How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use
Making your own primitive instruments from simple materials such as coffee cans and flower pots. Includes 121 figures.
1110865513
How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use
Making your own primitive instruments from simple materials such as coffee cans and flower pots. Includes 121 figures.
8.49 In Stock
How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use

How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use

by Bernard Mason
How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use

How to Make Drums, Tomtoms and Rattles: Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use

by Bernard Mason

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Making your own primitive instruments from simple materials such as coffee cans and flower pots. Includes 121 figures.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780486156064
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication date: 12/03/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 11 MB
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How to Make Drums, Tomtoms & Rattles

Primitive Percussion Instruments for Modern Use


By BERNARD S. MASON, Frederic H. Kock

Dover Publications, Inc.

Copyright © 1974 Dover Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-486-15606-4



CHAPTER 1

Drums the World Around

MINE is a drum very old. I have many drums—how many I know not without counting them, and each fascinates with the story of the old-time Indian who once claimed it as "his drum". But "my drum" is not to be confused with these—it may be shaped and constructed like the rest and to an observer may seem in no wise more significant, but to me no other could replace it. For the smoky old Indian who gave it to me forbade that any other man should beat it, and his lessons in the use of its potent powers lasted for many days.

My drum is full of memories. Memories not merely of the time-wrinkled Redman and the mingled odors of smoke-tanned buckskin and sweet-grass that pervaded his bark wakinoogan in the Pine Land where once it hung, but memories of all ancient and beautiful things of the woods and its people.

My drum is full of mystery, full of Voices. They are heard in its deep rhythmic reverberations, these Voices, and they speak always of olden things, yet in the same breath they seem to speak of youth and more youth to come. They tell of children—millions of them in all the tomorrows, radiant, joyous, dancing—yet they seem to say, these drum Voices, that these same children must know the simple life, the romantic life of the woods; that men will live the modern life better if as children they come to know the ancient way.

My drum tells of lone red paddlers in frail birch-bark canoes, darting down the white-watered streams of the trackless wilderness; of war-canoes of painted warriors gliding across the mirror-magic of turquoise lakes; of lithe, befeathered riders on spotted ponies racing across the Plains; of quiet, soft-spoken Acoma artists squatted over their silvercraft in the heart of the land of sun, silence and adobe. It speaks of grave and solemn chieftains seated in the circle of council, reverently blowing smoke to the Great One before speaking; of the dreamy, far-off faces of singers as they whip willowy beaters against drums; of the naked painted bodies of dancers, plumes waving in the breeze as their feelings become vibrant in reserved and supple rhythmic movement. My drum speaks of powerful bodies, sinewy muscles, strength, stamina, endurance—of bodies perfectly proportioned and completely developed, sun-tanned and winter-hardened. And of noble, lofty spirits within these bodies!

Yes, my drum is full of dreams—dreams for the future built on a childhood of living with the romantic things of the past.

It is an ancient drum, a sacred drum.


DRUMS THE WORLD AROUND

Drums are universal. There is not a country in the world, or a tribe of primitives on record anywhere that does not make drums of some type or other, and these drums are usually regarded as among the most precious elements of the group's culture. Primitive peoples in particular are inclined to surround their drums with deep significance for reasons that will become clear presently. Drums are everywhere, and the types of drums the world around are many and varied.

Drums mean rhythm—their chief use is to produce a rhythmic repetition of sound. Among some early primitive peoples, a rhythmic sound for dancing was produced without the use of drums; for example, the spectators at the dance would stamp their feet upon the ground, or again the "drummers" would slap the open hand upon some handy object such as a log. Man early discovered that hollow objects produce a louder sound and different type of sound when struck than do solid objects; for example, a hollow log was found to be more resonant than a living tree. The beating of clubs against hollow logs became a very common and far-flung method of producing loud sounds and rhythmic percussions.

While the use of hollow logs as "drums" was wide-spread, it probably reached its highest development among the natives of the islands of New Hebrides in the Pacific, and in other south-sea islands. The New Hebrides tree-drum stands upright, a hollowed-out log placed on end so that it stands up like a dead tree trunk. These logs are frequently huge in size, measuring two feet through at the base and extending into the air from ten to eighteen or more feet. They are hollowed out to a thin shell throughout their entire length except for the extreme top and bottom which remain solid. Down one side there is a long narrow slit perhaps four inches wide extending from near the bottom up to about two-thirds of the length. Immediately above and below the slit is usually found a round hole of about the same width as the slit, and other small holes are often seen near the top. The tree-drums usually taper toward the top with the upper extremity rounded off. Frequently these logs are carved with faces, animals, birds, and geometric designs, executed in a bizarre and distorted fashion which give the poles much the same grotesque appearance that characterizes the totem poles of the Indian tribes of the American Northwest. In New Hebrides a number of these huge resounding logs are often grouped together thus creating the so-called "drum groves" that at a distance look for all the world like groves of dead tree trunks. Each of these logs produces a slightly different sound from its neighbors, and moreover, different sounds can be produced from any one log by striking it in different places, thus permitting the "drummers" to create many and varied interesting sound effects.

