AY Honors/Drumming & Percussion/Answer Key
Template:Otheruses Template:Redirect A rudiment is one of a set of basic patterns used in rudimental drumming. These patterns form the basic building blocks or "vocabulary" of drumming, and can be combined in a great variety of ways to create drumming music.
There have been many attempts to formalize a standard list of snare drum rudiments. The National Association of Rudimental Drummers (NARD), an organization established to promote rudimental drumming, put forward a list of 13 "essential" rudiments, and later a second set of thirteen to form the original 26. Finally, the Percussive Arts Society (PAS) reorganized the first 26 and added another 14 to form the current 40 International Drum Rudiments.
Historical organization
Thirteen "essential" rudiments
- The Long Roll
- The Five Stroke Roll
- The Seven Stroke Roll
- The Flam
- The Flam Accent
- The Flam Paradiddle
- The Flamacue
- The Ruff
- The Single Drag
- The Double Drag
- The Double Paradiddle
- The Single Ratamacue
- The Triple Ratamacue
Second thirteen rudiments
- The Single Stroke Roll
- The Nine Stroke Roll
- The Ten Stroke Roll
- The Eleven Stroke Roll
- The Thirteen Stroke Roll
- The Fifteen Stroke Roll
- The Flam Tap
- The Single Paradiddle
- The Drag Paradiddle #1
- The Drag Paradiddle #2
- The Flam Paradiddle-diddle
- The Lesson 25
- The Double Ratamacue
Last fourteen rudiments
More recently, the Percussive Arts Society added 14 more rudiments to extended the list to the current 40 International Drum Rudiments. Note that the ordering was completely changed during this last re-organization, so these numbers won't match those above.
- The Single Stroke Four
- The Single Stroke Seven
- The Multiple Bounce Roll
- The Triple Stroke Roll
- The Six Stroke Roll
- The Seventeen Stroke Roll
- The Triple Paradiddle
- The Single Paradiddle-Diddle
- The Single Flammed Mill
- The Pataflafla
- The Swiss Army Triplet
- The Inverted Flam Tap
- The Flam Drag
- The Single Dragadiddle
Publishing year | Name | Author |
---|---|---|
1812 | A New, Useful, and Complete System of Drum Beating | Charles Ashworth |
1815 | The Art of Beating the Drum | Samuel Potter |
1861 | The Drummers' and Fifers' Guide | Bruce Emmett |
1869 | Strube's Drum and Fife Instructor | Gardiner A. Strube |
1886 | The Trumpet and Drum | John Philip Sousa |
1935 | Stick Control | George Lawrence Stone |
1942 | Modern Interpretation of Snare Drum Rudiments | Buddy Rich |
1945 | The All-American Drummer | Charley Wilcoxon |
1959 | 14 Modern Contest Solos For Snare Drum | John S. Pratt |
1979 | The Technique and Mechanics of Rudimental Snare Drumming | Ken Mazur |
1992 | The Drummer's Rudimental Reference Book | John Wooton |
2004 | The Beat of a Different Drummer | Dominick Cuccia |
Notable contributors
- Charley Wilcoxon: instructor, author, and teacher
- J. Burns Moore: instructor, author, and teacher
- George Lawrence Stone: instructor, author, and teacher
- Earl Sturtze: instructor, author, and teacher
- Les Parks: instructor and arranger, Sons of Liberty Fife and Drum Corps, Hawthorne Cabaleros, Garfield Cadets
- John S. Pratt: instructor, author, and teacher
- Fred Sanford: instructor and arranger, Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps
- Ralph Hardimon: instructor and arranger, Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps
- Tom Float: instructor and arranger, Blue Devils Drum and Bugle Corps
- Marty Hurley: instructor and arranger, Phantom Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps during the 1970's and early '80s
- Paul Rennick: instructor and arranger, Phantom Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps
- Scott Johnson: instructor and arranger, Blue Devils Drum and Bugle Corps
- James Campbell: instructor and arranger, The Cavaliers Drum and Bugle Corps
- Bret Kuhn: instructor and arranger, The Cavaliers Drum and Bugle Corps
- Dennis DeLucia: instructor and arranger, Bridgemen Drum and Bugle Corps
- Thom Hannum: instructor and arranger, Cadets Drum and Bugle Corps
- Charley Poole, Jr. instructor and arranger, 27th Lancers Drum and Bugle Corps
Hybrid rudiments
Over the years, many other rudimental patterns have been informally identified and given creative names, although most of these are based upon the original 40. They are commonly known as "hybrid rudiments" or "hybrids," and are especially common in drumlines and drum corps. A few notable examples are the herta, which is a drag played with alternating sticking, and the cheese, a diddle with a grace note.
References
External links
- DrumRudiments.com- All 40 Drum Rudiments with Video examples.
- The Percussive Arts Society International Drum Rudiments
- RudimentalDrumming.com
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