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  2. Grip (percussion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grip_(percussion)

    Elvin Jones playing drum kit using traditional grip, 1976. Traditional grip (also known as orthodox grip or conventional grip, fundamental grip and, to a lesser extent, the jazz grip) is a technique used to hold drum sticks while playing percussion instruments. Unlike matched grip, each hand holds the stick differently.

  3. Drum stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_stick

    There are two main ways of holding drumsticks: Traditional grip, in which right and left hands use different grips. Matched grip, in which the two hand grips are mirror-image. Traditional grip was developed to conveniently play a snare drum while riding a horse, and was documented by Sanford A. Moeller in The Art of Snare Drumming (1925). It ...

  4. Marching percussion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marching_percussion

    A line of 5 (with individual drum sizes ranging from 18 to 32-inches) is the most common in a drum corps. Some traditional groups, such as some show-style marching bands from historically black colleges and universities continue to use a non-tonal bass drums, where each drum is roughly the same size and each drummer plays the same part.

  5. Fulcrum (drumming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulcrum_(drumming)

    Fulcrum is a drumming term. Traditionally, the fulcrum refers to the part of a percussionist's grip that is the main lever for the drum stick to rotate. [1] This is usually created by the thumb and index finger, the thumb and middle finger, or a combination of the thumb, index, and middle fingers.

  6. Open-handed drumming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-handed_drumming

    Another advantage is a player's access to the floor tom while playing the hi-hats, a feat infamously difficult to pull off in the traditional technique without access to an auxiliary floor tom. In 2008 and 2011 Dom Famularo and Claus Hessler wrote Open Handed Playing vol.1 and 2 , which are lessons focused entirely on open-handed playing.

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