1 / 13

DRUM CIRCLES

DRUM CIRCLES. DRUM CIRCLES. Educational Applications Music Therapy General Music Recreational Drumming (uniting people, regardless of their backgrounds). DRUM CIRCLES. Why Percussion? Easy to produce a sound

candy
Télécharger la présentation

DRUM CIRCLES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DRUM CIRCLES

  2. DRUM CIRCLES • Educational Applications • Music Therapy • General Music • Recreational Drumming • (uniting people, regardless of their backgrounds)

  3. DRUM CIRCLES • Why Percussion? • Easy to produce a sound • Do not confuse “producing a sound” with producing a “good sound” or a “useful” sound

  4. DRUM CIRCLES • Facilitator • Coach • Teacher • Guide

  5. DRUM CIRCLES • Technique • Hand drums • Djembes • Congas • Bongos • Tubano • Cajon 1. Air under instrument for better projection 2. Bass tone; center of instrument; heel of hand 3. Open tone; fingers (no thumb); “dribble” off of head 4. Slap; brightest sound – by edge, w/curved fingers

  6. DRUM CIRCLES • Technique • Shakers • Maracas • Tube shakers • African shakers 1. Throw seeds so that pulse is forward

  7. DRUM CIRCLES • Technique • Claves 1. Form “C” with holding hand; cup shape 2. Strike “sweet spot” of claves together • Cowbells/Bells (agogo) 1. Face opening away from body2. Muffle with fingers; contrast with “open” tone

  8. DRUM CIRCLES • Facilitator Cues • Rumble/roll • “Ambient noise” category • Shaking hands is “the cue” • Dynamics • Lowering or raising hands for the cue

  9. DRUM CIRCLES • Facilitator Cues • Stop/Start • Counting in the start • Counting down the cut-off • Mark the pulse or accent • Helping the group establish a pulse • Accent a specific beat pattern

  10. DRUM CIRCLES • Facilitator Cues • Sculpting • Stopping one part of the group, in order to have them listen to another part of the group Tempo • Speed Up • Slow down

  11. DRUM CIRCLES • Facilitator Cues • Call and Response • Facilitator plays a rhythm; group imitates the rhythm • One part of a group plays a rhythm; another part of the group imitates the rhythm No Facilitation • Just start jammin’ and see where it goes…!

  12. DRUM CIRCLES • Form • Layering • Bring instruments in or out, one group at a time A – B - A • Apply various cue techniques, such as “ambient noise – rumble/roll” for section “A”, then a pulse or groove for section “B”, and back to the ambient noise for section “A” • Sound scapes • Focus on ambient • Soloists?

  13. DRUM CIRCLES • RESOURCES • REMO – “Kids Instruments” • Hal Leonard – “The Art and Heart of Drum Circles” featuring Christine Stevens (DVD) • Percussive Arts Society – Interactive Drumming

More Related