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| Tuning Intervals |
Drum set tuning intervalsAs drummers, we have a habit of tuning our drums to particular intervals. This means that the distance (the interval) between the tuned note of one drum and that of another is a recognisable one. This does not mean that we need to (or want to) tune to specific chromatic notes but rather that no matter where we choose to start we can always guarantee that the musical difference we choose between one drum and its neighbour is constant at any tension. There are as many tuning opinions as there are possible combinations of the musical scale, some are more 'musical' than others. The majority will centre around the major scale which is most usefully explained in terms of 'Solfa' or as Julie Andrews would say "do, re, mi, fa, so, la ti, do". The relationship between do and mi is a third (count 'em) and do-so is a fifth. Playing those two notes together gives harmony as does playing all three together. This is known as a major triad. If you tune your drums to these intervals then rolls, flams on two toms etc and the general tonality of your kit will be harmonious (assuming that this is what you want). Drumdojo has a page on tuning intervals setting out [mostly] common reference points to enable you to memorise the intervals. Read this slowly & Sing the songs! To apply this, using the do-mi-so triad as an example, pick a tuned tom, any tom that has a good sound for that drum, I generally start low but that's habit rather than recommendation. If drum X's pitch is taken as the 'tonic' or solfa 'do' then you should tune the next highest to 'mi'. To do this, sing the first two notes of "have yourself a merry little Christmas..." starting on the note (do) of the tuned tom for "Have" and you find the 're' note at "your" of' yourself'. The next highest tom to is 'so' which has the same interval of a third, so do the same procedure it again but starting on the first-tuned tom for "Have". When you have done this, hit any two or the three drums together and you make a chord! If you have five drums that you can usefully tune, then perhaps pick a pentatonic scale. The beauty of a pentatonic scale is that any combination of the 5 tones will be harmonious (like playing the black notes on a piano). The simplest to remember for me is (chromatically) D E G A B, easy to remember because each is just to the right of a black note on a piano. In Solfa it is DO - RE - mi - FA - SO - LA - ti - do -. Do-Re is a second:, so you sing "You Must remember this" You = Do (the note from your tom) & Must = Re Re-Fa is a third; "Have Yourself..." Have = Re & Your = Fa Fa-So and So-La are seconds again; You = Fa & Must = so; and then... You = So and Must = La Useful Interval References
Intervals between notes
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