
at that particular
time. The
drums
are the core of cult rites.
Personal modulations and lack of vigor are reflected by breaks on the solo drummer, and inevitably conveyed to all by the pulse. A good
drummer lends color and brilliance to the rites. Without any change in
beat, tempo, pacing, tone or volume. it is possible for the drnmmin« to become intense. This is accomplished by breaks and phrasing in
208
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
contrast to the European conception of dance rhythm. The beats of the drum frequently do not correspond to the natural accent of the melody, but occur in syncopated position, as in modern jazz. UNITED STATES Afro-American drums in the United States disappeared completely. Why? We will never know, but we can try to explain it. Before we try to explain their disappearance, let us for a moment mention some of
the accounts of the drums that did exist. George W. Cable in his article, “The Dance in Place Congo,” published in the Century Magazine of February,
1886,
describes
the orchestra,
the
dancers,
the
dances,
and
on the large
one
the setting for Congo dances held in New Orleans. We have collected and reconstructed former slave instruments used in the United States. (See Pl. VII — No. 10) They are described as long hollowed logs covered with sheepskin at one end. Three were used, each a little larger than the other. The drums were placed lengthwise on the ground and straddled. They were beat on the heads
with fingers,
fists, and
feet, slowly
and rapidly on the small ones. Sometimes an extra performer sat on the ground behind the larger drum at its open end and beat on the wooden
sides with
two
sticks.
Occasionally,
the
small
drum
was
made
from a joint or two of very large bamboo, which was thought to have given it its name, Bamboula. Other instruments making up the orchestra were the gourd rattle, hung from the end of a stout staff in one hand and beaten upon the palm of the other; a triangle; a Jaw harp, a jawbone of a cow, the teeth of which were scraped with a key. At times the drums were reinforced by one or more empty barrels or casks
beaten on the head with shank bones of cattle; the Marimba
brett;
and
the banjo, of four strings. Another instrument mentioned was the quills,
a flute made from several joints of reed tied together.
Drums were outlawed in the United States, as well as African religion; so were they in other places, but the cult went underground,
the instruments were hidden or substitutes found. This did not happen in the United States. Was law enforcement more effective? Were the education
and
religious
activities more
acceptable?
Did
the accessability
of European instruments have anything to do with it? Could it have been the desire to conform to European culture for benefits desired, or was it a rejection of everything African? It could have been any one of those things, all of them, or none of them. Whatever
the reason, the
AFRO-AMERICAN
DRUMS
drum
the hand-clapping,
rhythms,
us. The
drums
drum
ASIAN
AND
the foot-tapping
Chinese-American
@©
East Indian-American
States, but not heard, at least, the
OCEANIAN
AMERICAN
Japanese-American Others
1. Hawaii
2. U.S.A. a. California b. Washington c. Illinois d. Louisiana
e. Pennsylvania
f. New
are still with
once heard.
A.
OO
and
are felt in the United
true “Afro”
(J
209
York
3. Central America a. British Honduras 4, West Indies
a. Jamaica
b. Trinidad c. Bahamas d. Barbados 5. South America a. Brazil b. British Guiana
c. Surinam
Western
Hemisphere
MUSICAL
AREAS
12 OUR ASIATIC AND OCEANIC HERITAGE After the abolition of slavery, some other method of sustaining the economy had to be found—thus the equally infamous scheme of in-
dentured laborers. And so, the stage was set for the emergence of a wonderful, peculiar and totally new type of drum music. Several types of people were brought to the Americas under this scheme: Chinese, East
Indians,
Filipinos,
etc.
These
were
indentured
only
after
they
had been guaranteed the preservation of their customs, including their religions and national way of dress. Any of us who pay attention to the festivals of these people in American communities will grasp the importance of the several drums in the dance interpretation of folktales. Asian music is particularly adapted to—and dominated by— percussion instruments.
With the coming of a great number
the Americas, came Oriental
Polynesian,
and the Oceanic
traditional
of Asians and Oceanians to
absorption of Hawaii into religious practices. Islam,
religion,
and
Hinduism
Americas. Each of these groups used music in festivals. All of the groups brought drums their music. Each had its own philosophy Centuries before the birth of Greek and
are
the United States, Shinto, Buddhism,
all found
the
their forms of worship and that play a major role in of music and arrangements. Roman empires, the Chinese
possessed musical instruments and a system of music. They 210
in
ascribe the
OUR ASIATIC AND OCEANIC
HERITAGE
211
invention of their instruments to Emperor Kai-Tien-Chai, who is supposed to have invented them about 2500 B.C. The Chinese classified their instruments according to the material with which they are made. The instruments reproduced the sound of these eight substances: tanned skin (drums), metal (bells), clay (whistle or flutes), silk
bamboo
stone (musical stones), (strings of silk) lyre,
(flutes and panpipes), calabash and reed (reed organ—calabash
resonator).
All
these
materials
nature
provided,
and
man
made
the
To the Chinese, the sounds of music, the tone colors are more
im-
choice of their use.’ The Chinese considered the drum to be the most important of all musical instruments inspired by the gods and built by man. portant than the notes which may be formed. They have two scales corresponding to the black and white keys of the modern piano—but they prefer a five-note scale.** Chinese music is characterized by a slow tempo, overlaid with much percussion. The orchestras are generally
composed
of modern
of one large drum, two small drums, two little bells, a pair clappers
and
a flute. Most
non-tunable bimembranophones.
of their
drums
are tack-headed,
Japanese music is based on two great theoretical foundations; the
music of ancient China and the music of Buddhism. Buddhism entered Japan in the Nara period (553-794), coming primarily through Chinese sources.) The Buddhist ceremony begins and ends with a drum. Both the idiophones
and
two-headed
skin drums
are used in the service.
Neither European nor African music is characterized by a high
development of melody such as we find tation of East Indian music. Their scale is of modes (against our two modes, major is divided into twenty-four quarter-tones
in the rich melodic ornamenarranged into a large number and minor), and the octave (as against our twelve semi-
tones). This gives full scope to the flair for ornamentation to be found not only in the music of India, but also in other aspects of culture. Music was a science in India long before it was organized in other countries. This science was mentioned in Rig Veda, along with the drum and lute. The chief use of music was to assist in the performance
of religious ceremonies.
India never developed a method of notation as we find in Persian, Arabian, and Western music—but they did develop an elaborate method
212
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
of teaching music by rote. Their drum teaching method is as elaborate as any found in the world. The method lends itself to continuous improvisations. deity
The notes of Hindu music are thought to be presided over by a of the Hindu
pantheon
of deities.
Hindu
music has
attained
a
theoretical precision yet unknown to Europe. According to Professor Inayat Khan, there are 400 main rhythms in Hindu music. It takes a drummer a lifetime to master these basic rhythms and inprovisations. Before
singing
a song
itself,
the
Hindu
musician
sings
alap—a
kind of prelude to the song. There are no words to an “alap”; it simply
prepares the listener and creates an atmosphere for the ensuing song. The singer and the musician improvise according to mood. Master musicians care little for words because music conveys to the human
mind with ease what words fail to do. Music begins where words end. Hindu music is purely melodic. That is, it is produced by successive sounding of single tones of different pitch, whereas Western harmonic music is produced by the simultaneous sounding of single tones of different pitch. This melodic character of Hindu music helps to lend itself easily to improvisation. To understand East Indian drums and drumming, one of the most
complex and sophisticated types in the world, one has first of all to try to understand the significance of the art of drumming in the scheme of Indian music art expression. To the East Indian, in order to create something beautiful and to give it a physical aspect, he must develop a technique. Technique to the East Indian is the same as discipline. Thus,
in ancient
days,
to be a musician
or dancer
was the same
as to
be a “yogin.” Religion was beautiful—art was the expression of beauty —therefore,
art,
in
all its forms
became
a fundamental
factor
in
all
religious rites and ceremonies. From the point of view of sheer physical exertion
involved,
non-physical
as a physical
and
even from the point of view of spiritual labor, the Indian dance is the most demanding of all the arts. In dance, the body has to become so that those who behold
will forget the body
entity and become entranced by the art of the body’s expression. Dance
has been described by the Indian as “the music of the body.” In Indian music there is not only tala, which is “yoga” (control and discipline), but also “laya,” which is the rhythm within the tala. Rhythm, which in
music is the dance of the emotions, is also the dance of sound. The
OUR ASIATIC AND OCEANIC
HERITAGE
Indian believes that the moment
213
art (music
and dance
in particular)
is made personal, it becomes degraded, for then it expresses sensuality. A musician may like to show off, but this is fatal for in art, one not exhibit the artist, but the art.
does
With such an understanding of the Indian’s unconscious psycho-
logical
approach
to music,
one
begins
to comprehend
the
otherwise
strange fact that as a background man—rhythm man—the East Indian is unexcelled, although often unnoticed.*
Without a doubt, the most important Asian drums found in the
Americas are the “dhol” and the “tasa,” thought to be the forerunner
of the “timpano.”
Both are very popular
in Jamaica, Trinidad, and
British Guiana. It is used for weddings, festivals, and funerals. From the island and the State of Hawaii, the Americas
receive
the Polynesian instruments, and the instruments of China, Japan and Korea. Some of the Polynesian kettledrums come with a carved foot and are covered with sharkskin, and some are made from gourds and coconuts,
and
are also a part of our Oceanic
Northern
India by East Indians who
heritage.
The “tasa” and “dhol” were introduced into the Americas from
were brought to these shores, as
laborers. The descendants of these immigrants have kept the instrument and the traditions for which it is used.** The Chinese tom-toms, the cymbal, blocks, and the “Chinese boxes”
are used as accessories by popular percussionists all over the Americas. Their use in this manner puts them in the cultural stream of the Americas. Many
of the instruments used in the Asian temples of worship in
the Americas, have never been incorporated into the main stream of American culture, but are being used in the Americas nevetheless.
*Background men, or “rhythm men” are terms used by modern musicians, to identify the musician who holds the basic rhythm for improvisation. **1946 Census of Trinidad show 35.09% of population to be of East Indian descent.
DRUMS
214
PLATE IV — ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN Ami Dance Drum
Taiwan Hand Drum
Cocoanut Banjo Rattle
Kubu Drum Taiwan Floor Drum
Mrdanga
Skull Drum
Tabla Set
IN THE AMERICAS
DRUMS
Burma Tabla
13 ASIAN AND OCEANIAN AMERICAN DRUMS Of all the Asian drums seen in the Americas, only one has been
integrated into the main stream of American
culture. It is a small slit
drum used as an accessory with the popular drum set. It is referred to as a Wood Block and is used for special effects. The other drums are
seen on special occasions used by certain ethnic groups or study groups.
Chinese Wood Block —“Cajita China”: A small rectangular wooden box imported originally from China.
It is approximately
six inches long, three inches wide, and two inches
thick. The box has two long slits running from one side to the other near the bottom and near the top. It is referred to in China as ‘“nbogoi” or “popé.” During the thirties, it was standard equipment with the jazz set. (See Pl. XXII —No.
53)
Ipu-Hula— (Gourd Drum) Paipu (pa to strike ipu gourd): A real hula orchestra drum of Hawaii. A large round gourd with
the top cut away is sewn to a smaller gourd with the bottom and the top cut off, forming an hourglass instrument.
The bottom gourd averages from twelve to twenty-two inches in
height and from eight to sixteen inches in diameter. The short, squat
variety of gourd used for the upper chamber is from seven to eleven
inches in height and seven to thirteen inches in diameter. The two gourds are joined and sewn with breadfruit gum and thread, forming 215
216
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
a single chamber. The instrument also has a cloth loop handle tied between the gourds. The gourd drum is played by striking it against the ground, where a piece of cloth has been laid, then striking the gourd with the fingers. The drum is held with both hands and is raised in front of the musician who sits on the ground while playing. It is dropped between the legs on the cloth and the sound is emitted from the hole in the top gourd. (See Pl. XXIV — No. 58) Pahu: A single-headed,
footed kettledrum
of Tahiti, used at one time for
sacrificial rites. The instrument is played in upright position with bare
hands, and stands approximately thirty-six inches high and is fourteen
inches in diameter.
The body is hewn from the trunk of a coconut tree. The trunk is
cut from
both
ends,
leaving
a section
so that the sound
chamber
will
be closed. One extreme is carved to form a foot and the other is covered with
shark-skin
head.
(See
Pl. XVIII — No.
41)
Pahu Hula: A footed kettledrum found in Hawaii. The shark-skin head, played with bare hands, is laced to the carved foot supporting the instrument. The body, carved from a solid coconut tree log, stands in an upright position when it is played. It is used in the Hula dances. According to Hawaiian mythology, the first hula was danced by the goddess Hiiaka.
In ancient Hawaii, initiates were trained in the hula at the temples.’ The foot of the drum has oval holes carved through it, giving it
a lace or stud effect. Only two thirds of the log is hollowed out for a resonance chamber. The log is then reversed and the bottom and the foot are carved. A one-inch convex bottom is left intact two-thirds of the way down the body. The instruments average from eleven to twenty-two inches in height
and eleven to sixteen inches in diameter. There are several types of carvings used in the foot of these drums." The foot carvings come in the single row of arches with downward projections from the middle of each arch-type foot, the foot with two rows of arches with the second
row reversed;
the foot with two rows
with arches inverted; and another foot-type with three rows of inverted arches.
The mouth edge is smoothed to allow a close fit of the shark-skin
ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN DRUMS
217
head. The skin is one piece, overlapping the mouth of the shell one inch or more. There are two general ways of placing holes for lacing: one is a single row of holes and the other, a double row. The single row is laced by cords to the foot studs* alternately and in an indirect method; the “olona cords” (lacing cords) are threaded through two or three rows of holes to form two patterns and cords run from the skin lacing to the studs. The drummer sits in a squat position and plays with bare hands. (See Pl. XVIII — No. 42) Puniu: A Hawaiian knee drum made from a coconut shell. The shell is prepared by cutting the stem end off level above the middle or greater diameter of the coconut. The upper edge is trimmed to form a level horizontal surface. A sharkskin is fitted over the opening and allowed to lap
over
the edge
of the
outside
from
one-half
to one-and-a-half
inches—to allow for the attachment of cords for lacing. A ring of cork is made to fit around the coconut bottom about one inch thick. Cords are laced between the ring and the skin to tighten the skin. The instrument is tied in position above the knee ring is extended to secure the drum.
and a cord from
the bottom
The stick or beater is made of a thick two-ply cord or fiber, doubled in the middle and twisted into a cord. A knot is tied to the end to form
an overhand knot, used to beat the drum. This instrument is thought to be a local invention of Hawaii because it does not occur in any
other part of Polynesia. The instrument is played in conjunction with the wooden
hula
drum,
also a kettledrum.
The drummer sits on the ground and plays the wooden drum with one hand and the knee drum with the other hand. The dimensions are four inches in height and five inches in diameter. The Puniu is known as Hawaii’s snare drum, but in reality it is a kettledrum, covered with the skin of the Kala fish because it has very small
scales, or the sharkskin.
(See
Pl. XVIII — No.
42)
Pahu Heiau: A Polynesian temple drum found in Hawaii. The average height
is forty-six inches. It is footed with six or more carved arches—very similar to the Pahu Hula, only larger. It is a kettledrum carved from a *Base of the drum.
218
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
solid log of the coconut tree. The head is made from sharkskin and laced to the arches in the foot. It is generally played with bare hands or padded drumsticks. Touette: A Polynesian slit drum carved from a solid log. It is carved in the shape of Oro-tiki (Oro, name of God; Tiki, meaning God). This instrument is two-and-a-half feet long, four inches high, and six inches wide. The slit is made in the anterior through three-fourths the thickness of the instrument. One lip is thicker than the other, giving the drum two definite tones when the lips (sides of the slit) are struck.
It is found in Tahiti and Hawaii. (See Pl. XXVIII — No. 56) Tuili: A hand-slit drum carved from a solid block of wood. The exterior
is fashioned in the form of a fish, the underside is flattened, and a rec-
tangular slit is cut to approximately three-quarter inches wide, and one-and-a-half- inches deep and nine-and-a-half inches long. The Tuili is a Polynesian instrument found in Hawaii. It is used for both music and signaling. The instrument is struck with a stick on the side of the main body and held with the other hand. (See Pl. XXIII — No. 56) Ko-Tsuzumi: A small two-headed Japanese drum used in Japan in Nohgaku, the music of the Noh Drama.* It is related to the San-no-Tsuzumi in the court orchestra and also to the Korean drum, but it is played differently. It consists ofa wooden body
(do), two skins
(kawa), and two sets of
ropes (shirabe). The body of zelkova wood, like a good violin, comes from just the right zelkova tree growing in just the right place, and it is highly finished. The inside is hand carved with spiral patterns (kanname), deemed very important to tone or sound. The horse-hide skin is stretched over iron rings and then stitched at the rear with hemp thread. The stitches are covered by inner black lacquer circles which
can be seen on the heads. The back of the skin
is built up with clay so that the body fits snugly against the skin. The back of the heads is covered with a small patch of deerskin placed in the inside center of the back skin which controls reverbera*Noh: Japan's classic dance drama.
ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
219
tion of the skin along with a patch of paper (choshigami). The paper is changed with each performance to insure the proper sounds. One set of ropes holds the skins of the two heads against the body, and another rope is looped around the first. By squeezing the second rope,
tension
is created
on
the
skin
which
raises
the pitch
of the
in-
strument. The body of the instrument is decorated with black and gold
designs. (See Pl. XVI — No. 37) The
Ko
Tsuzumi
has five basic sounds:
pon, pu, ta, chi, and tsu.
Pon is produced by striking the center of the head with the fingers. Two to four fingers of the right hand are used, depending on the school of drumming
attended. The ropes are held loosely until the moment
impact, then squeezed quickly to produce a liquid waver to the tone. Pu
of
is similar to pon, but it is lighter and played with only one
finger. Ta is produced by hitting the edge of the head with two fingers while exerting maximum tension on the ropes. Chi is a light version of ta played with the ring finger.
