Timpani (also known commonly as
kettledrums or
kettle drums) are
musical instruments in the
percussion family. A type of
drum, they consist of a skin called a
head stretched over a large bowl
traditionally made of
copper, and more
recently, constructed of more lightweight fiberglass. They are
played by striking the head with a specialized
drum stick or
timpani mallet. Unlike
most drums, they are capable of producing an
actual pitch when struck, and can be
tuned, often with the use of a pedal
mechanism to control each drum's range of notes. Timpani evolved
from
military drums to become a staple of
the
classical orchestra by the last third of the 18th century.
Today, they are used in many types of
musical ensembles including
concert,
marching
percussion, and even some
rock
band.
Timpani is an
Italian
plural, the singular of which is
timpano. However, in
informal
English speech a single
instrument is rarely called a timpano: several are more typically
referred to collectively as
kettledrums,
timpani,
or simply
timps. They are also often incorrectly termed
timpanis. A
musician who plays the
timpani is known as a
timpanist.
Alternative spellings and etymology
Alternative spellings with
y in place of either or both
is—
tympani,
tympany, or
timpany—are occasionally encountered in older English
texts. This substitution is taken from the
Greek word
tympanon (pl.
tympana), from which via
Latin tympanum (pl.
tympani) the Italian word descends, ultimately from
"typto" (τύπτω) meaning "beat" or "strike" . While the word
timpani has been widely adopted in the English language,
some English speakers choose to use the word
kettledrums.
The
German word for timpani is
Pauken; the
French and
Spanish is
timbales.
The tympanum is defined in the
Etymologiae of
Isidore of Seville:
The tympanum is [an instrument made of] skin or
hide stretched over a hollow wooden vessel which extends
out.
It is said by the symphonias to resemble a sieve, but has also been
likened to half a pearl.
It is struck with a wand [stick], beating time for
the symphonia.
The reference comparing the tympanum to half a pearl is borrowed
from
Pliny the Elder.
Construction
Basic timpani
The basic timpani drum consists of a drumhead stretched across the
opening of a bowl typically made of copper or, in less expensive
models,
fiberglass and sometimes
aluminum. On rare occasions, primarily as drums to
be presented to an ensemble,
silver bowls
have been produced. In the
Sachs-Hornbostel classification, the
timpani are thus considered
membranophones. The drumhead is affixed to a
hoop (also called a
fleshhoop), which
in turn is held onto the bowl by a
counterhoop, which is
then held by means of a number of tuning
screw called
tension rods
placed regularly around the circumference. The head's tension can
be adjusted by loosening or tightening the rods. Most timpani have
six to eight tension rods.
The shape of the bowl contributes to the tone quality of the drum.
For example,
hemispheric bowls produce
brighter tones while
parabolic bowls
produce darker tones. Another factor that affects the
timbre of the drum is the quality of the bowl's
surface. Copper bowls may have a smooth, machined surface or a
rough surface with many small dents hammered into it.
Timpani come in a variety of sizes from about 84
centimeters (33
inches) in
diameter down to
piccolo timpani of 30 centimeters (12
inches) or less. A 33-inch drum can produce the C below the
bass clef, and specialty piccolo timpani
can play up into the
treble clef. In
Darius Milhaud's 1923
ballet score
La création du monde, the
timpanist must play the F sharp at the bottom of the treble
clef.
Each individual drum typically has a range of a
perfect fifth to an
octave.
Machine timpani
Changing the pitch of a timpani by turning each tension rod
individually is a laborious process. In the late 19th century,
mechanical systems to change the tension of the entire head at once
were developed. Any timpani equipped with such a system may be
called
machine timpani, although this term commonly refers
to drums that use a single handle connected to a spider-type tuning
mechanism.
Pedal timpani
By far the most common type of timpani used today is the
pedal
timpani, which allows the tension of the head to be adjusted
using a pedal mechanism. Typically, the pedal is connected to the
tension screws via a spider-like system of metal rods.
There are three types of pedal mechanisms in common use today:
- The ratchet clutch system uses a ratchet and pawl to hold the pedal in
place. The timpanist must first disengage the clutch before using
the pedal to tune the drum. When the desired pitch is achieved, the
timpanist must then reengage the clutch.
