The present invention is directed to a reduced volume drum, and more particularly, to a reduced volume drumhead. In particular, the present invention provides the sound and response of a traditional acoustic drum at about fifty percent (50%) to about seventy-five percent (75%) less of audio volume level produced when played.
Musicians that have many years of experience in practicing and teaching drums often suffer from hearing impairment caused by the volume or decibel level produced when a traditional drumset is played. A traditional drumset, marching and orchestral drums also cause difficulties for musicians by raising the volume during solo and group practice and performance. As used herein, the terms “drum” and “drumset” include, but are not limited to, a range of contemporary drums and drumsets (e.g., rock or jazz), marching drums (e.g., field or corps), as well as traditional orchestral instruments (e.g., snare, bass, toms).
Musicians and music industry (“MI”) professionals have noted that the audio volume level, expressed in decibels (“dB”), produced by an acoustic drumset undermined and thus prevented the conventional use of the drumset in live performances unless the drumset was separated or shielded from other musicians or fully enclosed in a separate structure or sound isolation booth. A typical conversation measures about sixty (60) dB, a lawn mower about ninety (90) dB, and a loud rock concert about one hundred twenty (120) dB. In general, sounds above eighty-five (85) dB are harmful to the human ear, depending on how long and how often a person is exposed to them without wearing hearing protection such as earplugs or earmuffs. During a practice or performance, various drumset components typically produce audio volume levels in the range of about ninety (90) dB to about one hundred forty (140) dB.
Conventional snare drums typically include a top drumhead, a bottom drumhead, a shell, and a snare assembly disposed on the bottom drumhead. The snare assembly includes multiple wire, nylon and other material strands that contact the bottom drumhead and vibrate when the top drumhead is struck or played. A conventional snare drum 1000 is shown in
The inventor has determined that modification of a drum itself does not provide a substantial reduction of the volume level and instead unsatisfactorily alters the sound and feel of the drum. Such methods or techniques employed by the inventor included: muting the striking surface or drumhead with a drum mute; altering the materials from which a drum rim or hoop is fabricated; altering the materials from which a drum shell is fabricated; and altering the edge shape of a drum bearing. Moreover, known materials from which typical drum heads are fabricated have inherent problems due to the one or two ply traditional nylon mesh or screen substrate material having a limited tonal range and hard tactile responses.
Some known reduced volume drumheads are made using nylon mesh as a striking surface. Examples include the REMO® SILENTSTROKE® mesh drumhead used primarily on a traditional drumset to reduce its volume; and the Roland “Power Ply” mesh drumhead used primarily with digital drum systems, external drum triggers, rubber trigger cymbals and digital drum audio. (REMO® and SILENTSTROKE® are registered trademarks of REMO, Inc., a California corporation; Roland Corporation is a Japanese corporation). When used to reduce the sound of a traditional acoustic snare drum, these known prior art examples have inherent problems in reproducing the actual sound characteristics of the traditional acoustic snare drum.
The inventor has concluded that, preferably, the volume level of a drumset will be reduced to allow the drum set to remain a viable instrument moving forward and that the reduction in the volume level must be achieved without altering the end-user experience (i.e., the drummer, other MI professionals and the listening audience). What is needed are drums and percussion instruments that look, sound and play like traditional acoustic drums and percussion instruments but that produce much lower audio volume levels.
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to a reduced volume snare drum comprising: a top drumhead having a top face and a bottom face; and a snare assembly releasably secured to the bottom face. In one embodiment, the reduced volume snare drum further comprises: a drum shell; a top drumhead hoop for mounting the top drumhead to the drum shell; and at least one snare mount for mounting the snare assembly to one of the drum shell or the top drumhead hoop and in contact with the bottom face. In one embodiment, the top drumhead comprises: a three-dimensional knitted fabric having two separate knitted substrates which are joined together by a filament or fiber.
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to a reduced volume drum comprising: a top drumhead fabricated from a three-dimensional knitted fabric having two separate knitted substrates which are joined together by a filament or fiber.
The present invention is directed to a reduced volume drumset that maintains core elements of a conventional drumset without compromising the feel, sound or appearance of the instrument. Embodiments of the present invention include reduced volume drums and reduced volume drumheads that produce a drum sound that blends with the other drumset components without compromising the appearance, acoustic tone or the physical (i.e., tactile) stick response produced from the drum.