Tsu may be executed by leaving the hand on the front head and allowing the rear head to produce the tone. When the instrument is not in use, it is often tied up by a separate rope known as a shimeo. The tying and untying of these ropes are ideally done with a careful ceremony. In Japanese drumming, the stage manner (expressions and movements) is as important as the playing technique in the Noh drumming.'** The teacher always sits in front of the pupil in order that his gestures can be imitated. They appear either very simple or with elaborate decorations. Mokugyo-Wooden
fish
(Moku-Wood)
(Gyo-fish):
An Asian slit drum carved from a camphor, mulberry or rosewood log, in the form of an eyeless fish head. A fish which has no eyelids is regarded as a symbol of wakeful attention and therefore the wooden fish is used as a prayer drum. The small drum is placed on a cushion and struck with a padded drum stick to mark the time for Buddhist prayer.
A large instrument of this type is used in both Taoistic and Bud-
dhistic temples. The small ones are used in the home. The Chinese ver-
sion of the instrument is generally painted and is struck with a painted wood beater. (See Pl. XXIII — No. 57)
220
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Odaiko: A large, two-headed Japanese drum used to add gravity to the choreography of certain dances. It is used in the oldest orchestral art music in the world, the Gagaku,
or court music.
Even though these instruments are played in court music, they are
also used in the folk, popular and temple-worship music. They appear either very simple or with elaborate decorations. The tone is controlled with pressure from the left arm. The basic sounds are: chon — strong; tsu-— weaker; don — made by hitting the front head and holding, allowing the rear head to make the sound. Taiko — A Noh and Gagaku Drum: A barrel drum about twenty-six inches in diameter and in height.
The convex body is made from zelkova wood, considered best for that purpose. The two heads are of horse or cowhide. The top skin is thicker than the rear one. A patch of deerskin is attached to the center where all blows are directed. The rear head is bare and not traditionally used.
The heads are lashed across the body with one set of ropes and
another set is used to tune the instrument. A special stand which grips the encircling ropes holds the instrument off the floor while it is being
played with two blunt sticks. The sticks are about twelve inches long— called “bashi.” The basic sounds of the Noh Taiko are divided into three groups:
small, medium,
and large — sho, chu, and doi.
In general, when two drums are used in Japan, one generally carries
the basic rhythm and the other creates the syncopation.
—No.
37)
(See Pl. XVI
Uchiwa— Daiko (Fan Drum): A membrane stretched over an iron ring and then attached to a wooden handle — used by the Nichiren sect for Evangelist work in Japan. sewed
The Uchiwa drum is beaten with a wooden stick. The head, which is to the ring in many
cases, has religious slogans written
on its
surface. Uchiwa in Japan is a vender’s drum used in selling sacred texts. The beating of the instrument is an accompaniment for chants and prayers. This instrument, even though it has only one head, has two playing surfaces; it has no body, just a head.
ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
221
This instrument is used by some dance teachers on the West Coast of the United States for marking rhythms. (See Pl. XV — No. 32) Kou:
A Chinese drum. Most of the drums designated as Chinese drums seen in the Americas are the bimembranophone variety. The Pang Kou,
Tao Kou, and Tang Kou have a cylindrical bowl-shaped body of wood.
The openings are wider in diameter than the height of the drum. The
pigskin heads are tacked to the body with large flat-headed brass tacks,
which generally identify the instruments as of Chinese origin. The heads are generally shellacked along with the body, making the skin hard and slick. The
heads,
as a rule, are also painted with the symbolic
dragon,
flower, or the lion.
The Kou usually is played with one stick provided with a round
rubber tip. These drums are of indefinite pitch and the Pang Kou has
an internal rattle of metal. The inches to four or five feet. It is These instruments are seen areas where we find groups of being used in dance classes for souvenirs.
diameter of the heads runs from six often found in temples. played on special festive occasions in Chinese-Americans. They are also seen keeping time, and also as ornamental
Tabla: The Tabla of India used for court performances is played with the fingers and palms. In all its refinement, the technique takes years of strenuous practice to master. The different strokes of the right and left
hands are defined and named, and the combinations and variations. of the
right- and left-hand strokes together and separately give an almost unlimited scope to the artist, especially within the long phrases which the more
intricate
talas present.
The Tabla is the Pakhawaj
Mrdanga,
and
the Dhol
have
drum
divided into half. The Pakhawaj,
an irregular
cylindrical
shape,
tapering
slightly at the ends. They taper more markedly toward the right hand
with a smaller stretched parchment, tuned to the fourth or fifth above
the left-hand parchment. The right-hand parchment is tuned to the note chosen as a drone for the performance." The Tabla is a pair of kettledrums and is probably one of the most, if not the most,
sophisticated
drum
in the world.
Its method
of being
played and the system worked out for its rhythm cycles or tala will verify this to the casual student.
222
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
The drum played with the left hand is called Banya. It is made of
wood, clay or metal right hand is made
(brass)
of wood
and is semi-spherical. The drum for the
and is cylindrical but irregular with only
the top being open and covered with parchment. The tuning is regulated by blocks between the leather thongs that keep the parchment in place. The drums provide not only the rhythmical backbone of the performance, but also a firm basis on which the singer can rely for his pitch, against which he can build his contrast. The Parchment of the Tabla (Daina) is made in three pieces: —.
JO
- 1, Kinar 2. Chaant 3. Syahi
The parchment of the Banya is composed of two parts:
The different parts of the drums have different sounds; for example,
oo
~
@)
\
Vea ;
---- Part 1 has the sound Na or Ta 1. :
Part 2, Tin or Tun - Part 3, T or Tr
Banya
Part 1—Ge or Gey Part 1 & T—K
ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
223
The arranging of drum syllables to fit the beats of the rhythmic cycle is called Theka. The rhythmic cycle is referred to as Tala or Tal. (x) — The
down
beat or
(#1)
“Sum.”
(1) — bar (0) — Khali — usually the first beat of the 2nd half of cycle (=) — stress Na or Ta + Ghey = Dha Tin or Tun + Ghey = Dhin
For example, Dadra tal — 6 beat cycle x 1 x
Theka:
2
Dha
0 /4 0
3
Dhin
Na/Dha
Rupak Tal — (7 beats 3 + 4) x
Theka:
5
6
Tin
Na
0
1
2
3
Tin
Tin
Na
2
/4
5
/Dhin
/6
Na
7
/Dhin
Na
Teen Tal — 3 claps — 16 beats x
2
123 x
Dha
4
Dhin Dhin
/5 2
Dha Dha/
0 6
7
Dhin Dhin
8
/9 0
Dha
3 10
11
Tin
Tin
12
/
Ta/Ta
13 3
14
Dhin
15
Dhin
16
Dha
Dha
The drum strokes are referred to as bol. The leather thongs used to secure the head or warka are referred to as diwal. The wall of the
drum is referred to as chatter. The black spot on the head is referred to as eye or siyahi. Both the right and left hands are tunable. The Tabla
is tuned to
scale and often must be re-tuned during the course of an evening’s performance. The drummer generally sits in the lotus position and plays with the drums in front of him. The instruments are tuned with a metal hammer which is used to knock down the cylindrical blocks of wood between
the sides of the drum and leather thongs and also the edge of the head. (See Pl. IV)
Mrdanga: (Mridangam) A two-headed East Indian drum averaging twenty-one and one-half
224
DRUMS
inches long with the bass head of approximately
IN THE AMERICAS
seven and one-half
inches, and a tenor head, six and one-half inches in diameter.
The parchments are fastened to two hoops which are laced together
with thongs across the body. The body is larger in the middle and tapers
toward the ends. A circular black cement spot is found on the tenor head. The spot is used for dampering. The heads are usually one-fifth apart in pitch. The small head is played with the right hand and the left hand plays the large head or bass. It is used for dignified or serious music. The heads are composed of two skins, one full skin and one skin ring superimposed on the full skin. Both heads are played with fingers and hands. (See Pl. IV) Dhol: A two-headed folk instrument played with sticks or hands. The cylindrical body is larger in the middle and tapers toward the ends. The taper toward the smaller end is greater, ending in an opening smaller in diameter than the bass end. The heads are wrapped about skin rings. The two heads are laced to each other by cord. Two tension rings are superimposed on the skin rings. The cord is run from one ring to the other around the body in a “W” fashion. Rings are connected between two cords and by pulling the
ring, the heads are tensored.
(See P]. XVII — No. 38) The East Indians
of British Guiana use the instrument in the Tadjah festival which is similar to the East Indian Hosain festival of Trinidad and Jamaica. It is not unusual to hear forty drums at the Tadjah festival. The drums are modified dhols. They are made from wooden barrels decorated with colored cloth. Both ends are covered with goatskin. The goat skins are placed on flesh rings and an inch larger than the diameter of the body. The two heads are laced together across the body with a rope in a “V” fashion. The heads can be tensed by loops running between the rope. It is beaten with a heavy wooden drum stick. As the drums are brought from various villages, all over the country, there is an element of rivalry. Special prizes are offered for the best decorated drum, the best beaten or sounding drum and also for the best drummer. Naturally, there are some wagers placed apart from any prize money which heightens the excitement. Tasa: An Indian
(India)
kettledrum found in Trinidad and British Guiana
where there are large numbers of people of Indian (Asia) ancestry. The
ASIAN AND OCEANIAN-AMERICAN
DRUMS
225
semispherical body of baked clay is covered with calf skin; the ead is laced across the body and terminates in a rawhide rim around the bottom.
The Tasa is played with two bamboo strips padded on the end with
resin and the handle portion covered with cloth.
The instrument is approximately fifteen inches in diameter and twelve inches high. The instrument shown in Plate XVIII — No. 43 was obtained in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in 1959, after the Hosain festival from
Mr. Matura, a sponsor of the festival. The festival is dedicated to the martyrdom
of Iman Hosain, grandson of the Holy Prophet Muhammed
— which took place in the Om of Muharram 61 A.H., corresponding with the ninth of October of the year 680. Iman Hosain’s body was destroyed, cut into pieces, and trampled
under the hooves of horses, but the legend of his faith in the existence of God and in the truth of his grandfather’s message, and his unwavering conviction of the Future Life, has remained unshaken. There is no rational
being that does not praise him for his labours in emancipating humanity
from physical bonds. Iman Hosain still lives in the hearts of millions and the Hosain Festival is a testimony to that fact.
Chang-Ko: A Korean bimembranophone, one end played with the fingers and the other with a bamboo stick. The sound is varied by striking the head and then on the rim. The drum shown on Plate XVII — No. 38, is eighteen inches in length, the diameter of the small head is thirteen and one-half
inches and the large head is thirteen inches in diameter. The hourglass-shaped body is ten inches in diameter and machined from
several pieces and
glued together.
The
heads
are threaded to a
wooden rim. The heads and the rim are laced through hooks with rope to each other. The lacing acts as a tensor. Leather ears are placed on the ropes laced in “W” fashion. By lowering and raising the ears, the lacings
are pulled tight, thereby tensing the heads. The heads are natural, but
the body and the strappings are decorated with Korean figures in color and low relief carvings. Most, if not all, of the instruments used by Asian-Americans are either
Asian or American. The Asian instruments are used and American instruments are used to play American little blending on the surface that shows. At least it has in any innovation in the construction and use of
to play Asian music music. There is very not manifested itself the instruments.
14 AFRICAN
DRUMS
Drums of Africa are seen in the Americas only in museums, among study groups, and in concert, but the derivative of this instrument is
seen and found in many
Aframericans.
places in the Americas in the hands of the
The African slaves brought with them to the New World a distinc-
tive style of music and a musical value system that continued to develop
(while absorbing new elements) in the foreign surroundings.
Almost all the African slaves in the Western hemisphere stemmed from the musically fairly homogenous strip of territory along the Western coast of Africa In most
from
Sierra
areas where
Leone
to Angola.
Aframerican
music
is found,
we find African
drums, but there are two notable exceptions. In the U.S.A. we find the
Aframerican in large numbers and his music dominates the scene, but he has adopted European instruments. He has changed them a bit to
fit his needs and has completely lost interest in his own instruments. In Argentina we find Afro-Argentinian rhythms and style very prominent in the music,
but we
do not find Africans or African
instruments;
he has been absorbed and only the names of his rhythms and instruments
remain.
The slavery situation in the United States while unique in some
respects was certainly not altogether unlike the situation in other slaving
areas of the new world.
226
AFRICAN DRUMS
There
areas. The
227
was
and
difference
is differential treatment
shown
in the areas was in degree
in all slavehold
of difference.
Slave-
holders of Latin ancestry had different ideas of treatment of slaves than did Northern Europeans. The reconstruction of African instruments in the New World was conditioned by new interest, social, economic, religious, judicial necessity
and availability of material. Some common
types of West Coast drums
were never reconstructed in the Western hemisphere, yet a few were. In teaching of drumming in parts of Nigeria, a pupil is made to
lie face down
while the master drummer
sits astride him
and literally
beats the rhythm onto his bare back. A more advanced method is to play a rhythm and have the pupil repeat it orally with nonsensical words until he has it memorized, then execute it on the drum. The final
method is to have the pupil repeat on his own drum what the teacher plays. The teaching of rhythms in Africa starts with infancy. The mother grinds her corn with the child on her back, singing and keeping time
with the motion. The boys make drums of of animals to imitate their musical careers on
the
drum,
and
children are taught rhythmic games and the little cans and calabashes, covering them with bladders their elders. The boys generally are started on at about the age of six years. They are started
once
the
basic
rhythms
are
learned,
they
take
up
other instruments. A typical West Africa orchestra (Ewe) consists of three sections; these are the background rhythms section, the drum section, and lastly the choir and hand-clapping section. The background section consists of the double bell (Gankogui), rattles (axatsi), and the gongs (atoke). The Gankogui is the foundation which keeps the entire orchestra in time. The drums are the most important part of the group. They are the Atsimevu, the master drum;
the lesser drums
collectively called, Asiwui,
Sogo, Kidi and Kagan. Bongon:—African Talking Drum: The talking drums of Africa are essentially language drums and not conventional signal instruments such as the bugles of the army. The talking drums can be grouped into two general types: wooden slit drums, which are the more common, and skin drums. When the skin drums are used in Africa, they are often referred to by the natives
228
DRUMS
as twin drums. The modulating
“dundun”
IN THE AMERICAS
is also used
drum; in this case only one skin drum is used. The slit drums of Africa, used for communication,
as a talking are from
one-
and-a-half feet to twelve feet long, cut from a single log. The log is carved asymmetrically, so that the hollowed-out log has two lips. A single slit is cut in the top of the log lengthwise and the log is hollowed out through this slit. One lip is carved out more than the other, leaving the latter thinner.
The one that is more forceful and penetrating is designed as the male lip, and the other, the female lip. The higher-toned lip or skin is
usually the female one. In the slit drums, this may not be the case. The
same terms are used with the twin drums, which are generally goblet shaped. They are covered with a skin and one has a narrower body and a thinner skin, giving it a higher tone.
Both types are beaten with two sticks, tipped at the ends with a ball of latex from a forest creeper. Bare sticks are sometimes used.
In one skin variety, hands are used, depending on the tribe and locality.
Talking drums are confined to certain tribes, largely due to the loss of
the art and language barriers. The carrying power or audible range is
three to four miles from drummer
to listener; from
there, if need be, it
can be relayed. The audible range is greater in early morning and late evening, because of the quietness and moisture in the air. Since the drum language is for the most part an echo of the spoken language, each dialect and language has its corresponding drum lan-
guage. In many instances, the local language or dialect only covers a few miles and interpreters are usually required for relay purposes. Most African languages are tonal languages. The higher-pitched lip
or drum
words
corresponds to the high-pitched syllable. Distinctions of the
in any
single
group
are on the basis
of stress, syllable
length
and additions of conventional explanatory material. The messages are
sent in sentence form with known meanings — for example: a European coming into the forest would be described as “‘a man from the outside world comes to the forest” — a native would be described as “returning
home.” The basis of the drum language of Africa is the tonal pattern of the words which make up the language. The drum beats out the tonal pattern of the words which make up the drum language. A complete message may consist of five parts:'57C
AFRICAN DRUMS
229
1. 2.
A signal for attention or a chief’s refrain. Name of desired recipient (repeated three or four times).
3.
The name of the sender
4.
The message
(omitted if the chief refrain is used).
itself (repeated several times).
5. The signal for the end (sharp beats or a series of low tones). Both types of these drums were used at one time in the Americas,
(the United States, West Indies and Brazil) but have since disappeared.
The signal drums found in South America are true signal drums and not language drums. These slit drums are constructed in the same manner but do not carry language tones. (See Pl. XXII — No. 53) Daraboukkeh:
An
of
clay
(Darabukka)
Egyptian
single-headed
or
It is traditionally
metal.
goblet, or vase-shaped found
in
Greece,
drum — made Palestine,
and
throughout the Middle East, but is also found in the Americas. It is held in the armpit and played with the fingers. The instrument averages from fourteen to sixteen inches in height, six to ten inches in diameter across the head, and the diameter across
the bottom is from four to six inches. The clay model head is laced to the body. The metal type has its head attached to a flesh ring. The flesh ring is held in place by a counter hoop bolted to the body. (See Pl. XXIX — No. 72) Dundun-Kalungu
(Butcher Drum):
One type of African drum never reproduced in the Americas by the Aframericans is the most commonly used drum of the Hausa tribe in Ghana and Nigeria. It was a modulating instrument peculiar to the butchers
(the
Hausa
tribe
is noted
for meat
vending),
but
also used
by professional drummers. The instrument is carried suspended from the left shoulder with the left arm depressing the tightening strings (lacings) while the right hand beats the drum with a curved stick. The left hand is employed as a soft accompaniment to the fortissimo note of the stick. More than a complete octave can be played and, consequently, a great many variations are possible. It is called the butcher’s drum because of its common
use by men in this trade.