- In the balanced action system, a spring or hydraulic cylinder is used to balance the
tension on the timpani head so that the pedal will stay in position
and the head will stay at pitch. The pedal on a balanced action
drum is sometimes called a floating pedal since there is
no clutch holding it in place.
- The friction clutch or post and clutch system
uses a clutch that moves along a post. Disengaging the clutch frees
it from the post, allowing the pedal to move without
restraint.
Any pedal
drums that are tuned using the spider system can be called
Dresden timpani, though the term is most often used for
drums whose design is similar to the original pedal timpani built
in Dresden
(see
below). Strictly speaking, a Dresden drum has a
pedal that is attached at the player's side. The timpanist can move
this pedal with ankle motion. A
Berlin-style pedal is
attached by means of a long arm to the opposite side of the drum,
and the timpanist must use his entire leg to adjust the
pitch.
The drums that most professional timpanists use are Dresden
timpani, commonly with a ratchet clutch or friction clutch pedal.
In addition to a pedal, high-end instruments will often feature a
hand-operated fine tuner, which allows the timpanist to make minute
pitch adjustments. Most school bands and orchestras below a
university level use less expensive, more
durable, commonly fiberglass model timpani. The mechanical parts of
these instruments are almost completely contained within the frame
and bowl of the drum. They may use any of the pedal mechanisms,
though the balanced action system is by far the most common,
followed by the friction clutch system. Many professionals also use
these drums for outdoor performances and like remote performances
due to their durability.
Chain timpani

On chain timpani, a chain links the
tension rods so a master handle can be used to turn them all at
once.
On
chain timpani, the tension rods are connected by a
roller chain much like the one found on
a
bicycle, though some manufacturers have
used other materials, including steel
cable.
In these systems, all the tension screws can then be tightened or
loosened by one handle. Though far less common than pedal timpani,
chain and cable drums still have practical uses. Occasionally, a
player is forced to place a drum behind other items so that he
cannot reach it with his foot. Professional players may also use
exceptionally large or small chain and cable drums for special low
or high notes.
Other tuning mechanisms
A rare tuning mechanism allows the pitch of the head to be changed
by rotating the drum itself. A similar system is used on
rototoms. Jenco, a company better known for
mallet percussion, made timpani tuned
in this fashion.
In the early 20th century, Hans Schnellar, then timpanist of the
Vienna Philhamonic, developed a
tuning mechanism in which the bowl is moved via a handle that
connects to the base, and the head remains stationary. These drums
are referred to as
Viennese timpani (
Wiener
Pauken) or
Schnellar timpani.
Adams Musical Instruments
developed a pedal-operated version of this tuning mechanism in the
early 21st century.
Timpani heads
Like most
drumheads, timpani heads can be
found made from two materials: animal
skin
(typically
calfskin or
goatskin) and
plastic
(typically
PET film).
Plastic heads are durable, weather resistant, and relatively
inexpensive. Thus, they are more commonly used than natural skin
heads. However, many professional players prefer skin heads because
they feel the heads produce a warmer, better quality
timbre. Timpani heads are sized based on the size of
the head, not the size of the timpani bowl. For example, a 23"
Timpani may require a 25" timpani head.
Sticks and mallets
Timpani are typically struck with a special type of
drumstick fittingly called a
timpani
stick or
timpani mallet. Timpani sticks are used in
pairs. They have two components: a shaft and a head. The shaft is
typically made from
wood—usually
hickory,
cherry,
birch,
persimmon, or
maple—or
bamboo, but may also be
made from
aluminum or
carbon fiber. The head of the stick can be
constructed from a number of different materials, though
felt wrapped around a wood core is the most common.
Other core materials include felt and
cork, and other wrap materials include
leather. Sticks can also have exposed wood
heads. These are used as a special effect and in authentic
performances of
Baroque music.
Although not usually stated in the score, timpanists will change
sticks—often many times within the same piece—to suit the nature of
the music. However, choice of stick during performance is entirely
subjective and depends on the timpanist's own preference, and
occasionally, the wishes of the conductor. Thus, most timpanists
own a great number of mallets available towards any given musical
performance. The weight of the stick, the size and latent surface
area of the head, the materials used for the shaft, core, and wrap,
and the method used to wrap the head all contribute to the timbre
the stick produces.