One embodiment of an exemplary reduced volume drum in accordance with the present invention is a reduced volume snare drum shown in
In one embodiment, a reduced volume snare drumhead, referred to herein as RVSDH 100A, includes the top drumhead 102, the bottom drumhead 104, the snare assembly 120 secured thereto as described with reference to the RSVD 100 wherein the snare 124 contact the bottom face 102B of the top drumhead 102. Thus, the RVSDH 100A may be retrofit or assembled onto a conventional snare drum, for example the snare drum 1000 shown in
Unlike the conventional snare drum 1000 shown in
In one embodiment and as shown in
Several procedures can be applied to the striking surface 102A to fine-tune the tone, attack and tactile response of the RVSD 100 for each diameter and type of drum (in addition to a snare drum) to which the reduced-volume head is mounted. These include, for example: (i) spraying a coating on the full surface of one or both of the top face 102A and bottom face 102B of the top drumhead 102; (ii) spraying a coating in-line (e.g., at the centerline position 101) and the same width of snare assembly 120 on the bottom face 102B of the top drumhead 102; and (iii) spraying thin rings on one or both of the top face 102A and bottom face 102B of the top drumhead 102 at pre-determined intervals based on the diameter of the top drumhead 102. Variations of the RVSD 100 can mirror traditional (acoustic) snare drum diameters and depths, some types known as “piccolo” and “tenor” snare drums, thus reproducing such sounds.
One embodiment of a reduced volume drum in accordance with the present invention is shown in
As a result of extensive testing and experimentation, the inventor discovered that the material from which a drumhead is fabricated provides an opportune feature of a drum that can be improved upon to achieve a reduced volume drum in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. As a result of further extensive testing and experimentation, the inventor has discovered that fabricating a drumhead from a fabric mesh meeting a range of preferred performance criteria and exhibiting one or more preferred property characteristics provides a reduced volume drumhead in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. Such performance criteria include, for example, reliable haptic feedback under tension while dampening vibration and sound. Such property characteristics include, for example, improved noise permeability, improved rebound elasticity or spring-back effect, improved pressure distribution, even reinforcement, high shock absorption, low weight, suitable malleability, suitable coating and laminating properties, and long service life.
The inventor has discovered that such mesh fabrics are known in the automobile and bedding manufacturing arts as a “spacer fabric” used primarily in climate-controlled mattresses and car seats because such fabrics facilitate air flow. Other uses of spacer fabric include running shoes and hiking backpacks. The spacer fabric is a three-dimensional knitted fabric having two separate knitted substrates which are joined together by a filament or fiber. The inventor has further discovered that one such exemplary fabric is commercially available as 3Mesh® fabric from Mueller Textil GmbH of Germany.
In one embodiment, the drumhead 250 is fabricated from spacer fabric 255 (i.e., a three-dimensional knitted fabric having two separate knitted substrates which are joined together by a filament or fiber); and in one embodiment, the drumhead 350 is fabricated from spacer fabric 355. In one embodiment as shown in
In one embodiment, the spacer fabric 155, 255 and/or 355 ranges in thickness up to about twenty-five (25) mm. In one embodiment, the spacer fabric 155, 255 and/or 355 ranges in thickness from about two (2) mm to about ten (10) mm. In one embodiment, the spacer fabric 155, 255 and/or 355 ranges in thickness from about two (2) mm to about five (5) mm.
In one embodiment and as shown in
The reduced volume drum and/or the reduced volume drumhead can be employed in various diameters and depths in a range of musical or percussion applications including but not limited to a drumset, marching and orchestral drum settings. In one embodiment, the reduced volume drum and/or the reduced volume drumhead is provided as an after-market product and offered in retail packaging in a variety of sizes (diameters), such as for example, ten (10) to eighteen (18) inch sizes. In one embodiment, the reduced volume drum and/or the reduced volume drumhead is provided as an original equipment manufacturer (“OEM”) or private label (“P/L”) product and offered, for example, as a striking/tone generation surface (drumhead) within an acoustic, electronic digital (“A-E-D”) drumset or “Hybrid” drumset. In one embodiment, the reduced volume drum and/or the reduced volume drumhead is provided for end-user musical applications, such as for example: (i) education and practice; home, public, private and college; (ii) recording and production at home, at a professional studio, or live; and (iii) performances including at a house of worship, live stage, or musical theatre (orchestra pit).
The present invention provides a reduced volume drum and a reduced volume drumhead without compromising the appearance, acoustic tone or haptic response produced from the drum. The present invention also provides a reduced volume drum and a reduced volume drumhead with improved drum tone and wider tonal frequency (range and depth). The present invention further provides a stick, mallet, rod or brush contact which is similar to a traditional drumhead. The present invention also replicates the look of a traditional drumhead and easily mounts on a drum in the same manner as a traditional drumhead.
Although this invention has been shown and described with respect to the detailed embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed in the above detailed description, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
The present application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/397,388 filed Sep. 21, 2016, and further claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/490,205 filed Apr. 26, 2017, the disclosures of both of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62397388 | Sep 2016 | US | |
62490205 | Apr 2017 | US |