In almost every Hausa village the day’s proceedings open with an
outburst of drumming on the Kalungu. It is fairly easy to recognize the
call. The Kalungu is famous as a talking drum and many of the Hausa
drummers joke and talk with their customers and passers-by. The Dundun can be
made
to imitate
all the
tones
and
glides
used
in Yoruba
230
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
speech, therefore, it is most suited for talking. It is the only drum in Africa used to add percussion to the playing of a large “gage” or fiddle orchestra. The
Kalungu,
shown
in
Pl.
XXVIII— No.
70,
was
made
by
a
Hausa tribesman in Ghana. It is claimed by many Africans that the Hausa instrument is the finest made in all Africa. It is six-and-a-half inches in diameter
across the head, fifteen-and-a-half inches in height,
and three inches in diameter in the center. Inside this instrument are several objects which sound like marbles being knocked together when it is played. The hourglass body is hewn from a solid block of wood and waisted; the two heads are laced together with leather thongs. The Kalungu, without a doubt, is one of the most beautifully made drums that I have had the pleasure of actually examining. The Dundun is the most elaborate and the best suited to reproduce
speech. The story goes that the Dundun was first used by Ayan, a native of Saworo in the Ibariba tribe lands of Nigeria. He taught some
Yoruba families the art of drumming and he was so loved by them that they deified him after his death. The Dundun set consists of the Iya Ilu, the Gudugudu, the Kerikeri, the Isaju, the Konango, and the Gangan. All are used for talking except the Gudugudu.® Karkutter:
An African, single-headed, shrill treble drum always heard in conjunction with a deeper-toned drum. It is hung around the drummer’s neck and is usually beaten
or bark bound with leather. Ngoma
with two soft-leather sticks— usually rags
(Big Drum):
An African kettledrum of Uganda (B.E.A.) often referred to as the Uganda laced drum. The egg-shaped wood body is hewn from a large log section, cut at the top and bottom. The large skin at the top is the only
one
beaten.
A
second
non-sonorous
skin
is stretched
across
the bottom of the drum body to hold the lacing. This instrument is a monomembranophone even though there is a small area in the bottom covered with skin.
The Ngoma is played with two padded, tipped sticks. The head is
laced horizontally across the body with very decorative rawhide thongs
from a non-sonorous skin. The lacings are so close together that the
AFRICAN
DRUMS
231
body of the drum cannot be seen. The instrument can be tuned by twisting short sticks about the lacing like a tourniquet. The specimen shown in Pl. XXVIII— No. 69 was obtained in British East Africa. The height is approximately two feet. The diameter of the head
is nineteen
inches, and
that of the bottom,
eight inches.
For several reasons many of the famous drums of Africa were not
reconstructed
in
the
Americas.
The
instruments
may
not
have
had
ritualistic importance; no slaves were brought in from the area or no one from that area brought in, knew how to make the instrument — or they were not interested. Also the material for the construction of the
drum may not have been available. Of course, it is always possible that we have not found examples or preserved the history of this instrument in the Americas. The Ngomas found in the Americas are imported.
Ntumpane: Ashanti talking drums shown on Plate XXIX — No. 74, Drums in Ashanti, though sometimes classed under the general name of twene, have each their special names, taboos, and in many cases their special
dress. Drums are grouped together to form drum orchestras. have When
The
Ashanti
a soul
or
tribe
spirit
of West
residing
Africa
in
believe
them
which
that nearly
all should
all things
respect.
an Ashanti craftsman wishes to cut down a tree to make a drum, it
behooves him to be very careful how he sets about it. The Kodia or Tweneboa (Entandophragma) from which the talking drums are fashioned is a potentially vindictive spirit. The woodcutter strives to propitiate the sprit of the tree, upon which he is about the ply his ax, by placing offerings before it, ““Osese tree receive this egg and eat; do not permit the knife to cut me,” he says as he breaks an egg upon the tree just before he lays the ax or cutlass against it. So speaks the maker of the Ntumpane before he fells the tweneboa tree. Nor does the propitiation stop there. The spirit that inhabited the tree is enticed to enter the drum by subsequent rites of consecration of the completed drum and also the spirit of the elephant,
whose
ears
form
its tense membrane.
Thus,
the Ashanti strives to placate and control the forces which he has been compelled by his needs to anger, or whose original abode on earth he has destroyed. He provides a new home which he will endeavor to make acceptable to them. He will keep it free from pollution of those things
which each particular spirit is known to abhor. This then creates taboo for certain drums.°®
232
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Each instrument is footed and carved from one solid log of tweneboa wood. The set shown stands twenty-eight inches. The drum measures twelve inches across the head, fourteen inches through the body and has feet eight inches in diameter. The shell is approximately one-inch thick. The
elephant
ear heads
are laced to a twisted
thong
forming
a
skin ring. The skin rings and heads are tensed by means of eight pegs carved to be driven into holes in the body. Each peg contains six con-
tinuous tension thongs. The drumsticks are approximately twenty inches long with an offset head, set at an angle of forty-five degrees. The
number one drum is tuned higher than the other. The drummer stands and the heads are inclined away from the drummer allowing the sound
to escape from the foot.
West African drum heads and shells are unpainted. The instrument may be dressed and in many instances we find this case. Most of the drums are played with bare hands and sticks. They are played in sets as well as batteries, and the rhythm patterns for some are set and for others improvised. The African drums shown by no stretch of the imagination cover the drums of Africa, but they do give examples for comparison with Aframerican drums found in the Americas as well as samples not found in the Americas.
15 RHYTHM Percussion
expression musical
is, of course,
back
the
to the time when
activity.
still is in many
AND
Rhythm
was
DRUMMING
oldest
then
parts of the world.
form
tree-trunk
the only
of instrumental
beating
element
was
musical
the main
of music,
In the music of western
as it
civilization,
rhythm became subordinate to melody and harmony. Up to the present
century percussion was used only for occasional emphasis in the orchestra. But under the influence of bands, jazz and metric experimenters,
rhythm is coming to be emphasized in western music. If an attempt was made to classify the theories of the origin of music, they would fall into three groups; those theories which hold that music first found expression in rhythm; those which claim music came about through melody; and those which contend that rhythm and melody were contemporaneous.
However,
it is now
conceded
that vocal music preceded
instru-
mental music, and rhythmical instruments were the first to be developed.
Rhythm seems to be a word without a generally accepted definition. Men, for two thousand years, have attempted to give an accepted general meaning. (a) b)
“Rhythm
is flowing meter
Charisius — 400 A.D.
and meter is bonded
“Rhythm is Flow.” Fawele
c) “Rhythm is order of time.” Aristophanes
(d)
“Rhythm
is order of movement.”
Plato
e) “Rhythm is the horizontal aspect of music.” Apel f)
“Rhythm is the dance of music.” Wellesz
233
rhythm.”
234
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Curt Sachs characterized the rhythm of the Western music as even
beats — chaotic
arbitrariness
in jazz
and
squareness of East Asiatic melodies;
weird
modern
art music;
regular
irregular patterns of the
near East, India and Africa; tidy feet and meters of Ancient Greece; and
the rigid Gothic.” If rhythm
is the recurrence
of sound,
heart
and
light, event
or object,
at
patterns
of
regular intervals, then life begins with rhythm and is expressed by nature over and over again. The years, seasons, day and night, the tides, electricity,
the
beat —
life
death
itself-—— are
rhythm.
Early men heard the pounding rhythm of their hearts as they hunted down wild beasts, or when they listened for the slightest sound above the quiet of the night. The rhythm of their hearts, the rhythm of their march, the rhythm of the herds of moving animals — that rhythm is the father of all dance and music. . Rhythm is one thing all men have in common. Man responds to rhythm whenever he senses it and seeks it when it is not present . . . for it is invariably pleasant or disturbing. He may merely feel in harmony with it—he may respond by body motion or he may not — but he always reacts in some way. The rhythm of the drum is more closely connected with the foundation of aurally
generated
emotion
than that of any
other instrument.
It is able in itself to cover the whole range of human feeling. No other
single musical instrument has been
ing the sick.
used more
in war, wooing,
and cur-
The emotional appeal of music is to a very large extent muscular. Rhythm is a neuro-muscular quality, and the fundamental framework
for musical sound. Rhythm was strongly developed by the Aframerican and Amerindian. The pleasure they derived lies not so much in the tonality of the song as in the measured sounds arranged in contrasting thythms
and
which,
by
their clash,
stimulate
the
nerves
and
spur
the
body to action, for the voice which carries the melody along is often subordinated and treated as an additional instrument. To increase muscular power, the strongest stimulus is muscular movement. To produce emotional intoxication, the combination of rhythmical muscular movement with rhythmical sound is the most effective.
Melody cannot be divorced from rhythm but can be played independently. Rhythm, we can say, reached its highest development in
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
235
Africa and India. No system of notation grew, so harmony remained undeveloped. The great emphasis is upon complex rhythms or polyrhythms. The drums are more important than the singers who carry the melody, and the drummer is the virtuoso. The music is played by ear, and from memory,
has
reached
its greatest
without benefit of notation.
development
notation is a great science,
in western
Harmony
civilization,
to date
where
The highest development of melody occurred in the Orient. Prof.
C. Sachs in his “Rhythm
and Tempo”
says that melody in the Orient
(India) has grown to a refinement unknown in western civilizations. Hindu melody is the most elaborate known to man, and represents the peak of human achievement in melody.!@ The Americas can boast of many kinds of exciting and exotic rhythms. Some of the most interesting are to be found in and around Central and South America and the West Indies — particularly the Caribbean region. The entire body of rhythms, like the people who inhabit the area, is an interesting admixture of various strains. The rhythms we hear in the Americas are truly American because they are neither European, African nor Indian but a blending of them
all. It can be called mestizo,
or mulatto,
without
error, praise
or
scorn. This cross-breeding is neither unproductive nor eclectic, nor a discoloration. It is simply a third entity, the fruit of the cross. The
rumbas
of
Cuba,
calypsos
of
the
West
Indies,
sambas
of
Brazil, temboritos of Panama and jazz in the United States are products of such cross-breeding. In most
Aframerican
societies
music
is thought
of in rhythmic
patterns. For example, if one has attended many “jam sessions,” the rhythm section starts a mood and the other musicians will fall in and build on a rhythmic base without any thought of a particular song in
mind.
This will continue
until each musician has satisfied his urge to
express himself in his vein. If you have been in this setting, you have witnessed the spectators being swept up in this mood and from the expression on their faces you will see how they can anticipate the phrasing and rhythmic configuration the musician will next take. Rhythm and the dance were probably the two most pressing needs in the organism of the Aframerican
in his natural state. They were an
outlet without which his very life seemed
threatened.
For thousands
236
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
of years his whole being had been conditioned by the beat of the drum.’ The African combines several metrical structures into what is known as polyrhythms, and there is a close relationship between the melody and its rhythmic accompaniment. African rhythm is ultimately founded on drumming and the drumming can be replaced by hand-clapping or tapping of the foot. The remarkable thing about Aframerican and African polyrhythms is that each musician is percussing an instrument of a different pitch from that of his neighbor and developing his own theme which must, nevertheless, fit in such a way as to give an impression of over-all unity. Today even stringed instruments, such as the string bass or guitar, are often used in ensembles for stressing rhythm rather than for melody and harmony. Jazz and swing have glorified rhythm and percussion.’ This is not the kind of music one has to study in a course of music appreciation to understand. This music is kinetic, and people’s reaction to
it depends
upon
their
imagination,
musical
background
and
in-
hibitions. It is doubtful whether any group of people are born with a greater sense of rhythm than any other, but the environment into which an individual is born does condition his reaction to it. The Amerindian’s rhythms are frequently intricate, and diverse, and
involve frequent changes in some tribes— unknown harmony and rhythm varieties give him the different musical effects. It is characterized by unusual accents not equally spaced. The rhythm of the drum differs from singing rhythms. The rhythms of song may speed up or be retarded,
while
the
rhythm
of
the
drum
remains,
on
the
whole,
con-
stant. The Amerindians use a great deal of syncopated rhythm in many
of their songs. Broken rhythms and simple rhythmic patterns are used in the drumming. The rhythm of the drum beat varies with the character of the song. In certain tribes the drum and song rhythms are seldom synchronized, but go along in more or less independent parallel lines — or rhythmic melodic counterpoint. There is no fixed scale in the western sense. Indian melody is almost completely sung, and musical instruments are
limited
in
use
and
variety.
companiment predominantly.’
Percussion
instruments
furnish
ac-
Music, both instrumental and vocal, is primarily a man’s profession,
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
237
and a communal, tribal outpouring. To the European-American, music is the combination of harmonious tones (melody) with rhythm. The European-American treats music and rhythm as an elaboration of a single metrical structure. His environment in the Americas is changed and he is becoming more rhythm conscious
and making more use of rhythm, and his interest in it is becoming more
profound. Pure percussion, like all other music, cannot be truly appreciated until one knows how
to listen; it must be remembered
that even “ab-
stract” drum music evolved from music designed for marching, dancing or some other functional purpose. There
found
are
in the
many
diverse
Americas,
and
drumming
indeed,
styles
diverse
techniques
to be
styles to be found
and
within
almost any one ethnic group. Since any attempt to cover all these styles would be futile, we will consider over-all ethnic styles and those sub-
ethnic styles which show marked differences. At one extreme one finds in Dutch Guiana
(Surinam)
the Bush
Negroes, whose drumming style is purely African. These people are the descendants
of former
runaway
slaves
who
fled into the “bush”
and
flourished there. A wide sample of the music of Dutch Guiana has been recorded by Melville Herskovits and analyzed by Mieczyslaw Kolinski; the latter found that, with the exception
of a few songs, the music of
the Bush Negroes displays traits that are not only African but probably more “African” than those of today’s Africans, due to the growth of European influence on the African continent. The Bush Negro did not forget
how
to make
fine
drums,
and
their
wood
carvings
in many
instances excel the African carvings of today.’ Their drums, the most highly carved found in the Americas, are called by the same name they were known by in Africa. The lacing and
shell are almost identical with their African counterparts. The drummers straddle their instruments and play with bare hands as did their forefathers. In an attempt to understand “African style” drumming, there are certain basic things one has to listen for which are characteristics of African drumming. African drumming is essentially rhythmic polyphony; therefore, two or more drums are necessary. Three drums are generally used in American drumming, the “first drum” carries the basic
pattern:
in cult circles this is the high-pitched
drum,
but in secular
238
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
music it is generally a low-pitched one. The “second drum” carries a counter beat. These two patterns mesh like gears never interfering with each other: the basic pattern is held constant with no allowance for ad-libbing or improvisation; the second pattern is allowed only an occasional break within the pattern. The third drum is all improvisation. Usually the drums are tuned about a fifth apart. In performance the second drum rhythm starts one beat later than the first while the third starts one beat after the second.’® In cult music it is generally played by the most versatile of the drummers, the virtuoso of the group. His part is the spice and the color within the other two rhythms.
In
Afro-style
Cuban
drumming,
called “tumbadora”
or “beginner.” The
sometimes
to
referred
as
“caller,”
the
basic
second
drum,
“salidor,”
and
rhythm
drum
is
or “Ilamador,”
is
the
third
is
called
“quinto” or “re-quinto.” In all areas, where there is Afro-style drumming, a basic rhythm pattern is used, corresponding to the measure in Western music. This pattern is called “clave” in Cuba,’ and all other rhythms revolve around it. The most striking thing about this pattern is that it is “in force” regardless of whether or not the clave is being played; the musicians rigorously observe
its configuration.
When
claves, themselves,
being used occasionally a cow-bell is used for the pattern, pattern need not be physically present. While each country where clave rhythm predominates has its own clave pattern, known pattern is the traditional Cuban one. The Clave* pattern for Afro-Cuban music can be written in ways for both the reader and non-reader of music: A
TA
wy
TA
are not
but the or area the best different
7a-TA
r
z
yry
Beverse Clore
Wsed in Montano
z
Zz
I72754H*
S42
Yo” oS
4°
"The claves (Pl. XXV, P. 63) used in playing the “clave pattern” are two hard wood sticks approximately eight inches long and % inches in diameter. The lower toned of the pair is placed in the cupped left hand, while the second clave is grasped in the fingers of the right hand
The
and is used
Ewes of Ghana
also composed
of two
to strike the cupped
clave, producing
use an iron instrument called “Akogo” pieces
of steel or iron;
loosely-fitting
a sharp
pentrating
sound.
in a similar fashion. It is
ring
placed
on
the
middle
finger of the right hand, and a ring placed on the thumb of the right. By striking the two
rings together, the identical sound is produced.
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
239
The rhythm can also be reconstructed by counting to eight twice and accenting the first, fourth, and seventh, and then the third and fifth
digits.1°’
In areas of the Americas where the clave pattern is not traditional —for example, the United States — local musicians have difficulty in accurately playing the clave pattern. Similarly, many Cuban drummers have migrated to the United States and begun to play jazz, only to find
that in fast tempo
they revert to clave patterns;
nearly always within the clave framework.
and their solos are
Like a first language, clave
becomes a part of the subconscious: musicians brought up in the clave tradition, hear music in “clave” and express themselves musically in reference to clave. It is their musical base. Aframerican drumming, in general, is characterized by: 1.
ad
2. 4. 5.
The use of a minimum of two or three drums in a battery or
set, or a three-drum rhythm. A good drummer can keep as many as four distinct rhythms going. It is not unusual to find one drummer carrying two rhythms, and a third if the need
(i.e., scarcity
of drummers)
arises.
Each drum carrying a different pattern and their simultaneity forming a polyphonic whole. Playing with bare hands or, a single stick and a bare hand. The use of a single-skin barrel-shaped drum (generally tunable).