In the early 20th century and before, sticks were often made with
whalebone shafts, wood cores, and sponge wraps. Composers of that
era often specified sponge-headed sticks. Modern timpanists execute
such passages with standard felt
mallets.
Popular Grips
The two most common grips in playing the timpani are the
German and
French grips. In the German grip,
the palm of the hand should be parallel to the drum head and the
thumb should be on the side of the stick. In the French grip, the
palm of the hand should be close to perpendicular with drum head
and the thumb should be on top of the stick. In both of these
styles, the index finger and the thumb should be the primary
supports for the mallet, not the third, fourth, or fifth fingers.
The
American grip is a
hybrid of these two grips.
In the modern ensemble

A standard set of timpani consists of
four drums.
A set of timpani
A standard set of timpani (sometimes called a timpani
console) consists of four drums: roughly , , , and
in diameter. The range of this set is roughly the D below the bass
clef to the top-line bass clef A. A great majority of the
orchestral repertoire can be played using these four drums.
However,
Leonard Bernstein
requires the timpanist to execute both a top-line bass clef A flat
and the B flat above it on the same drum in the
Overture to Candide. Adding a
piccolo timpano to the standard set of four extends the
range upwards by a few semitones. This is the instrument which
Igor Stravinsky specifies for the
production of the B below middle C in
The Rite of Spring, and from which
Maurice Ravel expects the D above that
in
L'Enfant et les
Sortilèges.
Walter Piston
points out that "these small drums, even if available, certainly
lack the characteristic resonance and sonority of timpani".
Beyond this extended set of five instruments, any added drums are
nonstandard. Many professional orchestras and timpanists own
multiple sets of timpani consisting of both pedal and chain drums
allowing them to execute music that cannot be more accurately
performed using a standard set of four or five drums.
Many schools and ensembles unable to afford purchase of this
equipment regularly rely on a set of two or three timpani, which is
the more traditional number sometimes referred to as "the
Orchestral three". It consists of , , and drums. Its range extends
down only to the F below the bass clef.
The drums are set up in an arc around the performer.
Traditionally,
North American, British
and French
timpanists
set their drums up with the lowest drum on the left and the highest
on the right, while German
and Austrian
players set
them up the opposite way. Over time, that distinction has
blurred: many German and European players have adopted the North
American layout and vice versa.
Timpanists

Balanced action timpani are used in
outdoor performances because of their durability.
Throughout their education, timpanists are trained as
percussionists, and they learn to play all instruments of the
percussion family along with timpani. However, when appointed to a
principal timpani chair in a professional orchestra or concert
band, a timpanist is not normally required to play any other
instruments (unless specifically written into the music or based on
the needs of the section) . In his book
Anatomy of the
Orchestra,
Norman Del Mar writes
that the timpanist is "king of his own province", and that "a good
timpanist really does set the standard of the whole orchestra." A
qualified member of the percussion section sometimes doubles as
associate timpanist, performing in some repertoire—such as
overtures and
concertos—as
well as any second timpani parts. While most pieces of music call
for one timpanist playing one set of timpani, occasionally
composers seeking a thicker texture or a greater palette of pitches
ask for multiple players to perform on one or many sets of timpani.
Gustav Mahler writes for two
timpanists in six of his symphonies.
Gustav
Holst uses two timpanists to achieve the range of notes needed
to echo the main theme in "Jupiter" from
The Planets suite. Using two timpanists is
relatively common in late
Romantic
and
20th century works
for large orchestras, although the early Romantic composer
Hector Berlioz calls for eight pairs of
timpani played by ten timpanists in the
Grande Messe des morts.
Timpani concertos
A few
concertos have been written for
timpani. The 18th century
composer Johann Fischer wrote a
symphony for eight timpani and orchestra,
which requires the solo timpanist to play eight drums
simultaneously. Rough contemporaries
Georg Druschetzky and
Johann Melchior Molter also wrote
pieces for timpani and orchestra, and these have all been
recorded.
