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  2. Slingerland Drum Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slingerland_Drum_Company

    Slingerland is a United States manufacturer of drums.The company was founded in 1912 and enjoyed several decades of prominence in the industry before the 1980s. After ceasing operation in the early 1980s, Slingerland was acquired by Gibson, who briefly revived it and owned it until November 2019, before selling Slingerland to DW Drums, who announced the intention of re-launching the brand.

  3. Leedy Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leedy_Manufacturing_Company

    Only drum kit components and timpani were sold under Slingerland, with the keyboard percussion division being dissolved. Nevertheless, Slingerland found, as Conn had before, that producing two separate lines of drums proved to be unviable. [32] Slingerland gradually phased out the Leedy brand with the last Leedy catalog being printed in 1965. [27]

  4. Artimus Pyle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artimus_Pyle

    It featured two rack toms (14 and 15 inches); two floor toms (16 and 18 inches); two bass drums (24 inches); and a Rogers Dynasonic snare drum (14 x 6.5 inches). [citation needed] Later, the Slingerland Drum Company built him a set of blonde-maple drums with red mahogany rims. This kit consisted of four tom-toms up, two toms on the floor, with ...

  5. John Robinson (drummer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Robinson_(drummer)

    Around 1979 through the efforts of Chicago drummer Danny Seraphine, Slingerland Drum Company picked up JR as an endorser. He said he preferred double-headed tom drums for their responsiveness, but played with single heads when a recording project required it. [9] JR endorsed Yamaha drums starting in 1981. [6]

  6. Danny Seraphine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Seraphine

    With Chicago, Seraphine used Rogers and Slingerland drums; and in the 1970s, he used an array of Slingerland drum kits in both recording and touring and in a variety of configurations. He switched to Yamaha Drums around 1984 before the departure of singer and bassist Peter Cetera. In 1988, he switched to Drum Workshop, which he has been with ...

  7. Tom drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_drum

    The pigskin heads were tacked to the wooden shells with metal tacks. Through close collaboration with Gene Krupa's concept of fully tunable toms, the Slingerland drum and banjo company were the first, in 1936, to begin offering fully tunable tom-toms (top and bottom heads) with metal or wooden rims, tension rods, and lugs. Most Chinese toms ...

  8. Scot Halpin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scot_Halpin

    Thomas Scot Halpin (February 3, 1954 – February 9, 2008) was an American artist and musician. In 1973, having initially been a member of the audience at a concert by the Who at the Cow Palace in Daly City, California, he ended up playing drums onstage after the band's drummer Keith Moon passed out mid-show.

  9. Drum Workshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_Workshop

    Drum Workshop was founded in 1972 as a teaching studio by Don Lombardi. Alongside student John Good, Lombardi began a small drum equipment sales operation to cover the studio's operation costs. After the closure of the Camco Drum Company in 1977, its manufacturing equipment was purchased by Drum Workshop.