The drummer placing the drum between his legs in the sitting position or straddling and sitting upon the instrument. 6. “Call” and “response” between instruments.) African and Afro-American drummers use five tones on their drums: 1. High, brittle, staccato tone — (seco) produced by muting the head with the left hand and hitting it with open fingers of the other hand. 2. Medium tone is produced by half-pressing and half-striking the head with the ball of the hand and finger tips. 3. An open tone is obtained by striking and immediately rebounding, and allowing the head to vibrate. 4. A deep tone is produced by striking the head in the center with the heel of the hand; it can be varied by substituting the whole palm. 5. A stopped or closed sound is produced by muting with finger
240
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
or hand, a tone previously struck; it often takes the of a rest or pause. Solo drumming calls for considerable musicianship; thus the master drummer who plays all solo parts. The solo drummer play not only the stereotyped phrases, but must improvise as well, ducing cross rhythmic or “‘contrapuntal” effects.
fone
place it is must pro-
4 patterns combined:
AGH, Deum { Slap
single playertwo drums
9eCCA
Low /' DauM
heel
Lone f
Drums
Ne
C Fingers
Nt
—
at
R
2.H Slap
Single Drums
LH. feel ro Tone
{
Slap
Secco
Tone
Singer Jone
{
Slap Heel& Hand
7
Jd
7
ah
Indryrdual
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
241
Afro-American drumming rhythms are a combination of double, triple, and quadruple time. The technique of playing the drums has an
important bearing on drum rhythms. There are six methods of holding
the drums for playing in the Americas. The instrument is slung on the body by means of a drum sling. The head of the drum falls in front of the drummer, whose arms are bent, allowing the hands or sticks to fall to the skin. If there is no sling, the instrument is straddled; stood on its
bottom (base); or placed in a drum stand. If the instrument is played with two heads, the drum is placed in the lap of the seated drummer, or held between the knees, while the drummer is in a sitting position. The teaching technique for hand beaten drums used in the Americas,
on the whole, falls repeat the rhythms their implications transferred to the The
other
into two categories. The young drummer is taught to orally with nonsensical syllables. These syllables with of sound giving color as well as rhythm are then drum.
technique
is similar,
but
direct;
drum
(teacher)
to
drum (pupil). The method is generally used after the pupil has mastered
the basic drum sounds.
In Afro-American drumming the basic sounds are obtained by hitting the skin and the body of the drum in a definite prescribed manner; to obtain a slap or “seca,” one of the most elementary sounds on a
hand-beaten drum, the head is struck with fingers, three-quarters the way to the center with the fingers at a slant, allowing the little finger to land first, followed by the ring finger and the other two, but the skin should not be allowed to rebound naturally. Stopped or muted beats are obtainable
by holding
the skin.
In most
Afro-American
drumming,
the
left hand is used for keeping time, muting, balancing and filling empty spaces. The right hand is the “work horse,” used for principal accents and generally controlling the pattern. With some variation these tech-
niques are used in styles where one or two sticks are used. While all beats may sound similar to the untrained ear, there is actually a wide
variety of sound at the drummer’s disposal; he could not dream of using a “wrong” sound at a given point in a pattern. Afro-American drumming is not merely rhythm, but has aspects of melody. Thus, in order to transcribe for Afro-type drumming, it is necessary to alter Western notation to show not just accents, but hand position, muting, etc. Many
hand drummers
in the Americas have set basic pat-
242
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
terns for each time signature and their embellishments improvised. (See basic conga pattern. |
BASIC
Count 4/4
CONGA
RHYTHM
1 & 2 & 3 DU K KA K DU BBall of the hand
PATTERN
& K
4 KI
F
Fingers
F4
Four fingers simultaneous.
FOR
4/4 TIME
are generally
ONE
DRUM
8&8 KI
Fs Fingers in sequential order from small to index finger. Stress skin depressed or closed. (SECA) Open-skin not depressed
Seca
Cult drummers, in addition to a knowledge
of rhythmic formulas,
must also have at their command the enormous repertoire of cult songs, so that when the leader intones the first bar of a song, the drummer immediately follows with the proper rhythm. This is the result of a long apprenticeship. In Brazil and Haiti, an opportunity for young musicians to play in public occurs when at the end of cult ceremonies, the ex-
hausted drummers retire; then their young apprentices take over their places and play for the last dancers, often lasting till the early hours of the morning.’ Amerindian drumming is characterized by simple, unison patterns often with several drummers using one drum. The Amerindian drum is an accompaniment instrument, used to set tempos and to start and stop the dances. Nearly all tribes have a lead drummer, who is the musical
director, dancing tutor, and the master of ceremonies. He signals the end of a dance by slowing the tempo and beating heavily. During the dance he likewise signals for steps on the preparatory beat and on the following down-beat the steps are executed. Some patterns are in duple groups: loud — soft, loud — soft; another pattern in groups of three, loud —
soft — soft,
or
four
beats
without
any
accent,
and
so
on.
In
any case, most of the rhythms are simple, consisting of single strokes with accents at definite intervals. This is particularly true of the Amerindians of the United
ducing
seven
States. Their drums, however,
distinct sounds.
One
is produced
are capable
by striking
of pro-
the center
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
243
of the drum and allowing the sticks to rebound. The second is produced
by striking and holding the stick against the head. Two more sounds are obtained by striking the drum near the edge in the same manner.
The fifth is achieved by striking the rim (with the wood)
and allowing
the stick head to continue until it strikes the drum head; the sixth by striking rim and center at the same time; and the seventh by striking the
body of the drum.
dds S
WAR DANCE
S SIOUX
ROUND
DANCE
>
>
S
S
While some tribes of Central and South America use two sticks and can
obtain
several
different
combinations
of
these
sounds,
those
of
North America make use of only the first three of these sounds in the rhythms.’” European-American style drummers are secular performers — even their tradition being military rather than religious. Training is formal and fairly standard. Drummers in classical western art music are gener-
ally referred to as “percussionists” because of the array of percussion instruments they are required to play. The actual drums used are of two types: those of definite and those of indefinite pitch.” The percussionists are usually taught the twenty-six “rudiments,” the counterparts of the basic positions of classical ballet. From these basic elements, the most complex pattern can be evolved. He should be master of more than a dozen instruments: those requiring considerable technique such as the snare drum, tympano, bells, xylophone, vibraphone, and marimba;
and those requiring less skill than
ability to handle several in rapid succession: bass drum, cymbals, casta-
nets,
tambourine,
triangle,
gongs,
giliro,
scraper,
maracas,
claves
and
such special effects as wind machine, marching machine, siren, etc. Early jazz drumming was greatly influenced by the military aspect
244
DRUMS
IN THE
AMERICAS
of the European tradition. This tradition tended to “fill up” marching
beats with many
EUROPEAN
notes.
MARCH
a
NOTATION
FOR
FIELD
DRUM
AND
BASS
DIXIELAND
The dean of New Orleans jazz drummers was Warren Baby Dodds, who, though influenced by military drumming, emphasized the first and third
beats of a measure
rather
than
the traditional,
for beat patterns.
Larry Gara in his “The Baby Dodds Story,” states that he first wanted to play a flute, but settled for the drums.'? He fashioned his first instrument from a lard can, then started playing it in his backyard with his brother, two years his senior. After taking formal training, both
ended up playing with King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band — the best known
of all New Orleans Jazz bands. There is a connection (a jazz “blood” line) between Baby Dodds and Louis Hayes, who is one of the young musicians of today. The line or connection may be blurred and has taken circuitous routes from then
to now,
but
the line
is there.
Gene Krupa asked Baby Dodds to prepare him for his first professional job— and today, Krupa is a well-known drummer in jazz; and possibly some will recall that he rose to prominence with the Benny
RHYTHM
AND DRUMMING
245
Goodman band in the middle and late thirties. Chick Webb
and Gene
“traps”
miniature
Krupa later simplified Dodds’ complexities, returning to the four-beat militarism of the earlier style. In the twenties, as “Chicago style” drumming came into vogue, the drum solo developed, calling for myriad new and
sounds
such
as gourds,
cow-bells,
wood
blocks,
xylophones, cymbals, pots, bottles, and whistles, though since the twen-
ties, many of these effects have been dropped. “Chicago” jazz re-popularized the four-beat style, frequent use of cymbals, the “Hi-hat” or “sock cymbal”
(derived from cymbals)
the place of sticks. By
and the use of wire brushes in
1940, the fad for solo drumming
had
run out. Basically, the
drummer’s function is still to provide and hold the fundamental beat and tempo — but modern technique incorporated much of the past. There is a constant
exchange
or assimilation
process
going
on
between
certain
bodies of music within the Americas as well as with non-American music sometimes referred to as an acculturation process, which on occasion has been accompanied by the adoption of new instruments. The Conga drum now heard in the States is an example of this exchange between Afro-Cuban music and jazz. The drummer who was responsible for popularizing the modern conga drum in the United States was Luciano
Pozo
y Gonzales,
born
in
Havana,
on
January
7,
1915.
He
lived in the slums of Havana, and won fame in Cuba as a carnival drummer. “Chano” Pozo migrated to New York City where jazz and
Latin musicians were exchanging ideas and playing together. This contact
of the two forms infiuenced both bodies of music. The influence of AfroCuban rhythm on jazz, and especially bop, reached a new high in 1947
when Dizzy Gillespie hired Pozo as a drummer with his band, and demonstrated the potentialities of this instrument in jazz. Drummers have been eulogized in poetry, prose and song,” but
there are many young drummers of awesome talent yet unknown who will
be the ones to extract from the past and shape the future. The modern drums of jazz are delicate and highly supple tools of music. They must be tuned carefully and handled with discretion. Their sparkish and propelling rhythmic foundations, so highly important to jazz, might turn out to be our most profitable exportation. American music is growing *1. “Drummers of Company”. Robert C. Meyers 2. “Drummer Boy of Mission Ridge”. Kate B. Sherwood 3. “The Drummer”. Ann Robinson
246
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
in popularity through the world and the United States government, recognizing the fact, is financing bands and arranging tours for our diplomats sans portfolios. I again repeat that jazz is one of the greatest contributions from the United States to the musical culture of mankind, although it is greatly underrated by the American people. It is the symbol of free expression and democracy, a mighty weapon in the fight for ideals.
16 DRUM ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS BELLS: The history of the bell is similar to that of the drums and rattles.
Many superstitions of the Middle Ages were associated with bells. They
were adorned with ornaments for favors, rung to insure a good harvest, to break the thunder and dispel the storms, and rung in churches to ward off evil spirits. They are still rung today at weddings and funerals, and on New Years Eve to bring good luck. Most American ethnic groups had some form of bell, making it from available materials: pincers of crabs, hooves of animals, shells of plants and
are
animals,
nuts,
pottery,
wood,
and
after
colonization,
metal.
Many of the bells used in popular and folk bands in the Americas the clapperless type. They are made from cowbells, hoes and
plow shares and
other flat iron objects, and are used
to hold rhythm
and in many cases to establish the tempo as well as the accompaniment for dancing and singing. In Cuba
they are called “campana”
timbrels, and in the States, cowbells. The
ferred to as “gongiié” or “agogo.” and in Trinidad “gan.”
or “‘cencerro,”
double
In Surinam,
2
bells in Brazil
they
in Peru, are re-
are called
iron
The “agan” (heroe) or iron in Curacao is made from a plow blade. It is a flat piece of iron bent into a pipe section with a slit. It is struck with a heavy iron nail and is very popular in the Benta orchestra. The 247
248
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
“agan” is thought to be of African origin, where it is called “gan,” or “gankogue.” In Haiti it is called “ogan” and is forged from a hoe blade, pipes, brake drums and links of chain. (See Pl. XXVI — No. 64) BENTA
(MOUTH
BOW):
A bow made from a tough kind of wood, generally of carawara, tamarind,
or from
the gourd
tree, and
found
in Curacao.
The
bow
is
strung with the fibers of the coco or nut palm leaves. This instrument
is used similarly to a jew’s harp.
The fiber strings are plucked and stroked with a small piece of wood or bamboo held in the right hand. The left hand is used to support the instrument and apply pressure to the fiber — different tones are produced. The bow is held in such a way as to allow the string or fiber to
pass through the lips without touching. The cavity of the mouth
as a sound chamber — when the mouth the sound is altered. The Benta is a folk instrument of old Aframericans in the benta bands on are found in the West Indies, and also
Amerindians.
(See Pl. XVI — No.
35)
serves
is opened wider or constricted, : Curacao. It is played by the the island. Similar instruments in South America among the
CYMBALS:
A platter-shaped thin sheet of metal, generally brass, found in most popular and classical European instrumental groups. It was thought that cymbals began as pot covers. In the Orient the Chinese used two stone discs. The cymbal was introduced into the European orchestras in 1680 but had been used in many other parts of the world before that time.
There are three general types of cymbals seen in the Americas. Two small cymbals worn on the fingers, which are referred to as Greek cymbals, even though they were introduced into Greece from Asia.
Two large cymbals seen in march bands — each cymbal has a holder
in the back and the second type The third with a brush or Many
they are held in each hand and slapped together. This is of cymbals. type is a single cymbal, seen in jazz bands — struck a drumstick.
of these
circular
brass
plates
saucer-like depression in the center, and which they are supported.
are
slightly
convex,
with
a
are pierced by a hole from
DRUM
ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS These
instruments
are
used
for
working
249 the
rhythm,
fill-in
and
effects in popular and classical instrumental groups. DRUMSTICKS:
The most elaborate drumsticks in the Americas
the North American Indians.
are found among
The Aframericans make less use of drumsticks than any other group. The ones used are seldom, if ever, carved or decorated. If they
produce the sound desired, the drummer is satisfied. European and Asian drumsticks are not decorated and follow a standard pattern. The European-American drumsticks can be classified in three general groups: the brush, the hard snare stick, the soft beater or mallet. The Amerindians of North America make elaborate preparation in decorating and preparing their drumsticks. Generally the Amerindian drummers are singers as well; they bring their individual sticks to their dances and festivals. They share the drums, but drumsticks are looked upon as personal possessions. Certain drums call for certain types of drumsticks — due to tradition founded on experience. Tone qualities are dictated by both the drum and type of stick used.
The Amerindians have hard beaters, semi-hard beaters, soft beaters, long, short, circular, crooked, curved and rattle drumsticks. It is be-
lieved that, if the wrong style of beater is used on a drum, it might nullify the spirit power. This is particularly true for medicine drums. For this reason the medicine drum beaters are kept with the instrument constantly and used for no other purpose. Hardwood is usually preferred for drumsticks. Long slender sticks of white oak cut from the trunk of a sapling are preferred by woods dwellers;
they produce
a lively, clear, definite tone, good for dancing.
These sticks are held parallel to the drum head and slapped against the head. The playing end is wrapped with a little cloth. The European types are carved to form a tip or acorn. Curved End Drumsticks: Curved drumsticks are used on medicine hand drums and dance drums. The resilience of these sticks is greater than that of the straight sticks. The head is bent into a circle forming a loop, with a length of approximately twenty inches. The handle is wrapped with rawhide or cured buckskin. Occasionally the head is cov-
ered with rawhide or fur. The curved head is used on the drum head only. Rattle Drumsticks: A curved end drumstick enclosed in rawhide,
250
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
with beads or pebbles placed inside. This type of drumstick looks very
much like a small drum fastened to a handle. The
head
of
the
rattle
stick
is
approximately
four
inches
in
diameter. The frame, a curved head, is made hy soaking and bending the wood. A sapling twenty-eight inches long and one-half inch in diameter is placed in water; when the sapling becomes soft, one half of the stick
is bent
to form
a loop,
then
secured with
rawhide.
The head or rattle portion is decorated with symbolic designs of
the Amerindians. They are used as drumsticks for medicine hand drums
and dance drums. The heads give a counter maraca sound with the drum beat. When the drummer goes to the dance area, the stick serves as a dance rattle. Semi-Hard Drumsticks:
Drumsticks with very little padding on the
head are referred to as semi-hards. Soft Beaters (Mallets): When a drumstick head is generously pad-
ded it is generally referred to as a mallet. Felt, cotton, rags, feathers, hair,
rubber
and
resin
are
used
for
the
padding.
This
type
drumstick
is
found in all areas in the Americas and among all groups. Knob Head Drumsticks: The Amerindians of North America use a drumstick on their water drums, carved to form a knobbed convex disc — greater in diameter than the handle. The handle end is covered
with tanned buckskin, and is tapered to the curved head where it flares out to form the head. The knob is used on the head of the drum. Brushes: Fine steel wires gathered in a fan shape and inserted in a handle like a whisk broom—
drumstick
remains
the Americas.
as standard
used
as a drumstick.
equipment
for popular
(See Pl. XXVI — No. 65 and 66)
This type of
drummers
in
FLUTES—PANPIPES—WHISTLES: Among the people of Central America, South America and the Caribbean area, flutes are very popular and frequently used with drums. They
are
made
of
clay,
bamboo,
bone,
wood,
reed,
metal
the
Pandian
and
cane.
There are both nose and mouth flutes, and they appear both as singleand
multi-piped
instruments.
In Peru,
we
find
pipe;
in
Bolivia, the Sicu panpipe, which is made of reeds tied together in a line similar to the quill—at one time popular in the States. We also find the guena,
a reed
flute, as well as the giant
flutes of Bolivia,
the “anata.”
Mexico has its Uapitzallis and chililihtlis, and Central America its ocarina.
DRUM
ACCESSORIES
AND
AUXILIARY
INSTRUMENTS
251
No instrument is more adaptable to the gentle side of the Amer-
indian’s character than the flageolet-flute. It was used in many ways:
a
signal for warriors, wooing, dancing, it was sounded by mourners and as
decoys by hunters. The Amerindian uses both transverse and end flutes,
large and small. All the groups that make up the Americas have some type of flutes. The flute is as much a part of the American heritage as any instrument. The Hopi
Indians named
one of their great clans after it: Lenya, the
flute clan of ancient origin. It was told that in the beginning the head of the flute clan journeyed
down
into the underworld,
where
he en-
countered a beautiful maiden. By the magic tune of his flute, he lured
her away with him and later they were married in the house of the sun.