Another type of tree-drum found in the South Seas lies flat on the ground. It is hollowed out to a thin shell except at the ends which remain solid, and has a narrow slit along the top side extending the entire length. Again, there are trough-shaped logdrums consisting of half a log hollowed out to a thin shell with boards inserted in the ends producing an arrangement suggesting a primitive water trough. Still another type, this to be seen in the Philippines, resembles the tree-drum of New Hebrides except that it is suspended from the branch of a tree and is swung back and forth against a crossbar made of a heavy pole, thus producing more of a huge bell than a drum-in fact, it is used as a village bell.

These various types of log-drums can be heard for many miles when properly struck by a skillful beater, and they thus constitute one of the chief means of communication, the "language" of the drums being well understood by the natives. Thus the name of telegraph drums has often been applied to some of them. In fact, the custom of communication by drum is common in many places other than in the South Sea Islands and is particularly well organized in Africa where an elaborate code of sound and rhythm is developed to carry messages from village to village. Explorers in these parts have often been amazed to find that their coming was known in villages long before their arrival, and they were mystified as to how this was accomplished until told that the loud-voiced drums had sent the news in all its details reverberating through the woods in code well understood by the dark-skinned natives whose alert ears detected much that the white men never heard.

Hollow logs were not the only objects used by primitives to produce a drum-like sound, baskets being used in this way by some of the Southwest Indian tribes in this country. The baskets were inverted upon the ground and slapped with the open hand. The type of basket usually employed was a shallow, circular one about the size and shape of a mixing bowl, made of roots and grasses woven very tightly and solidly. This same style of basket is used today by the Southwest Indians as a "sounding bowl" for moraches, the notched-stick scraping instruments described in Chapter IX. A circle of drummers seated around one of these inverted baskets and slapping it with the open hand can produce a surprisingly loud sound.

Similarly, some Southwest tribes cut a large gourd in half and placing the inverted halves on the ground, beat them with sticks. Sometimes the half gourd is inverted on water and struck.

Now obviously neither the hollow logs of the South Sea Islands nor the resounding baskets or gourds of the Indians can legitimately be called drums. True enough, they produce a drum-like sound and are used for the same purpose for which a drum is used, but if such as these are to be considered drums, then any instrument that resounds when struck is a drum—a bell, a cymbal, a triangle, or even a tin pan or a washbasin. To be a drum, there must be a thin material (usually rawhide) stretched tightly across a frame of some type, in such a way that it produces a resounding sound when struck. If we limit the word drum to instruments of this type, drums are still as old as history and widespread as the wanderings of man upon this old world. Practically all primitive tribes possessed them and they were used and revered by the ancient Egyptians, Romans, Greeks, Chinese, Japanese, and in India.

As one goes from place to place and culture to culture, the drums are found to vary widely in shape and in the materials from which they are fashioned. We find drumframes made of wood, pottery, baskets, metal, gourds, cocoanuts, nutshells, horn, etc. We find drumheads made of the skin of deer, moose, caribou, buffalo, antelope, tigers, lions, leopards, monkeys, elephants, zebras, sharks, cattle, goats, and even human beings, the last-named being found occasionally on ancient African drums. We find barrel-shaped drums, hoop-shaped drums, kettle drums (with rounded bottom), vase-shaped drums, square drums, hour-glass drums (large at each end and small in the middle), egg-shaped drums, etc. We find drums varying in size from tiny affairs made from nutshells covered with skin, up to huge log drums requiring ten men to move them. We find crude drums consisting of nothing more than a hide stretched over a round frame, and again we find drums of elaborate and artistic workmanship made of highly ornamented pottery or of carved wood inlaid with ivory. Drums of all kinds and descriptions—but drums everywhere!

No people in the world have made greater use of drums or attached more significance to them than did the tribes of the American Indians. And no drums are more interesting or carry a greater imaginative appeal.

Much of this book is devoted to instructions for making these picturesque Indian tomtoms so full of symbolic meanings and so useful as percussion instruments today.


THE MEDICINE OF DRUMS

Have. you ever seen an old Indian sitting alone, absorbed with his drum? If you have, you will appreciate something of the medicine of drums; at least you will agree that to this lone Indian there seems to be a mysterious potency, a spirit power within the drum that in the seeming, at least, transforms him temporarily into a different kind of individual. Medicine is an indispensable word in connection with Indian customs, characteristics, and moods—it means spirit power. And it is an appropriate word in connection with drums!

As the lone Redman drums away and perhaps sings softly to himself, a dreamy, far-off look comes into his eyes. He seems to become entranced, entirely oblivious to his surroundings, his reverie lifting him above all mundane things. I have frequently witnessed somewhat this same sort of expression, but to a less extent, on the faces of a circle of drummers seated around a big dance-drum and beating rhythm for the dancers.

If the Indian is sad he seems to find solace with his drum. If he is angry his drum brings relief. If he is afraid his drum gives him courage. Whatever the emotion, an hour by himself with his drum seems to compensate and to offer satisfying expression; it gives him a feeling of relief and contentment. An aged Chippewa woman once told me through the interpretation of her son: "I cannot part with my drum. I find so much comfort in it now that I am alone so much."

