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  2. Daechwita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daechwita

    Daechwita musicians playing yonggo (dragon drums) in a Seoul street parade. Daechwita (Korean: 대취타; lit. Great Blowing and Hitting) is a genre of Korean traditional music consisting of military music played by wind and percussion instruments, generally performed while marching or as a static performance.

  3. Marching percussion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marching_percussion

    Marching multiple tenor drums can weigh anywhere between 30 and 45 pounds, depending on the model, and number of drums. This means they are typically the heaviest drums in the drumline. Modern marching bands and drum corps use multi-tenors, which consist of several single-headed tom-toms played by a single drummer. The bottoms of the shells are ...

  4. Yaogu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaogu

    Percussion music has one or more pieces each of big drum, big flange and small sickle. Big drum sound quality is thick, strong in volume, penetrating, and the main accompaniment instrument. Small shackles belong to the auxiliary instruments, and enhance the musical effect, so that the rhythm is more bright and harmonious.

  5. Military band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_band

    Personnel from both the Presidential Guard Battalion Band and the Band of the Independence Dragoons form part of the newly formed Army Marching Band and Pipes and Drums, formed in 2016. The Brazilian Marching Band and Pipes and Drums is composed of 74 musicians who play instruments ranging from instruments for marching bands to traditional ...

  6. Military drums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_drums

    Among ancient war drums that can be mentioned, junjung was used by the Serer people in West Africa.The Rigveda describes the war drum as the fist of Indra. [1]In early medieval Europe, the Byzantine Empire made use of military drums to indicate marching and rowing cadence, [2] as well as a psychological weapon on the battlefield since the End of Antiquity. [3]

  7. Drum cadence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_cadence

    In music, a drum cadence or street beat is a work played exclusively by the percussion section of a modern marching band (see marching percussion).It is stylistically descended from early military marches, and related to military cadences, as both are a means of providing a beat while marching.

  8. March (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/March_(music)

    March music originates from the military, and marches are usually played by a marching band. [citation needed] The most important instruments are various drums (especially snare drum), horns, fife or woodwind instruments and brass instruments. Marches and marching bands have even today a strong connection to military, both to drill and parades.

  9. Basel drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel_drum

    Owing to the diagonal position of the drum, the traditional grip must be applied regardless of stick used. The Basel drum is configured into a marching snare drum, which is played by sticks and the common type used by Swiss fife and drum corps, or a marching single tenor drum played with the soft mallets or drum sticks.