Their descendants were called the clan of the flute “Lenya.” XXV — No. 62)
(See PI.
GRATES—RASPS—-SCRAPERS:
Scraper is a very earthy term used in reference to a friction type musical instrument associated with drums, favored by some Amerindian, Polynesian and Aframerican musicians. It is usually found in the form of a serrated or notched surface scraped by a stick, nail, wire, or a piece of bamboo.
The scrapers are made of wood, bamboo, metal, bone, animal shells
and gourds. By running the stick, nail, or wire over the surface, the produced rhythmic sound enhances the basic rhythm. The flavor is projected by placing emphasis in different back and forth strokes.
Dentlé: A notched stick braced against a bench or plank which acts as a sound board. The dentlé found in Haiti is about eighteen inches long and one-and-a-half inches wide. A small piece of bamboo is rubbed back and forth over the notched stick. With well-placed emphasis on different parts of the instrument, the desired rhythmic pattern can be produced. It is used as an accompaniment in the drum orchestra for religious dancing among the cultists.
Grate (Grage): A sheet of metal perforated with closely spaced jagged holes, made by driving nails through the metal. It is similar in many ways to the kitchen grater. It is played by drawing a nail or piece of wood or wire across the rough surface. The grage is used in Haiti along with the tambourine, marimba, claves, and bass drum,
in secular music.
Guayo: A metal cylinder made from a flat piece of tin—dented
252
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
over the entire surface and rolled into a tube and welded. A metal handle and cone-shaped cap are welded on to complete the instrument. The guayo is used in the Dominican Republic by both popular and folk musicians. The instrument is played by stroking the rough external surface with a heavy-gage piece of wire. The rhythmic motion of the hand is up and down in a continuous pattern, with the accent falling in the same place. Giiiro: An oblong dried gourd or calabash shell with the top cut away and transverse “V”-shaped cuts made with a file from the top to the bottom on one side. One of two holes cut in the back serves as a handle for holding the instrument. The serrations are skillfully rubbed back and forth with a small, hardwood stick to produce the desired sound. The Giiiro is the unofficial national instrument of Puerto Rico where it is so popular that it is occasionally used as the only instrument
for some folk dances. The gitiro is called “guayas” in the Bahamas. It is found in all the Americas except in the far north where the gourd or calabash does not grow. Raspador: A percussion instrument made from a board eighteen to twenty inches long and one-and-one-half to two inches wide. A handle
is carved at one end. The remaining sixteen inches are serrated by cutting parallel grooves across the face of the board, one-eighth of an inch apart. The instrument looks very much like a file. In Mexico it is held by the handle at one end and the other end is allowed to rest on the back of a half-round empty gourd which acts as a resonator. The instru-
ment
is played by pulling a small bamboo
stick across the serrations.
It is used for dancing along with the flute, the jicara de agua, and the guitar by the Yaquis of Central America. (See Pl. XXVII — No. 68) Reco-Reco: A section of bamboo approximately one-and-a-half inches in diameter and from tweleve to fourteen inches long. Grooves are cut on one side and scraped with a small round hardwood stick. The instrument is found in Brazil, used by small popular and folk instrumental groups. The
Reco-Reco
is accompanied
frequently
by
two
drums,
a flute,
and a bell. (See Pl. XX VII — No. 68) Wiri: A half-round piece of serrated pipe used as a percussion instrument in Curacao. It is stroked back and forth over the serrated area
DRUM ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS
253
with a definite rhythmic pattern to the accompaniment of the big bass drum, the Benta and triangle. This group is referred to as the Benta Band. The instrument was originally made from a gourd in which ribs were carved with a knife. Later a cow horn was carved and used when the “cai’orgel” (hand barrel organ) was introduced into Curacao. A metal pipe is used today to get a louder sound in the street bands. The gourd type is used now for house parties. (See Pl. XXVII — No. 68) MORTARS
AND
PESTLES:
The mortar and pestle (A grain pulverizer instrument) takes on the characteristics of a musical instrument when utilized in the West Indies in ceremonies along with singing and hand-clapping. When two or more are used, they carry a drum pattern. The sound is produced by lifting the pestle and dropping it into the mortar. When done in rhythm, it produces a drum-like sound. Wooden mortars are preferred. PECHU
DI
CALUMBA:
A bow strung with a woven cotton string. One end of the bow is placed on a box which acts as a sound chamber. The musician sits down with one leg passing between the string and the bow while the bow rests on the opposite thigh and an empty box below. The bow string is manipulated with the left hand and plucked with the right hand. This
is a folk instrument
found
in Curacao
and
used
with
the
drum,
like the mouth bow (Benta). The pechu di calumba is played as a single string bass. A similar instrument in the Belgian Congo is called a Khais. (See Pl. XXIV — No.
60)
RATTLES:
There are two general types of rattles found in the Americas. One is a container with seeds, pebbles, shells, beads, shot or stones, which strike
the sides when shaken to produce the typical rustling sounds of rattles. The
other type is a container with a network
outside
the container,
and
of seeds, beads,
classified as an external rattle.
or shells
The first rattles were probably simply dried plants in which the natural seeds provided the sounding agent. Pebbles were later added, to increase the sound. Some primitive people believe that in order for a rattle to be potent or contain certain magic, it is necessary that the rattle contain seeds.
254
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
The seeds have within them that mysterious spark of life which puts the primitive mind in touch with the supernatural and the unknown. The most common rattle found in the Americas is the gourd variety. The gourd is the fruit of a plant resembling the melon or pumpkin. The dried rim and seeds are used in the rattle. This family of vegetables has made a generous contribution to the developmnt of music. It serves as maracas, so important in magic and ritual worship; as scrapers or giliro, as resonators for the xylophone and marimba, and as wind chests for the primitive pipe organs. It is also occasionally used as mutes for
wind
instruments.
In Brazil, Mexico,
Curacao,
and
Hawaii,
the gourds
are used as drums. Rattles are also found in the Americas made from shells of turtles, coconuts, hooves of animals, and containers of leather, wood, bamboo
and metal. Some rattles are painted and highly decorated while others are plain, depending on the local tradition. ; The gourd rattles in Hawaii are called “uli uli,” and in most of
the Americas, “maracas.” In Curacao the rattles are called marakas, in Haiti they are known as tcha-tcha, tcha-kwa, kwa-kwa, and mayoyo, and in Panama, rattles are called maracas and sometimes known as giiiros.
Rattles in the Americas are both indigenous and imported from Africa. This instrument reaches its highest development as a musical instrument in Haiti, where it is employed in all kinds of Haitian music, both religious and secular. It is used in the invocation of deities and acccompaniment to solo
singing. The gourd rattles in Haiti are round gourd shells into which a
few seeds are placed, and wooden handles inserted and held by small wedges. There are both single-head and multiple-headed gourd rattles. One, two, or three such rattles may be used to accompany the drums. In religious music only one rattle, or maraca, is used. The singing leader ordinarily plays the rattle. (See Pl. XXV — No. 61)
Asson or Baksor: The sacred gourd rattles used by cult priests of Haiti are unpainted, brick-reddish in color, and have the shape of a pear. The asson is covered with a loose network of beads and vertebras of a snake, acting as external strikers. A small bell generally hangs from
the handle.’ This sacred rattle is used in summoning the gods and the dead, and as a signal to servitors or helpers in the cult rites, who assist in the
DRUM ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS
255
performance or magic. The asson is accompanied by chanting, dancing
and singing. Cabaca: A large two-chambered gourd covered with a network of beads—used as a rattle in the Americas. The cabaca is played by moving the instrument in a rotary motion with one hand, causing the network of beads to rotate on the gourd. The rhythm is marked by striking the instrument with the palm of the other hand. It is used for both secular and ritual music. A similar type instrument used in Cuba by the Lucumi cult group
is called “atcheré,” and larger ones called Bakosé
or “awé-koesola.”
Cha-Cha: A metal cylinder filled with beads or pebbles used as a rattle type percussion instrument in the West Indies and South America. It is approximately one foot in length and two-and-a-half inches in diameter. It is played with one or both hands. The instrument is shaken by
moving it up and away from the body—then down and toward the body in one continuous motion. The cha cha was particularly popular with the samba
rhythms heard in and around Brazil.
Chocalho: A Brazilian rattle with an external network of beads or shells, made from a coconut shell placed on a stick which serves as a handle. The instrument is played by rotating the handle, causing the external network of beads to slide over the shell. The rhythm is marked by patting the instrument with the palm of the hand. The Chocalho is particularly popular with the samba schools of Brazil. It is used in both popular and folk instrumental groups. Chocalho is also a generic term in Brazil for rattle. Cocoon Rattles: A rattle made from the cocoon of the silk worm and strung on a cord to form a necklace. The cocoons are dried out, opened
in the middle
and
two small pebbles
placed at each end. The
cocoons are then laced to a cord dividing a single cocoon into two rattles, one on each side of the lacing cord. Cocoon necklaces are worn in Amerindian dances in Central America. They produce a subdued rustle while the wearer dances. This instrument is particularly popular with the Yaqui Amerindians. Deer-Hoof
Rattles:
The
Amerindians
make
use
of many
objects
for rattles such as horns, nuts, shells, seeds, nests, and hooves.
The hoof of the deer is pierced through the tips and strung in a
cluster.
These
clusters
are
sewn
to bands
for
making
belts,
anklets,
256
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
bracelets, and rattles for dancing. When the dancers move about, the striking of the hooves against one another can be heard in rhythm with the body movement. The Yaquis of Central America were very fond of this belt rattle. (See Pl. XVII — No. 40) Maracas: Two dried gourds from three to seven inches in diameter, containing
shot,
seeds,
stones,
beads,
rice
or
marbles,
«vith
a handle
to all the Americas.
They
are also
inserted. One maraca is generally held in each hand and is shaken or struck.
The
maracas
are common
known as marakas, sonajas, marugas, etc. Matrimonial: A rhythm instrument of Curacao,
it is a thin-dressed
plank twenty-four by two inches, on which four sets of metal discs are
nailed so as to slip up and down when the plank is struck against the thigh. The
instrument
is held
on
the
two
ends
with
both
hands
and
struck alternately on each thigh in rhythm with the drum. The sound
is similar to the ancient cymbal, or sistrum. (See Pl. XIII — No. 28) Quijada: The lower jaw of a horse, mule or burro, with the teeth
loose in the sockets—used quijada
is played
as a percussion instrument in Cuba.
in three
different ways.
It is shaken,
struck, depending on which sound is desired. When
stroked,
The
and
the instrument is shaken or struck, the loose teeth will strike
the walls of the jaw, turning it into a large rattle. When the teeth are stroked with a large nail, the quijada becomes a rasp. It is used in Cuba by Afro-Cuban groups. (See Pl. VIIIT— No. 10) RHYTHM
These Manimba,
hole
in the
rhythm and
boxes, also known
Marimbula,*
center.
In front
are
BOXES:
as and called Marimba,
in the form
of this hole
of a wooden
is a series
Malimba,
box, with
of metal
a
strips
mounted in such a way that they may be plucked with fingers. The metal strips are cut in different lengths from spring steel, then placed in a bracket to give definite tone interval. The box acts as a sound chamber and as a seat for the musician. The musician sits on the box with the keys or steel strips between his open legs. There are gen-
erally from three to seven keys which *U.S.A. Marimba Brett. Brazil—Marimhba Haiti—Malimba, Manimha.
Jamaica—Rhumha Box, Rhythm Cuba—Marimbula.
box.
are plucked with both hands.
DRUM
ACCESSORIES
The marimba
AND
AUXILIARY
INSTRUMENTS
is a bass accompaniment
257
for the maracas, guitar,
drum and claves used in Jamaica for secular dances. It is also found in Haiti, Panama,
Cuba and other islands in the West Indies.
The marimba is recognized as an enlarged edition of the African
“sansa.” In the United States it was known as marimba brett. (See Pl.
XXV — No. 62)
RHYTHM
STICKS:
These instruments have been inherited from primitive man, who used all sorts of sonorous objects that nature put at hand. Man used the hands and feet first, then added objects (drumsticks and pedals) for better sound and speed. Rhythm
sticks in the Americas come
in several forms. One form
used in Haiti is a flat piece of wood about eighteen inches long and three inches wide. One is carried by each dancer and as they move in a circle, they strike the stick of their opponent
rhythm.
This dance is called the Stick Dance,
or partner
to mark
or “Battonie,”
the
a Haitian
Carnival dance, in which peculiarly only men participate, attired in women’s clothing.'* Similar sticks are used in Mexico during Easter week celebrations in their traditional stick dance, to carry the rhythm for the “Chirimia” and the drum.* Around Bolivia and Brazil, we also find rhythm sticks used in certain dances. (See Pl. XVIII — No. 41)
Bones: Two flat rib bones from a sheep, pig or cow, cut to a length of approximately six inches and from one inch to an inch-and-a-half in
width—used
as a rhythm
instrument
in the United
States.
The
two
bones are held in the right hand with the middle finger separating them. The long portion extends down the palm of the hand. One bone is cut a fraction of an inch longer than the other. The longer bone is held
stationary with the ring finger and the short one is allowed to swing free between the middle and index finger. By swinging the hand in a
rotary motion, the short bone strikes the longer one producing a “clack” sound. Bones were very popular in the southern part of the United States during the latter part of the nineteenth century and the early part of the twentieth century. Today they are made of wood and plastic. (See PI. VHI — No. 10) Bones were used to augment the drum in the early slave instrument groups. *Chirimia, a clarinet-like wind instrument found in Central and South America.
298
Castanets
or Castanuelas:
The
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
castanets found
in the Americas
were brought in, no doubt, from Spain, and were in all possibility origi-
nally adapted from the Moorish rattle. The name was taken from the word “castafia,” the chestnut wood from which they are made.
The castanets are two pieces of wood carved in a spoon shape and laced together with a thong, braided cord or ribbon. The lacing is looped over the thumb and struck against the palm with the middle fingers.
The tambourine is the drum generally associated with this ment. The castanets are used in pairs—the right-hand pair is the bra” (female), marking the rhythm, and the left-hand pair is the and cruder, accenting the beat of the ‘“‘macho” (male) part. When together by the fingers, the hollowed wooden
instru“hemlarger struck
discs meet with a clicking
accent of special resonance. In Spanish, the sound is described as “‘castafieteo”; the motion as “castafetear”; and the snapping of the fingers,
“pitos.” . Clappers: The knicky-knackers known in the Middle Ages and referred to by Shakespeare as tongs and bones—used today in the concert
orchestra for special effect. The modern clappers are two flat pieces of wood, one longer than the other. The long piece has a handle carved on one end about four inches above the handle; the other board is attached parallel to the first
with a metal or cloth hinge.
The two boards are made to clap with a hammer-like motion. This
instrument is used only occasionally by the drummer for special orches-
tral effects.
Clave-Cleavers: The best-known and probably the most important rhythm sticks in the Americas are called “claves” in Cuba, where they seem to have originated, and cleavers in the Bahamas where their usage
was adopted. The clave is very important in Afro-Cuban music since almost
all the arrangements
clave pattern.
for this body
The clave is an instrument
consisting
of music
of two
are made
round
in the
sticks, one
ap-
proximately eight inches long and another of eight-and-a-quarter inches, and both are from three-quarters of an inch to an inch in diameter. In Cuba, they are made from a very hard sonorous wood, generally acana
(a hard reddish Cuban wood) any).
and of ébano
(ebony)
or caoba
(mahog-
DRUM ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS
259
The word clave was no doubt derived from the small round piece
of very hard wood used as pegs or claves in assembling furniture in Spain. Clave was also a name given to an instrument used in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries before the piano was used to accompany songs. One stick is passive and is laid across the palm of the hand, lightly supported by the tips of the four fingers and the full length of the thumb.
This is the hembra
(female)
stick, which
is struck near the center with
the second stick held lightly in the fingers of the other hand. This second
stick is the “macho” (male). The idea of attaching sex to instruments is an African characteristic retained by Aframericans.'*
The clave sticks have only one sound, but a good clave player is
able to color, dampen
and make
the claves sing like a human
voice by
changing the cup of the hand and the pressure of the hembra. The cupped hand acts as a sound chamber. The claves have been called the spirit of Afro-Cuban
melody, even
though they are not allowed to leave the basic rhythmic pattern. They
have a pleasing timbre; their simplicity and melodic exclamation are full of emotion. In Africa,
south
of the
Sahara,
there
is an
instrument
called
the
“akoge,” which is used as an accessory to create the same sound as the clave, and which
carries a similar pattern for music.
It is made
of two
metal rings worn on the thumb and middle finger of the right hand. The
sounds are so similar to that of the clave that it is almost impossible to
distinguish between them —- whether two has yet to be proven — but
there is a connection between the
the evidence
(the sound and the use
of the instrument) would certainly lead one to believe so. Palen: Two sticks held in the same hand are employed by the Yuma Amerindians as accompaniment to songs of the “frog” dance series.* The Yurok use a stick, of white cedar plank or boat paddle for marking their gambling, narrative, and shaman
songs, but not for dancing.
Puili: A bamboo rhythm stick from Hawaii, with one unsplit end including a node serving as a handle. The other, longer end part is split into narrow widths of about one inch. The length is from twenty
to twenty-one inches. The unsplit handle parts on each side of the node
range in length from five to eight inches. The splitting of the long part of the tube is done in two ways; one *Rain producing dances.