Drums are precious to practically all primitive peoples. In many tribes they constitute the only musical instrument, and almost universally they are regarded as the most precious of musical instruments. There are several reasons for this:

In the first place, drums mean rhythm, and one of the most striking characteristics of primitive men is their response to rhythm. To the rhythmic beating of the tomtoms their bodies react like sounding boards, vibrating with a different emotion each time the rhythm changes. In this respect it must not be assumed that primitive men are any different from the rest of mankind, except perhaps for the unrestrained and uninhibited completeness of their expression, for all men wherever they are found and however complete their development, respond to rhythm whenever it is perceived. In fact there seems to be a universal law of rhythm—we see it in the movement of waves, the undulating of the fields of grain, the swaying of branches of the trees, the rising and falling of tides, in return of night and day, the seasons of the year, the coming and going of years, the beating of the human heart-in fact wherever we look in the physical universe we see rhythmic motion. And man responds to rhythm whenever he senses it, and seeks it when it is not present—for it is invariably pleasant. He may merely feel himself in harmony with the rhythm and thus experience it without bodily movement; he may express it in reserved fashion by the tapping of fingers or the beating of time with the foot; or he may exert the whole body as in dancing. But react he will in some way, and experience an elemental joy thereby.

Little wonder that men of all periods have prized drums, the instruments of rhythm, the instruments of dancing. All primitive groups loved to dance and the more advanced tribes developed the dancing art to an impressive level of beauty and perfection. No finer example of the expression of life through dancing can be found than the dance-drama of the American Indian. His dancing is his most salient characteristic and the highest form of his art, surpassing his singing, his crafts, and his legendary lore, for all of which he is justly famed. The American public has long recognized the eminence of the Redman's baskets, blankets, pottery, beading, and symbolic design in general, but curiously enough, has not appreciated the fine quality of his chief artistic accomplishment—dancing. Withal, dancing is the Indian's chief source of recreation; of all his forms of play, dancing tops the list. And the drum, therefore, becomes the chief instrument of joy.

Moreover, dancing to the beating of drums fulfilled another community function of unsurpassed importance: It seemed to unite the people, to develop a feeling of group strength and solidarity. Preliminary to battle, for example, long dances were held during which the constant movement to rhythm developed an increased feeling of power, of strength and ecstasy, of capacity to meet any emergency. The drums whipped up morale and flamed esprit-de-corps. (Even today bands play vigorous military marches preliminary to sending soldiers into fighting.) Similarly, the village dances of the Indians in peace times developed an elation, a reckless joy, a high feeling of self-regard, and a sense of harmony with all others in the group. Sociability was increased, friendliness became more pronounced, and all came to feel that the village was a good place and its inhabitants good folk with whom to be. The medicine of dancing drums develops harmony, oneness of feeling and purpose.

It becomes easily understandable from these facts why the council ring or dancing "round-house" was regarded as the center of the northern Woodland Indian village. Even today, no matter how shabby and weather-beaten it may be from the long years of use, it is still pointed to with pride as the focal point of the community. It symbolizes joy, happy days, warmth, friendship, community spirit. And the central object in the round-house is the big dancing drum! Likewise, in the Indian villages of the northeastern woods in the old days there was usually to be seen a big drum supported by permanent poles in the center of the village, uncovered and open to the elements, with ground packed hard around it from many dancing moccasins. The drum symbolized the community. Whether enclosed in a dancing lodge or in the open circle of the village center, the drum pulsed the heart beat of the tribe.

On a recent visit to the very primitive Chippewa Indian village at Lac le Croix, Canada, I fell in with an Indian who could speak a few words of English and succeeded after repeated requests in inducing him to show us the interior of the old dance house. No sooner had we stepped inside the dilapidated round structure than a wrinkled old lady came running up, filling the air with all the wrath her native tongue could convey. Humbly apologizing, we withdrew and gave her gifts to show our sympathy. Why this objection to our being there? For the same reason that one is not welcome in a Pueblo Indian kiva. And this brings us to the most significant aspect of Indian dancing (and of the drum used for dancing)—it means religious expression. This was the temple of the Spirit, where the Great One is worshipped through beautiful rhythmic movement—and the old lady was the wife of its custodian!


(Continues...)

Excerpted from How to Make Drums, Tomtoms & Rattles by BERNARD S. MASON, Frederic H. Kock. Copyright © 1974 Dover Publications, Inc.. Excerpted by permission of Dover Publications, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

DOVER CRAFT BOOKS,
Title Page,
Copyright Page,
CHAPTER I - Drums the World Around,
CHAPTER II - The Craft of Drum Making,
CHAPTER III - Indian Hand-Drums,
CHAPTER IV - Large Dance-Drums,
CHAPTER V - Drums of the Log or Barrel Type,
CHAPTER VI - Water-Drums,
CHAPTER VII - Drumsticks,
CHAPTER VIII - Using the Primitive Drum,
CHAPTER IX - Dance Rattles and Other Sound-Makers,
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF INDIAN DANCING AND MUSIC,
Index,

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