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Drum kit

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A drum kit (or drum set or trap set - the latter an old-fashioned term) is a collection of drums, cymbals and other percussion instruments arranged for convenient playing by a sole percussionist (drummer), usually for jazz, rock, or other types of contemporary music. Such a kit has been an integral part of most popular music since the jazz of the 1920s, until the arrival of synthesised and sequenced percussion (such as drum machines) replaced drums in some electronic music. Companies such as Simmons (in the 1980s), Yamaha, Roland and many others have created electronic drum sets which use pads or triggers (mounted on acoustic drums) to play sampled or synthesized sounds (see DTX). The trend in electronics since the late 1980s has been away from overtly electronic sounds and more towards an intensified acoustic sound.

The oldest active drum company is Sonor Drums from Germany. Developed primarily in the United States, early drum kits were known as traps kits (short for contraption) and usually consisted of a bass drum, a snare drum on a stand, a small cymbal and other small percussion instruments mounted on the bass drum or a small table, all played with drum sticks or brushes except for the bass drum. The bass drum was sometimes kicked to produce a sound, and is occasionally still called a kick drum, though bass drums are now nearly always pedal-operated, and sometimes even played with two pedals to allow for greater speed. Trap set survives in the term trap case still given to a case used by a kit drummer (or any percussionist) to transport stands, pedals, sticks, and miscellaneous percussion instruments other than drums and cymbals.

A drum kit from the player's perspective, showing a crash cymbal, hi-hat, high tom-tom, ride cymbal, snare drum, floor tom-tom and bass drum.

The exact collection of components to a drum kit varies greatly according to musical style, personal preference, financial and transportation resources of the drummer. At a minimum a kit usually contains a bass drum sitting on the floor and played with a pedal, a snare drum on a stand, two or three tom-toms, some of which are mounted on top of the bass drum and the largest typically free-standing alongside it (on the floor - hence the word "floor tom"), a hi-hat (two small cymbals played by means of pedal) played with the left foot, a ride cymbal and a crash cymbal arranged on stands on the right and left. The drummer sits with the snare drum between his legs, his/her left foot on the hi-hat pedal and his/her right on the bass pedal (it should be noted, however, that if the drummer is left-handed, and plays as a left-handed, the drumset will be horizontally inverted). He/she will usually play with sticks, but may also use brushes, mallets, hands, or any of a variety of "multi-rod" sticks.

Some drummers may add a second bass drum (played by the left foot), additional toms, more cymbals, tambourines, woodblocks, cowbells, electronic pads that trigger sampled sounds, or any of a whole galaxy of accessory instruments. Some drummers, such as Neil Peart, Terry Bozzio, and Mike Portnoy have gone to extreme lengths and built massive kits including features such as ranges of tuned tom-toms, allowing them to contribute melodically as well as rhythmically. These huge kits reached their zenith in the arena rock of the 1980s, and the trend since then has been towards a smaller instrument.

Audio samples
Component Content Audio (Ogg Vorbis)
Snare Unmuffled snare drum 53 KB
Muffled snare drum 37 KB
Rim click on a snare 46 KB
Bass drum Muffled bass drum 54 KB
Toms 8-inch rack tom 59 KB
12-inch rack tom 41 KB
Floor tom 39 KB
Hi-hat Closed hi-hat 41 KB
Open hi-hat 58 KB
Hi-hat being opened and closed by its foot pedal 48 KB
Crash Crash cymbal 52 KB
Ride Hit normally 61 KB
Hit on the bell of the cymbal 71 KB
Hit on the rim 67 KB
Beat A typical rock beat on hi-hat 95 KB
Typical rock beat on ride cymbal 89 KB
See the Drums category at Wikipedia Commons for more


See also