260
way and nate inch used
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
is to split the tube simply at close intervals of one-quarter inch, is rarely wider. The other technique consists of cutting out alterpieces of one-quarter inch width, thus spacing the narrow one-quarter rods at intervals of equal width. The bamboo rhythm sticks are in a dance named after the instrument “hula puili.” (See Pl. XVIII
— No. 41) STAMPING
TUBES:
Ganbo or ti Kanmbo: A tube of bamboo used in Haiti as a rhythm instrument and on occasions as a substitute for the drum. Tubes of bamboo of different lengths and diameters have different sound chambers and in turn give different sounds. The stamping tubes work like inverted drums. Four or five tubes are used to produce rhythm — the sound is produced by striking the tubes against the ground. Cupped hands are used to manipulate the sound from the open end. At one time in the Caribbean,
prohibited. The
they
were
bulatier,
the
used
as drum
man
handling
substitutes the
when
solos, works
skin with
drums
were
ti kanmbo,
holding one in each hand. The musicians squat at the edge of the dance area or sit on very low stools and beat their rhythm out against the
bare ground. The stamping tubes are found in Hawaii, Haiti, and Venezuela where they are called “quitiplas.”* In Hawaii, they are referred to as “ohe
ka’eke,
and pitch.
and
each
musician
(See Pl. XXV — No.
uses two, each
62)
with
a different
length
TRIANGLES:
A small round steel bar bent into the shape of a triangle, open at
the upper end and struck with a metal beater.
The triangle is thought to be of European origin. It was used by folk, popular, and classical instrument groups. This instrument in the Americas is predominantly used by Aframericans and European-Americans. Neither the Asians nor the Amerindians seem to have adopted this instrument into their new cultural patterns. (See Pl. XVI — No. 35) TRUMPETS AND HORNS: The trumpet has long been associated with military drums, but in modern warfare both the trumpet and the drum are outmoded and are now only associated with parades and bugle corps. *Africans of Dahomey
call this instrument “Kukugoku.”
DRUM
ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS
261
The horns today most closely associated with drums
are found in
folk and popular instrumental groups in the West Indies. Vaccine (Burro Voice): A length of bamboo with the natural membranes removed at one end. A small hole is made in the remaining membrane to form a mouth piece. This instrument is peculiar to Haiti; the vaccine is used as a signal horn by work groups and fishing fleets, and also used with drums in dances of the Congo group. The “arada”
festivals that come
in pre-Easter week depend solely on the vaccines
for their music. Three or four vaccines
(trumpets)
of different lengths
are used. Each vaccine has a different tone but only one note. The trumpeters walk or march abreast of each other and the dancers follow. The musicians beat upon the side of the bamboo with a small stick, producing counter rhythms. The conch shells and pipes have been substituted for bamboo in some areas of Haiti, but the sound
favorite.
of the vaccines remains
the native’s
(See Pl. XXV —- No. 62)
Cachoe Horn: This is a cow horn with a hole drilled in the side one-and-a-quarter inch from the sharp end of the horn. The horn used is about ten inches long. The player blows into the hole while the open end is manipulated with the free hand to change the sound. In Curacao, the
“cachoe,”
along
with
the
‘“‘agan,”
is called
“cachoe
Koe
Heroe,”*
and is used to carry news and signaling, just as the drums of Curacao
were
used.
This
instrument
is found
America and the West Indies — in FOLK
AND
POPULAR
in
North,
South,
and
Central
Haiti it is called “cayambouque.”
BAND
INSTRUMENTS
IN THE AMERICAS: The instruments used in the various countries in the Americas indicate to a certain extent the type of music and the ethnic influence found in this part of the world. There are some countries like the United States where a cursory examination of the instruments indicates only one influence — but on closer examination, other influences are heard
in the music. The drum is the most widespread of all the various found in this continent. Other instruments vary from the lonely turtle to the piano. Argentina: In Argentina the instrument used by the folk instrumental groups are: the caja (a small two-headed *Horn with iron.
instruments shell of the popular and drum), the
262
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
bombo (a large two-headed drum), the flute, the guitar, the violin, the accordion or concertina (bandoneén). Bahamas:
Cleavers
(claves),
drums
(barrels
covered
with
skin),
guayas (a serrated gourd), the cowbell and the saw. Bolivia: two-headed
Sicu
(a
drum),
panpipe),
bombo
guena
(a
(a bass type
reed
drum),
big flute), charango
(armadillo shell guitar).
(a two-headed
played
Brazil: Tambor drum
(a two-headed with
flute), harp,
caja
guitar,
(a
anata
bombo
(a
drum played with a stick), surdo
one
hand
and a
stick),
atabaqué
single-headed cylindrical drum played with a bare hand and a (a large bass drum), triangle, chocalho
reco-reco (a rasp), gongue anvil) and the guitar.
small
(a
stick),
(a maraca type rattle),
(a double bell), agogé
(a single bell or
Colombia: The guitars, bandolo (mandolin), tambor (a two-headed instrument played with two sticks), gauché (rattle), and the maracas (also a type of rattle). Cuba: Trés (guitar), maracas, gitiro (rasp), flute, claves, bongés, conga and the quijada (lower jaw of a horse).
Curacao: Musik di Zumbi (a big bass drum played with two sticks),
benta (a mouth bow), triangle, wiri (a metal rasp), tambor, matrimonial (a sistrum type rattle), cornet, piano, cello and clarinet.
Dominican
Republic
(Santo
Domingo):
The
guayo
(a
metal
scraper), pandereta (tambourine), balsié (a single-headed drum played with the bare hand), and the accordion (acordeén). Ecuador: The guena (flute), antara or sicu (flutes), guitar, char-
ango
(armadillo shell guitar), harp, caja
and the bombo
(a bass drum).
(a small tinya type drum),
Guatemala: The national instruments are the marimba (xylophone), accompanied by the flute, tambor (a two-headed drum), and the harp.
Haiti: The maracas, single-headed cylindrical hand played drums, the two-headed drum, the vaccines (single note trumpets). The bell and
the flute, are the instruments of choice. Hand clapping and singing play
a large part in the music of this country. Jamaica: Folk bands and popular bands are made up of combina-
tions of rumba box, maracas, flute, banjo, guitar, conga drums, the water tub bass, the small snare drum and the bass drum — filled in with
hand clapping and singing. Mexico: The typical band of Mexico
includes the violin, guitars,
DRUM ACCESSORIES AND AUXILIARY INSTRUMENTS harp,
flute, clarinets,
(xylophone)
trumpets,
the
drum,
and
263 frequently
the marimba
or any combination of these instruments.
Panama:
Along with hand-clapping and singing, the mejoranera
(a five-string guitar), bocana (guitar), rabel (a three-stringed rustic violin), a battery of two single-headed drums and a two-headed tambor,
guachara (gourd rasp), cello and the violin are used in different combinations. Occasionally an almirez (a brass mortar) is seen in folk and
popular bands.
Paraguay:
Harps,
violins,
guitars,
and
a two-headed
tinya
type
drum are seen in small bands of Paraguay. Peru: Pandean pipe (flute), ayacasttis (gourd rattle), hayllaiquipac or aylli-quepa (a conch shell trumpet), tinya (a small two-headed drum),
timbrels (bells), quepa
used.
Puerto
Rico:
(oboe), chil-chil (maracas), are the instruments
The
giiiro is the unofficial national instrument
of
Puerto Rico. It is used along with the claves, bongos, timbales, tambora,
pandero, maracas, and the guitar in different combinations for instrumental accompaniment. Surinam:
The kwa-kwa
(a board struck with sticks), maracas,
iron
bell, triangle, and a battery of drums are used in the bands. Trinidad: The guitar, gan (an iron bar or bell), maracas, cha cha (a rattle),
flutes, bamboo
tamboo,
and
skin
drums
used
in Trinidad’s
instrumental groups are being replaced by steel pans. (See Steel drums, under Idiophones.) United
States:
When
the
Civil
War
ended,
there
was
a decided
change in folk and popular music, musical instruments, and musical appreciation. It is claimed by many that jazz dates from this change.
The Century Illustrated Monthly published an article by George Cable in February 1886 titled, “The Dance in Place Congo,” in which
the dance music and instruments used by slaves and freed-men were described. Some of the instruments used are hard to find today; some
have disappeared entirely. of
a
hewn
The instruments found were bamboula (a single-headed drum made joint of bamboo), congo drum (a single-headed instrument from
a solid Joe). and a gourd
rattle, which
flourished at the end
of a stout staff, held with one hand, and beaten upon the palm of the other. ‘1he triangle is still in use, but the jew’s harp is now a toy. The jawbone of an ox, horse or mule is still used in the West Indies as a
264.
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
musical instrument. Casks or empty barrels are beaten on their heads with the shank bones of cattle. The marimba brett disappeared from the United
States, but is found
in Jamaica
as the rumba
box
and in
fiddle,
cornet,
Cuba as the marimbula. The four-string banjo today has also left the ranks of folk instruments and is now a popular instrument. The quill, a type of pan flute made from cane, has long disappeared. At the end of the Civil War, the surplus instruments of the Confederate and Union Armies were picked up by the ex-slaves and used to replace many of their former homemade instruments, yet the Negroes did not divorce themselves from their former music. The instruments found in the folk and popular bands in the United States
of
America
are
the
violin,
piano,
drums,
bass
clarinet, guitar, harmonica, accordion, saxophone, flutes; most of these
were of European origin.
The conga drums found in the United States today were re-introduced from the West Indies. The original type of this drum found here
has disappeared almost entirely. In the classical orchestra and some popular North American bands the instruments are all the standard European type. In Hawaii, the Hula orchestra of the past was made up of percussion instruments, predominantly the puili (bamboo rattle), ili’ili (stone castanets), uli uli (gourd rattles), pahu hula, ipu hula, and the puniu drums,
the ohe ka’eke
ukelele. Venezuela: drum),
furruco
The
or ohe keeke
maracas,
(friction drum),
(bamboo
guitar,
stamping
cumaco
atabalejo
tubes)
and the
(single-headed
(two-headed
drum),
hand
violins
and flutes make their appearance in varied combinations in both the popular and folk instrumental groups. The harp and bandola or mandolin are also very popular in Venezuela
the guitar and drum. The
instruments
may
differ
from
where music is the offspring of country
to
country,
but
the
thought, the inspiration, and the spirit behind the music are universal.
There is no bad music — we may not be sophisticated enough to appreciate, feel, and does —
understand
otherwise,
it would
all types of music,
but somewhere,
not be in existence.
someone
17 DRUMLORE An
accumulation
of beliefs,
tales,
and
learning
concerning
drums
is something like a historical x-ray, since it throws light on the sediment which lies at the bottom of the daily conscious conduct of a people. From a study of these accumulations, we have an insight into culture. The drum was indispensable in preliterate and primitive life. No instrument had so many ritualistic tasks, or was held in more esteem. There were many rites important to drum construction and usage. The
Lappons choose wood which has fibers that grow in a certain direction, and in Melanesia the drummakers climb the tree that is to furnish the wood
and
remain
there
until
the drum
is finished.
In Haiti, the wood
for the drum has to be cut at the right phase of the moon, or it is
thought that the wood will not be resistant to the ravages of the post
beetles or other termites. Skulls, shells and fetishes are often attached or enclosed within the shell, to impart magic power to the drum. For this reason there is some apprehension among the cultists in the Americas concerning looking into an open drum. In certain
islands in the West
is never touched—for
drum.
Indies, a drum
of another
drummer
fear of a curse on offending the power of the
In an Akkadian text on one of the rituals of Mesopotamia, this ritual for preparation of the drum head has been translated into French by Francois Thurean-Dangin and from this translation Dr. Galpin has made an English abstract. 265
266
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
A black bull, without defect and untouched by stick or whip, was selected, without any groups of white spots in star form. The animal was brought to the temple on a propitious day and offering was made to the gods, especially to Lumba, God of Music and Wisdom. The animal was placed and held on a reed mat, placed on the ground and covered with sand. Perfumes were burnt and offerings made. A torch was lighted and the bull was sung to. Twelve bronze images of the Gods of Heaven, Earth and Underworld were placed on twelve linen cloths. Sacrifices were made and the body of the drum was set in its place. The animal’s mouth was washed, and by means of a tube of aromatic reed, incantations were whispered into its ears explaining, in dialectical Sumerian,
the
divine
use
and
honor
which
was
hymn now was chanted to the accompaniment
about
to be
done.
A
of the double-reed pipe.
The bull was then slain, and its heart burnt and the skinned body was wrapped in red cloth. The skin was treated with beer, wine, grease, Hittite alum and gall-nut. In Africa,
criminals
and
fleeing
slaves
fine
become
flour,
and
untouchable
with when
they reach the drum yard, and animals that enter the yard are taboo. The Wahenga tribe of Africa believe that seeing a drum is fatal if the moon is not full. The drums are only moved at night. In other African areas, the drum is a sacred implement belonging to the king and is an insignia of his dignity. It is more than a symbol, it is a talisman for luck and victory. Drums are generally associated with the masculine
rites, in circumcision,
men’s
funerals,
etc. The
boys
of New
Guinea have one serious duty to perform for their initiation period— to make a drum. The boys are taboo and live in the forest until the drums are completed, regardless of the time necessary to construct them. Several boys go together. Straight logs are selected and cut to size, then
scraped with shells until the desired shape is wrought. The inner cavity is burned
out.
If, by any
chance,
the instrument
is seen
by
a woman,
it is destroyed and started anew. It is thought that the shell would certainly split if viewed by a woman—it is also thought that the skin would burst if fish were eaten; the eating of bananas causes the instrument to have a dull sound. The drinking of fresh water destroys the fire of the music. The boys drink water from the stems of the banana No one knows just how the first skin-covered drum was discovered
tree and coconut milk, so that their drum will be a good instrument.
DRUMLORE
267
but one of the stories goes like this, in Satis Coleman’s book entitled: The Drum Book.!® “Yubro, a native chief who lived ages ago, killed a leopard in the
forest and brought it home
to his hut, for he wished to make
a warm
rug of the skin. He hung the skin over a hollow tree stump that had
been hit by lightning, burning out the center, leaving a mug shape. He hung the skin with the hair down so that it would dry. The sun dried it, but it rained and softened the skin and it laid close against
the stump. When the rain had passed, the sun returned and dried out the skin causing it to draw tight against the stump. By chance, the children playing in the area pretended to kill the leopard and struck the tight drawn skin lying over the stump with a club. The sound produced frightened the whole village and it was thought that a great spirit had come to live in the village. It only spoke when it was touched and it had come as a good spirit to frighten away the wild animals and evil gods of sickness and hunger. By tapping on
the skin, the chief could communicate with the great spirit. The people would come when it was talking and sacrifice a wild animal to the spirit that dwelt inside the tree stump.” Drum
Worship:
The effect and magic power of the drum soon caused man to worship the drum as a god. It is said that at some point in history, the drum has been worshiped as a god in many countries of the world. In some parts of South America, the drum-god is the only object the natives worship. The only way the natives could explain the strange sound of the drum was to suppose it to be the voice of some great and powerful spirit. The sound has a strange influence on them. They give themselves up to this influence by shouting and dancing. The teponaztli and huehuet! are instruments held sacred in areas
in Mexico. According to Mendoza, the legend goes like this: “Seeing that they were utterly unable to prevail in their struggle with the newly-created Sun, the old gods of Teotihuacan in desperation decided to sacrifice themselves. Xolotl, the appointed sacrificer, opened each of their breasts with a large knife and drew out the heart; then he killed himself. By their deaths, the Sun’s anger was appeased. Each god bequeathed his sacred clothing to a priest who had worshipped him. Realizing the great weight of their responsibility for such
sacred
relics,
the
priest
guarded
the
vestments
most
zealously.
268
DRUMS
Their grief, however,
on account
IN THE AMERICAS
of the deaths of their gods was not
assuaged even though they now had in their possession the sacred vestments. Instead of abating, it in time grew unsupportable, and they therefore decided to undertake a pilgrimage, hoping that somewhere they might find solace for their anguish.
After wandering about together for a time, they separated and one priest traveled toward the seacoast. When he arrived at the ocean he
met there Tezcatlipoca, Lord of being, who instructed him to proceed onward to the court of the Sun, and there to beg the Sun for musical instruments. With songs and musical to fittingly praise his new gods.
instruments,
man
would
be able
In order to assist him in this long journey to the court of the Sun,
various animals in the sea, among
them the tortoise, the whale,
sea-cow,
formed
a
the
he
themselves
into
priest might pass over them. When Sun,
explained
the
motive
bridge
and
the
so
that
the
grief-stricken
of his visit.
The
Sun
however,
the priest arrived at the court -of not
wishing to diminish his own retinue of followers, forbade any of his servitors to listen to the priest’s entreaties. But, so eloquently and earnestly did the earthly messenger make his plea that two servants of the Sun, the one named Huehuetl and the other Teponaztli, disobeyed and listened. For their presumption in disobeying him, the Sun cast them forth from his presence in disgrace.
They then accompanied the priest on his return to earth. But the sound of the huehuetl and teponaztli must forever remain sorrowful; because forever they remember the sorrow they felt when first they heard the story of man’s
extremity,
as the priest told it in
heaven. If man’s anguish because the gods of Teotihuacan are dead has now
abated
and if he has learned how
to dance
and
make
merry
in
song and dance, the sounds of the huehuetl and teponaztli still continue to remind him of the sighs huehuetl and teponaztli long ago breathed in heaven when first they heard the sad entreaties of the earthly
messenger.”
