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  2. 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 ...

  3. Yaogu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaogu

    Two drum rings are installed on one side of the drum body, and the ring is tied with a belt to hang the drum diagonally from the waist, and each hand holds a whip to strike. The large drum is 40 cm long and has a diameter of 20 cm; the small drum is 34 cm long and has a diameter of 15 cm. [ 6 ]

  4. List of ensemble formations in traditional Chinese music

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ensemble...

    Ensembles comprising loud wind instruments (including suona, guanzi, sheng, and sometimes also dizi, long straight brass trumpets, or string instruments) and the percussion instruments of the luogu ensemble are usually referred to as either guchui (literally "drumming [and] blowing") or chuida (literally "blowing [and] hitting") ensembles.

  5. 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]

  6. Junjung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junjung

    A junjung (or variously jung-jung, gungun, dyoung-dyoung etc.) [1] is the royal war drum of the Serer people in Senegal and the Gambia. [2] It was played on the way to the battlefield, on special state occasions as well as on Serer religious ceremonies. It is also the progenitor of the music of the same name found in the Caribbean. [3]

  7. 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 ...

  8. 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.

  9. Janggu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janggu

    The oldest written records about an hourglass-shaped drum may be traced to the reign of King Munjong (1047–1084) of Goryeo as a field instrument. The Korean record from 1451 titled Goryeo-sa , or History of Goryeo, in chapter 70, records twenty janggu as the gifts of instruments to be used in the banquet attended by the Song dynasty emperor ...