“When the anthropologist John Roscoe came to the Banyankole, he found at a little distance from the Royal Kraal, a small enclosure in which stood the hut of the royal drums. The hut was always domed
and had no point or pinnacle; inside there was a stand or bed on which lay two drums. At the back of the hut behind the bed lay a quantity of material for repairing these drums, and this had to be carefully guarded
DRUMLORE
269
for it might not be used for any other purpose. To the left of the hut was a bag, in which were the instruments necessary for taking an augury
should
it be needed,
and
beside
it lay some
whistles
and
an iron
rod
upon which the tools for making the drums were sharpened, for this might not be done upon a stone. In front of the bed or stand was a row of milk pots belonging to the drums in which the daily offerings of milk were put. The chief drums were the two which lay upon the bed. These were covered with white skins with a black strip across them, making them look like a pair of great eyes in the gloom of the
hut. A sacred herd of cows yielded a supply of milk which was daily offered to these drums in the pots which stood in front of them. “It was placed there in the morning and remained until nine or ten o’clock,
by which
time the drum
spirits had taken
the essence
the remainder might be drunk by the guardians. There woman, who was known as the wife of the drums, whose
and
was also a duty it was
to look after the milk, the churning, and the covering of the drums. Another woman looked after the fire in the drum-house, which had
to be kept burning always because the drum spirits required warmth. Offerings of cattle or beer were made to the drums by chiefs when a son had been born to them or when they had received promotion to some office or had been successful in some expedition and earned the commendation of the King. The King also made an annual offering of cows to the drums, so that they possessed a large herd; those offered to the first of them had to be red or white and those for the second,
black. These cows were sacred and the King alone might order one to be killed; no one but the guardians could eat the meat
of an animal
thus killed and the skin was kept for repairing the drums. It was from these cows that the milk was taken, which was daily offered to drums, and from the surplus milk, butter was used for smearing
drums.” “In 1901, a Reindeer was
at the time
when
Big
Koryak Raven
woman
(Kamchatka)
lived—while
still outside,
narrated:
the the
It
they heard
the sound of a drum. They entered the house and found Universe beating on the drum—his wife Rain-woman sitting next to him. In order to
produce
rain, he cut off his wife’s vulva and hung it on the drum;
he cut off his penis and ordinary drumstick.”!”
beat the drum
with
it, instead
of using
then
an
“In East Africa, coronation drums must be struck with sticks made
270
DRUMS
of human ones
after
IN THE AMERICAS
tibias, which have a phallic significance. To provide fresh the
yearly
coronation
festival,
the
royal
drummers
carry
away all drums except one; whichever onlooker innocently picks up and brings this last drum, saying “you have forgotten it,” is immediately seized and killed, and his arm bones used as drumsticks.”
In Nile regions the sacred drums are hung in front of the chief’s
house,
or under
the sacred
tree of the village.
When
hung
in front
of
the chief’s house, they become identified with the mysterious power of his office. The drum is regarded as the mouth piece of a god or spirit. Each temple of a chief in West Africa has a tall drum (gvedri) with a carved body. This drum has a protecting spirit—the slave who was sacrificed to it when it was made. It is played only at religious ceremonies. The Nahua-speaking
tribes
of Mexico
claim
music
and
musical
instruments have a supernatural origin—their myth states that the God
Tezcatlipoca had music sent from the sun and had a bridge constructed
to the sun made of whales and turtles (Indian symbol of strength) to guarantee safe passage to the earth. Drums of all kinds crossed the bridge. Shawnee Amerindians place charcoal inside their water drums. Charcoal stands for fire—fire and water will make
anything move, but
man must guide it. A drum with water alone would not sound good.
The fire in the drum illuminates everything. The spirits and the Creator
can see it. When the head of a drum is hit the chacoal in the drum causes the buckskin head to expand and the water comes up through the buckskin and sprays out. This is good: it keeps the buckskin wet without charcoal, the skin sags down in the center and dries. It has no life in it until the two powers, fire and water, are present. It is said that charcoal makes light, and light goes everywhere.
It is thought by the Cherokee and Shawnee tribes of America that
the cypress tree was placed on this earth by the Creator for the Indians
to use in the making of their drums. Cypress trees are smooth at the trunk and hollow inside. When the Indians beat the drum, the Creator
can hear it.!” The Navahos
claim that their ceremonial basket design came
to
them in ancient days. A Navaho woman was seated under a juniper tree finishing a basket in the style of the other tribes, and while so engaged,
she was intensely thinking if some stronger and more beautiful border
DRUMLORE could
not
271 be
devised.
As
she
sat
in
thought,
Hastséyalti,
the
Indian
God, tore from the overhanging juniper tree, a small spray and dropped it into her basket. Immediately it occurred to her to copy the design
of the juniper tree into the peculiar fold of her basket. She devised a
way to do it and from it came the design of the Navaho basket drum. The Navahos claim that all baskets with the Navaho margins are made by Navaho women or under the tutelage of a Navaho woman.!”* Investiture drums were once a symbol of royal authority. Upon seizing power, a Baluba of the kingly line (most of whom come to the throne through fratricide) had to give voice to his new might through a specially
constructed
tom-tom,
the “drum
of the ancestral
ghosts.”
The Ngoma wa bakishi drum had to have part of a human skull fixed
in its resonance
sacrificial
victims
chamber.
After
entombed
the dead
beside
chief had
him,
the grave for several days, doing homage
his
been
buried,
with
successor
stayed
near
to the departed
soul and
asking for his protection. Finally the old men of the tribe came, placed
a halter around his neck and dragged him off to the village where he at once prepared his “ngoma wa bakishi.” He had to send out small war parties with orders to kill the first man to be encountered
and bring in his head. As soon as a head was obtained, “chiondo,” the signal drum, called in the searchers to avoid needless slaughter. Then
a new round tom-tom, standing more than four feet high, was hollowed out and the hollowed crown of the victim’s skull was gummed fast inside the new drum. A goatskin membrane was stretched in place and the chief, in the presence of his people, beat a single tap upon it. The drum responded deeply—the ancestor replied to the call of his descendant— the new
reign commenced.
In Nigeria, among the Yorubas, if a lad shows promise of being a good drummer and has already reached a good standard, he may be invited to take the arts of a dead master drummer. If his father or his uncle was a master drummer, it may well be one of these whose art he is to replace. The occasion suitable for the ceremony is when a-master drummer has just died. The official performing the ritual must,
if possible,
be
a master
drummer
family. The dead man is propped up in in his hand and a drum is set in front shakes the dead musician’s arm to beat then takes the drumstick from the dead
and
a member
of
the
lad’s
his hut, a drumstick is placed of him. The master drummer the drum. The son or nephew man’s hand and touches the
272
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
drum at the spot where it has been beaten, saying certain words. At the libation, which is customary for all funerals, a special petition to the dead master drummer is added in this case, to pass on his art to the lad and bless him. On future occasions when the new master drummer plays unusually well, people will be pleased but not surprised at his prowess. They know whence his art derives. There is an interesting instrument preserved in the Historical Musum in Dresden. It is supposed that it dates from the Thirty Years War. The story is that a chief of the Huns of this period bequeathed his skin to be used for a tympano after his death. The instrument was made and is the one now in the Dresden Museum. In Cuba, Aframericans
acquainted
with the music
and liturgy of
their African religions say that certain drums speak on given occasions. Among the Afro-Cubans of Yoruba origin, generally only the Iya (largest of the three bata drums)
speaks; however sometimes it carries
on a conversation with the middle-sized or even the small drum. Among the Congo people, the large “maquta” drum speaks; among the Abakuds (or fafigos) the bonkéenchemiya is the talker. In Abyssinia the beating of wooden drumsticks on a
pair
of
tympani is a symbol of power. A king of Abyssinia, it is reputed, was accompanied to the field of battle with no less than forty-four drummers and eighty-eight kettledrums.
Isabel Aretz, in her “Folklore Safari” (through Venezuela) (Américas Magazine, Nov. 1961), stated that Aframericans in Venezuela vene-
rate their Saints from whom they expect everything, and they carry out their promises to honor them each year with processions, songs and dances. These celebrations are generally carried on with the beat of the drum. These people love their drums and give them names. On one occasion, a truck ran over “burro negro” (as they call the big drum). The women wept and the men carried the big drum to be buried. When a drummaker dies, the drums he made are put in mourning by draping them with black crepe. There is a story traditionally told in Venezuela, which claims that Saint Benito was hurt by accident and his drums started to play themselves; help was sent at once and he was revived.
The Vodouns of Haiti believe if an impure woman
to a drum, the drum loses its tone. When
by
dances close
the tone is lost (or dies), the
drum is thrown away by the drummer where the Saint has ordered.
DRUMLORE
273
Some South Americans and Oceanians believed the divinity who created the water is also the creator of the slit drum. In the New Hebrides,
the slit drum
is struck when
the new moon
rises;
often a pit
is dug beneath it; the biggest slit drum is called the mother and frequently, though not always, the players are women. Oceanians see a female abdomen in its hollow body, a vulva in the slit and fornication
in the ramming action.
R. H. Codrington, in his article “Religious Beliefs and Practices in
Melanesia” (Journal of Anthropologist Instruction), states that throughout Melanesia drums are a part of a rich man’s possessions. The top of these drums are fashioned into a smiling face. When the drum is fashioned in the image of an ancestor, the strokes are made on the stomach. When
head,
the royal drum
the blood
with the blood was beaten, the The Murle ming. Therefore young
boys
of the
and
Kaula
cow,
whose
of the Baganda skin
is used,
is to receive a new
is run into the
of a beheaded man. The idea was that when the life of the man added fresh life and vigor to the of Africa say that their God Lingo taught them drumming has become so important in the life girls that
an elaborate
drums. The tree must be cut be of a certain kind. Prayer tree. The log cut from the shape. After preparation, the
ritual
is connected
drum
drum king. drumof the
with
the
in June after the first rain falls and must is held and an offering is made to the tree is then hollowed out to the desired shell is set aside for a year. The hide is
put on the shell and the maker prays to the God of Thunder.
The natives of Guiana preferred to head their drums with the skin of the baboon or howling monkey. The heads of their drums would thus impart to the instrument the rolling roaring sounds of this animal. The regalia of Malay states includes the drums of the court which
are considered sacred. The royal drums of Jelebu are claimed to be headed with the skins of lice, and emit a chord of twelve different sounds. The Sultan of Minang-Kabon woke daily to the sound of the royal
drum
(gandang
nobat).
The
drums
are thought
to have
come
into existence by their own will. They are also thought to be impervious to rot, nor can the sun blister them. Any person brushing past them would be felled to the ground by their magic power. In Veda*
writings,
the drum
was not only beaten,
“Ancient sacred scriptures of the Hindus of India.
but invoked
to
274,
ward
DRUMS
away
danger, such
as demons
and
enemies.
IN THE
The
used in sacrifices and battle. The warriors worshiped
playing
the drum,
The Hindu
drum,
which
he
a mantra
Brahmans made
from
or charm
was spoken
drum
AMERICAS
was
it, and
into it.
also
before
believe that the Creator invented the first the
blood-soaked
demon god whom he defeated in battle. The called ““myrdangras,” or clay-bodied drums.
earth
of
this
first Indian
enemy,
drums
a
were
By covering the drum with the skin of an enemy, one acquires his vigor. This was a well-known magic rite among the Amerindians of Central and South America. One ancient writer tells in detail how an Inca king, entering his capital after a rebellion, had the complete skin stripped from the live bodies of six subjugated chiefs. He then inflated them into human
shapes and ordered his soldiers to drum upon the stomachs. The skin
from
the entire body
was removed
and stuffed with straw, except the
stomach. A drum form was placed in the stomach. It produced an avet-
age-size drum which was carried beat it with two large mallets.
by
several
soldiers;
one
performer
The drum was also used by the Incas in their courting and wooing ceremonies. After the parents had given consent, a small hut was con-
structed for the daughter outside the family hut. The girl had to stay inside with her food and other wants satisfied by the family. The suitor
is required to make a belt of the bones of different animals which he has killed. For eight days he was required to remain outside and beat a drum (pimpim, a kettledrum) and move his body to cause pieces of bone in the belt to move
and rattle; and at the end
of the
eight days, if he did not please the father, he was rejected.” The Mayas and the Aztecs in their bloody wars speedily reduced their unfortunate captives to service as drum heads. They believed that the relatives of those sacrificed would
hear the sounds of their dearly
departed in battle and would take fright and flee in terror.
With the Chukchee in northeastern Sibera, the shaman is a medicine
man and a priest of Shamanism. He is believed to possess great powers. In his rituals the drum and the rattle are used to bring on “possession.” The shaman sits at the master’s place near the back wall, and even in the most limited sleeping room some free space must be reserved around him. The drum is carefully cared for, its head tightened, and if it is not tuned properly, it is moistened with urine and hung up to dry for a
DRUMLORE
275
short time over a lamp. The shaman sometimes occupies more than an hour in this procedure before he is satisfied with the drum. At last the light is put out and the shaman begins to perform. After making some preliminary sounds, such as that of a falcon or
a sea
mew,
a slight
to
rolling
concentrate
noise,
attention,
like the buzzing
the
shaman
begins
of mosquitoes.
to
make
Moreover
the
shaman uses his drum for modifying his voice, by placing it directly before this mouth, then turning it at an oblique angle and beating it all the
while.
The
music
begins,
at first tender
and
soft, vague,
then
nervous and irregular. Like the noise of an approaching storm, it becomes
louder
cries
like
whistle,
the
and
and more raven’s
the
decisive;
croak,
falcon’s
and
now
grebe’s
eagle’s
and then
laugh,
sea
screams.
it is broken
by wild
mew’s
sniper’s
The
wail,
music
becomes
louder, and the strokes on the drum become confused in one continuous
rumble—the bells, rattles and drums sound ceaselessly—there is a deluge of sounds. After
a few
minutes,
all this noise
begins
to move
the listeners,
who are crouching down, pressed together in a most uncomfortable position, and they begin to lose the power to locate the source of the sounds and almost without any effort of imagination, the song and the drum
seem
to shift from
corner
to corner,
or even
to move
about
without having any definite place at all. The shaman, after producing in his audience a hypnotic mental state, by suggestion
and command,
is then able to impose his wishes upon them. The dreams, the aspirations, the beliefs and the attitude
people
are
often
reflected
in
myths,
stories,
narratives,
and
of a
riddles.
The tales about and connected with the drums are no exceptions.
REFLECTIONS
AND
PROJECTIONS
The history of the drum in the Americas follows the history of man
in these waters. When there were cultural changes, we find a reflection in the instruments used and the music produced. Music is not universal, but rhythm can be characterized as having
universal appeal. Rhythm ethnic,
or
cultural
is familiar to all men
background.
statement in the Americas. The King of Rhythm—the
We
have
not
regardless of social,
found
drum, is found
exceptions
to
the
in all the countries in
the Americas in some form or fashion. Its construction has been con-
ditioned by several factors:
tradition, technology,
ritual, ethnic origin,
time, sound desired, materials available, and legal and social restrictions.
Wood, for the most part, is the most popular material used, but the trend toward the use of metal and plastics is mainfesting itself. By
headed
far, the grestest number
instruments,
but,
for
the
of drums
present,
in the Americas
there
is an
increase
are twoin
the
single-headed instruments. Most drums in the Americas can be classified ethnically by their construction, method of playing and use. All of these instruments are used for either secular Ethnically,
drums
or ritualistic affairs.
can be divided into six categories, in the Amer-
icas: Amerindian, European-American, Aframerican, Oceanian, AsianAmerican, and the instruments of mixed ethnic origin—those being
mulatto or mestizo. All the Americas
were
inhabited
276
by Amerindians
at the time
of
REFLECTIONS
AND
PROJECTIONS
277
the migration and conquest of this continent by Europeans, but there was little homogeneity of indigenous rhythm—a fact which is even more true today. Little remains today of pure Indian instruments and
music, and this is found in isolated areas.
Indians of the United States classify their drums as wet or dry, and break this down further by stating their use: ceremonial drums, social dance drums, and medicine drums. Only a few tribes make their drums today in the traditional way. Other tribes go to professional drum shops and drummakers for their instruments. Their instruments have changed as much as their cultural habits.’ The Amerindian drums are the most widely dispersed, but are also disappearing rapidly. These instruments are generally highly symbolically designed with figures painted on the skin or head. These instruments are played with sticks, portable, and when there is more than one drummer, they play in unison. The European-American drums are manufactured, two-headed* sophisticated instruments concentrated on the whole in urban areas from Nome, Alaska, to Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Aframerican
and
Eastern
drums,
coasts
geographically,
of South
America,
are found
the West
on the Northern
Indies,
and
the urban
areas of the United States where there is a large Caribbean population. At one time, these instruments were very popular in the southern part of the U.S.A., but have disappeared from this area due to legal restrictions placed on them. The Aframerican drums remained popular in the Caribbean, but are now being replaced by steeel drums in most areas. Asiatic and Oceanic drums are limited in the Americas. The Asiatic drums are found in Jamaica, Trinidad, British Honduras, British Guiana. Barbados, Hawaii, California, and New York. Hawaii is the only place
in the Americas where these instruments have been absorbed into the regional
music.
The
Oceanic
Hawaii in the Americas.
drums
are limited,
almost
exclusively,
to
The drums of mixed ethnic origin in the Americas have taken on
characteristics which have set them apart from, and peculiar to, the American continent—for each of the ethnic groups has drumming styles and instruments which are unique to the group. European instrumental music is based on a formalized discipline requiring an extensive knowledge of technique and precision, having little *The tambourine, timpano, cocktail drum
and “flat jack” are single-headed drums.
278
DRUMS
to do with a specific racial culture.
Amerindian
IN THE AMERICAS
and
Aframerican
in-
strumentation expresses and mainfests the culture of a people. Because of the relationship of drumming to the whole culture, past and present, it is not advisable to study “Aframerican” or “Amerindian”
drumming,
as an
isolated
art.
In European culture, the retention of European drums seems more likely, but their techniques of playing, and their rhythms, will be altered due to the impact of cultures with more advanced drumming traditions and
techniques.
The use of non-European drums will probably increase in the Americas, or a new instrument will develop as the folk rhythms continue to mold into a new musie which will typify American music. European drums are played a certain way and are manufactured so that all are the same, therefore—a score can be written which will produce more or less equal results. Folk instruments are not hand made to any specifications; then too, some of the instruments are struck on the body
as well as on the head. For example, there are the tambora
of the
Dominican Republic, the sewyak of Alaska, the chang ko of the KoreanAmericans, and the Puerto Rican bomba.
The present method of notation is inadequate for scoring folk drumming in the Americas, since it is impossible to indicate either how
a sound is produced
or its relative strength
notation,
orchestrations
scores
for
using
or weakness.
percussion
In Western
instruments
are
based upon a standardized instrument. There are certain sounds used that cannot be scored; for example, the sliding of damp fingers across the head to produce a “‘squealing” sound. This sound is used on the Haitian basse and arada drums as well as the Cuban bata drums. The effect is not always of the same quality or duration. The cracking of the instrument and sharpness of the beat cannot
rhythms
be
noted
with
the
present
that exist. For example,
the Lucumi
cult of Cuba,
method
used;
much
less,
a set of three baté drums,
are all two
headed
and each
head
the
poly-
used carries
by a
separate rhythm—it is as though six drums were being played. If the basic pattern was written for each head, the improvisation on one head would make the score worthless because hundreds of notations would have to be written if possible. “Afro” ritual drum patterns are not improvised; but there are many
REFLECTIONS AND PROJECTIONS
279
opportunities for improvisation within the framework of the basic pattern
and improvisation changes with the mood and timing.
Recordings can be used for analyzing and understanding rhythms but they have no clue as to technique of obtaining the sounds heard. At
best, they preserve the sounds and flavor. Aframerican drumming, for
generations a source of scorn and condemnation, is being recognized as having artistically contributed to the music of the world. So, it is important to preserve it for study and prosperity.
It appears that there are six drums, other than American drums, that can be classified as indigenous to the American continent—the twin drums of Cuba, the “bongés,” timbales; the surdos of Brazil; steel drums of Trinidad; the “flat jacks” of the United States;
the the
basses of Haiti; and the modern popular drum sets. The bongé of Cuba in construction, method of playing, position held while being played, and the tuning of the instrument is surely uniquely American.*
in all the foregone
The timbales, the other twin drums
areas of difference
found
of Cuba, vary
in the bongés,
plus
the
material used in their construction. The surdo of Brazil is a bass drum typified by having African, European, and Amerindian characteristics, thus making it an American instrument in all respects. The method of playing is African; the position held during playing European; and the dimensional construction Amerindian—making the surdo typical of what one would expect to find in Brazil, a country on American soil, proud of its ethnic heritage. The “steel drums” of Trinidad are a product of the last fifteen years, born out of a crying need of expression on an island where the cultural tradition ranges from Asia to Africa and molded by Iberian and Anglo-Saxon rule.
Many will classify the “steel drums” as a type of gong and, in some respects, they would be correct. However, the drum aspects of the
steel drums cannot be denied; it is more of a drum than a gong because of the method in which it is played and used in the orchestra. The “flat jacks,” a new type being manufactured in the United States, is a single-headed drum. The skin or head is suspended a metal rim, thirty to thirty-six inches in diameter, and four
inches in height. The
metal
tension
brackets
are welded
within to six
to the inner
*Africa has twin drums, but they are different in these particular respects.
280
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
surface of the rim. Either surface can be struck effectively—the instru-
ment is made in all models of non-tunable the snare, tom, bass, side and
Scotch
European
drums
such as
bass, with the bulk of the typical
European drum eliminated. The “flat jacks” are particularly popular with parade bands. The basse of Haiti is a frame-type drum with a handle. The skin is wrapped over a vine ring which is held in place with a vine tension ring laced to the frame body. The instrument is held in one hand and played with the other. It is played by striking and rubbing. The modern popular drum set is generally composed of four or five drums:
the snared side drum, the bass, two tom tom and occasionally
a slit drum,
two
metal
cymbals,
and
last but not least, two
sticks
and
two brushes. This set has European, Asian and African characteristics, but was developed and popularized in the United States. Drums of all kinds have been introduced into all parts of the world,
yet many
specific
types
become
more
rare
each
year.
At the
same time, few new ones are being developed. Therefore, drums are
becoming
more
standardized
each
day.
Some
of the
instruments
re-
ported on in this text can only be found in museums. The folk instruments (drums) in the Americas are being upgraded from
folk
instrument
to ethnic,
popular,
instrument, respectively. For example, the Conga
drum
slaves
with
and,
at first, associated
national,
of Cuba
was
cult practices,
and
international
introduced
by the
and
later
used
as a
occasionally
hear
this drum
secular instrument, which grew in popularity among the Afro-Cubans. Through the Carnivals and small bands on the Island, the instrument became routine in all Cuban bands, and today, it is being introduced more and more into popular dance bands in the United States. Band leader “Dizzy” Gillespie was responsible for the introduction of the Conga
drum
into the jazz field. We
now
being used even with semi-classical and classical orchestras. This process is also taking place with other folk instruments in the Americas.
This
acculturation
*“seca”—a
produced
process
is also
taking
place
in the
technique of playing. As in the practice of hitting and emphasizing the second beat with a sharp sound (the seca)* on the Conga drum is now used in jazz. The drummer uses the left stick and produces the sound
by
the right hand—by
allowing
the
fingers
to fall from
the
small finger to the index finger on the head of the drum in the center with the head closed.
REFLECTIONS AND PROJECTIONS
281
sound by hitting the stick on the rim of the snare drum on every second
count, giving the flavor of a conga drum. The acculturation process acts in both
used
directions,
in many
by classical musicians
instances.
and
The
folk
instruments
it is not unusual
are
being
to find a true folk
musician using a highly sophisticated instrument, such as an electric guitar, in concert.
The instrument of the Americas could possibly be represented by an incomplete triangle with all the instruments being represented by the base line. One
side of the triangle would
symbolize
the classical
instruments of Europe and the other side would be symbolic of the folk instruments. (The question now is, will the picture be finished when the triangle is complete, or will the configuration continue to form an hourglass symbol—only the future will tell.) The great masters of classical European music were great improvisers. Today few classical musicians are concentrating on this particular technique, their emphasis being on perfection. Losing the art of improvision has a tendency to impede growth and progressive development. If we ask a classical musician to play, he will play a composition,
which in all probability will be one he is most familiar with or favors. If we ask a jazz musician to play, he may start with a familiar piece, but he can play for hours by improvising on this particular theme. It is conceivable, that this may account for the growth and development of the American music. The manner in which it is developing and taught, offers an opportunity for self-projection and expression. Classical musicians, who have become interested enough in jazz or other non-European music in the Americas, are learning its techniques and spanning this gap. Musicians in the Americas playing jazz or other
non-Euopean type music, striving to broaden their horizons, are studying the masters. From these two groups it appears that the future of American
music,
probably
lies in their
hands,
and,
if true,
American
music is going to develop all of its potentialities. One of the great uses of the drum has been as a special instrument. Every possible form of social organization has been fostered and developed by its use. The drum will continue to serve man
its use
activities.
will
be’ limited
more
and
more
to
leisure
or
socially, but
recreational
The drum appeals primarily to muscular sense and secondarily to all that is built upon this foundation. Time will not change this.
282
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
I have become conscious of several essential facts in studying the
drums. All art and human achievement of the peoples throughout the
world are independent. Music is not a universal language, but rhythmlike feeling is.
Rhythms of the Americas were born in protest, then freedom and
protest again, and now they are espoused by the youth of the world— regardless of which side of the Iron Curtain they may be from—these
youths from uncommitted countries are all under the spell of the wonderful rhythms coming from the Americas. The physical structure of the drum is being constantly improved. I feel that the varieties of the drums will lessen as time goes by. The
single-headed drum will ultimately predominate, while the two-headed
variety will gradually disappear because of the cost of production the efficiency of the single-headed drum.
The future of drums in the Americas groups. It will depend on their reactions, evaluation of their own heritage. Folklore is changing with the needs of the people who a part of American folklore. Rhythmically,
the
drum
will
become
and
is in the hands of young their environment, and the never stale—it is constantly produce it, and drums are more
standard,
and
some
type of musical notation will be developed for the hand drum. At present, there is no adequate hand-drum pattern for jazz— some day a boy from the United States will pick up a conga drum and
play a pattern that will revolutionize hand
drums
in the Americas.
It
will be a boy who is not limited to the jazz or clave pattern. Drums in the Americas appear in four types of music: primitive,
folk, popular, and classical. There has been no attempt to group these instruments as such, because much depends on geographical location. In certain
areas, one classification would
hold
true, whereas
in another
it might not. The American continent presents a complex musical culture different from that of any other area. It is populated by people from many lands and the music is generally admitted to reveal the most sociological knowledge of all the arts, and comes, as it does, directly from the people. If culture could be defined as the sum total of all man’s activities —then drumming and drummaking, two activities men, could be called basic social activities.
common
to
most
They are social activities, because the ultimate aim of a drummer
REFLECTIONS AND PROJECTIONS
283
is to drum for an audience, and not for his gratification; therefore, the study of drums should unveil some understanding of the cultures of
men.
There is one thing I know with certainty, and that is the drum has been a part of man’s culture for a very long time, and that it is here to stay.
Glossary Acculturation—The exchange that takes place when two cultures come in contact
and there is borrowing between them. Acorn—The playing end of a snare drumstick, also called head, point, and button.
Adufe—A square shaped drum from Brazil, sometimes called Pandeiro. Agan—Two
pieces of iron hit together to space and time the instruments in a folk
band in Curacao.
Agbasi or Aposi—A two-headed cult drum, found in Haiti. Agida—A bowed stick used to play the “seconde drum” of Haiti.
Agidavi—An Afro-Brazilian drumstick. Agogo—A two-headed Brazilian bell. Agua—An Afro-Martinique two-headed drum, made from a rum keg.
Agueré—A single-headed Afro-Cuban drum. Aidjé (Hippopotamus)—A bullroarer, or thunder-stick, of the Bororo Indians of
Brazil. Alabe Huntor—A Brazilian drummer.
Amata—An Amerindian kettledrum, made from South American pottery. Angono-Puita—An Afro-Brazilian cult drum with a single head and a barrel-shaped
body. Arara—The pegged single-headed footed drums used by the Arara cults in Cuba— a cult built around the Gods and rites of the Yoruba theology.
Assot—(Arm Board Drum). A board of suitable length, held in the left hand resting on the forearm and struck with a stick in the right hand. (Haiti).
Atabal—A small drum, used by the natives —the atabal, or tambor, is a slit drum indian tribe of Cuba. {t is a hollowed tone than the other. Atabales—A single-headed drum found in Atabaqué—A
generic term
used
of Central America and the West Indies used by the Siboneyes, a former Amerlog with two lips; one lip with a higher Nicaragua.
for Afro-Brazilian
single-headed
drums
used by
the cultist. Atsimevu—An African master drum, five-and-a-half feet long, with a single head.
Baguette—A drumstick, or a stick used to play any musical instrument in Haiti. Bakiri nampe de moropo—A fianigo friction drum used for funerals, by the
Abakuas of Cuba.
284
GLOSSARY OF UNUSUAL DRUMS AND TERMS
285
Bambula—A single headed drum found in Martinique, formerly made from bamboo.
Bandes—A
Banjo
Drum
group
of Haitians
(Viola)—A
preparing
banjo
drum in Cuba. Barrel Drum—A drum made
for Mardi-Gras
with strings removed
competition.
and the body
from a barrel.
Bass Drum—A two-headed cult drum found in Jamaica.
Basket Drum—A ceremonial basket used as a drum by the Navaho Battery—Two or more similar drums used in a group.
Beleme—The
used as a
Indians.
fringe around the symbolic nafigo drums.
Bell—A metal cow bell with the clapper removed, used as a percussion instrument. Bitut—A generic term for percussion instruments. (Hindu) Board Drum—A long board raised a few inches above the ground by blocks— players sit along side beating it with a short stick (Amerindian Maiden drum). Bombo—A very large European type drum used all over South America—a generic Spanish-American term for bass drum. Bones—Animal ribs used as a percussion instrument by striking them together— the instrument is found in both North and South America. Bongo (Dhole)—A two-headed drum of India found in Trinidad. Bongon (Signal Drum)—A skinless drum of Africa, with two lips, carved from a log.
Bombam—A
bamboo slit drum with two lips—found in Hawaii and used by watch-
men for signaling alarm. Bop Trommel—Shallow snare Jazz drum. Botija—A bottle jug, used in Cuba as a wind instrument. Bototé or Bututi or Botuté—A skinless drum of the Amerindians of Venezuela, made from a hollowed tree trunk. Also a stamping tube struck rhythmically in a hole in the ground.
Box Drum-Kolookock—Eskimo square drum used in night chants.
Box Heel Drum—An Amerindian drum made from a box. The drummers sit on the box and kick it with their heels. Brake Band—An automobile brake drum, used as a bell in the steel bands of Trinidad. Bribri—A Costa Rican drum, three feet in length, six inches in diameter at the
head. This drum is hewn from a solid piece of wood and fitted with a tight head of iguana skin. It is played with hands, and goblet shaped. Bricamo—An Afro-Cuban single-headed cult drum. Brushes—Metal brushes used as drumsticks in modern jazz bands.
Bullroarer—A piece of flat wood carved in an oval fashion, placed on a string and used as a musical instrument by whirling. Buni (Arara) Drum—An Arar4 cult instrument of Cuba.
Bututd
or pututi—The
primitive trumpet of Bolivian Indians;
also a primitive
flute of South American Indians; and also a war trumpet consisting of several superposed clay jars. Cabaca (calabash)—A gourd with network of beads, used as a rattle externally. It is struck and shaken. Cachimbo or Pipe—A long cylindrical Afro-Cuban drum played by two drummers, one with bare hands and one with sticks.
Cachoe—Signal horn of Curacao.
286
.
DRUMS
IN THE AMERICAS
Cocoon Rattles—Ankle rattles of cocoons made for dancing by Amerindians. Caixa (taro or tarol)--A two-headed Brazilian drum origin. Caixa also means box in Portuguese. Caixa de Guerra—A Portuguese or Brazilian drum.
Caixa de Rufo—A Brazilian box drum. Caja—A small (Aymara) Amerindian drum often headed hand drum found in Latin-America.
thought to be of European
called
“Pequefio.”
A
two-
Caja—A small Bolivian drum with two skins and played with sticks. A generic Spanish name for all kinds of two-headed drums. Cajero—Player of the skin portion of the Yuka drum of Cuba. Cajita China (Nbogoi)—A small hollow box used as a drum or a drum accessory known to be of Chinese origin. j Cajon, El (Box) Any box played with the hands in Cuba.
Caqueltrum—A
two-headed Araucanian Amerindian hollow leg drum.
Caramba—A two-headed drum used in San Salvador. It is similar to the European bass drum and is played with one drumstick padded on the end.
Carimbé—A drum of the Brazilian negroes. Caté—Afro-Cuban
drum
without
a skin, played
with
sticks. It is also a Haitian
board or box used asa time keeping instrument. Catalier (One who catas)—-The drummer who plays on the body of drum or box with two sticks carrying the basic rhythm. (Haiti) Catter—A Jamaican mortar drum made from a solid round piece of wood, played with sticks. Chang-Ko— (Long Drum) Korean Drum found in California. Chapi—A
hoe used in Curacao
as a percussion
instrument.
Chata—A drum found in the Oriental province of Cuba. It is a small barrel covered with calfskin. Chelcheles—A Peruvian tambourine. Chirique—Amerindian
drum, made of clay vessel divided into two chambers, found
in Central America. Chocalho—A Brazilian type maraca with rattles on the outside. Ciye—Haitian term: A sound provided by rubbing the fingers over the head of the drum. Coco de Efik Obutén, E]—A skinless friction drum made from a coconut shell. It is used by the fléfiigos of Cuba. Codex—A manuscript volume. The early writings of the Mayas and the Aztecs of Mexico, are referred to as Codices. Coeroema—A kettledrum of Surinam played with two sticks on its sheepsskin head. Combite or Coumbite drums— (Haitian) Country side drums used to set the pace
for the worker in the fields.
Comparsa—A large group of Afro-Cuban dancers performing a ritual dance in procession. The procession is headed by men carrying huge lantern-shaped silken boxes. (Farolas). These “farolas” are dedicated to African Gods. The
drums beat out a definite rhythm. The dancing and infectious music attracts many people.
Conga—A large Cuban drum—also an Afro-Cuban dance named after the drum and characterized by the extreme violence of accents on the strong beat in
every other bar of a basic two-measure phase.
Corda de Linka—The
lacing on a Brazilian pegged-headed drum.
GLOSSARY OF UNUSUAL
DRUMS AND TERMS
287
Coyapa—Amerindian drum. One-headed goblet-shaped body. Creole Drum—Afro-Surinam drum used by the townspeople. Cucumbi—A Brazilian drum—also an Afro-Brazilian song-pantomime the “congada.”
similar
to
Culo-en-Tierra (Buttock in the earth)—A small Afro drum made from a coconut shell and found in Cuba and Venezuela.
Cumonagoto or Cavarre—Venezuelan
Amerindian slit drum played with two sticks.
Cununi—A large Colombian jungle drum, made from a burned-out hollow tree trunk, covered with monkey hide. Curimbé—A large conga type drum played with the hands in northern part of
Brazil. It is used in the Saint Benedict festival near Quatipurt. Cusuco—A Furruco type friction drum found in Colombia. Cymbal—A large flat piece of metal used as a percussion instrument. De Torno—A Brazilian drum with pegs inserted in the body to hold the skin. It is played with sticks. Dia de Reyes:—It was customary before slavery was abolished for the slaves to
choose a local king and After the ceremony the the local officials’ home, companied by the head
queen who was to represent them during the year. royal family and attendants formed a procession to for a gift and recognition. This procession was acof conga drums and dancing in the street. The com-
parsas today are a preservation of this custom.
Diti de Alabés—The annual event of feeding the drums in Afro-Brazilian cult life. Drum
Set—Two
or more
drums
of similar construction used in a group.
Dundun—(Gongon) Adona (Kulunga in Nigeria)—A two-head pressure drum of Africa—a famous African talking drum. Durun—