Throughout the 19th century and much of the 20th, there were no new
timpani concertos.
Then, in 1983, William Kraft, a well regarded American
percussionist and composer, composed his
Concerto for Timpani and Orchestra, which won second prize
in the Kennedy
Center
Friedheim
Awards. Gordon Jacob wrote a
concerto for timpani and wind band in 1984. In 1985, John Beck
composed a concerto for timpani and percussion ensemble.
In the
year 2000, American
composer
Philip Glass created his Concerto
Fantasy for Two Timpanists and Orchestra, which features its
soloists each playing seven timpani. Ney Rosauro composed
Concerto for Timpani
and Orchestra (as well as versions for the soloist accompanied
by wind ensemble and percussion ensemble); in this piece, the
timpanist requires five timpani.
Performance techniques
Striking the drum
For general playing, a timpanist will beat the head approximately 4
inches in from the edge. Beating at this spot produces the round,
resonant sound commonly associated with timpani. A timpani
roll is executed by rapidly
striking the drum, alternating between left and right sticks,
extending the duration of the sound as required and allowing
increases or decreases in volume.
Anton
Bruckner's 7th Symphony requires a continuous roll on a single
drum for over two-and-a-half minutes. In general, timpanists do not
use multiple bounce rolls like those played on the
snare drum, as the soft nature of Timpani sticks
causes the rebound of the stick to be reduced, causing multiple
bounce rolls to sound muffled.
The tone quality of the drum can be altered without switching
sticks or adjusting the tuning of the drum. For example, by playing
closer to the edge of the head, the sound becomes thinner. A more
staccato sound can be produced by changing the velocity of the
stroke. There are many more variations in technique a timpanist
uses during the course of playing to produce subtle timbral
differences.
Tuning
Prior to playing the instruments, the timpanist must clear the
heads by equalizing the tension at each tuning screw. This is done
so every spot on the head is tuned to exactly the same pitch. When
the head is clear, the timpano will produce a beautiful, in-tune
sound. If the head is not clear, the pitch of the drum will rise or
fall after the initial impact, and the drum will produce different
pitches at different
dynamic
levels.

Tuning gauges visually indicate the
position of the pedal so the performer can determine the drum's
pitch without listening to it.
In performance, tuning is typically accomplished with a method
called
interval tuning. Timpanists who do not have
absolute pitch obtain a reference
pitch from a
tuning fork,
pitch pipe, or a note played by another
instrument in the course of the performance, then use
musical intervals to arrive at the desired
note. For example, to tune the timpani to G and C, a timpanist may
sound an A with a tuning fork, then sing, hum, or think a minor
third above that A to tune the C, and then sing a perfect fourth
below the C to tune the G. Timpanists are required to have a
well-developed sense of
relative
pitch, and must develop techniques to tune undetectably and
accurately in the middle of a performance.
Some timpani are equipped with tuning gauges, which provide a
visual indication of the drum's pitch. They are physically
connected either to the counterhoop, in which case the gauge
indicates how far the counterhoop is pushed down, or the pedal, in
which case the gauge indicates the position of the pedal. These
gauges are accurate when used correctly. However, when the
instrument is disturbed in some fashion (transported, for example),
the overall pitch of the head can change, thus the markers on the
gauges may not remain reliable unless they have been adjusted
immediately preceding the performance. The pitch of the head can
also be changed by room temperature and humidity. This effect also
occurs due to changes in weather, especially if an outside
performance is to take place. Gauges are especially useful when
performing music that involves fast tuning changes that do not
allow the player to listen to the new pitch before playing it. Even
when gauges are available, good timpanists will check their
intonation by ear before playing.
Occasionally, players use the pedals to retune a drum while playing
it.
Portamento effects can be achieved by
changing the pitch of the drum while it can still be heard. This is
commonly called a
glissando,
though this use of the term is not strictly correct. The most
effective glissandos are those from low notes to high notes and
those performed during rolls. One of the first composers to call
for a timpani glissando was
Carl
Nielsen, who used two sets of timpani, both playing glissandos
at the same time, in his
Symphony No. 4 .
Pedaling refers to changing the pitch of the drum with the
pedal; it is an alternate term for
tuning. In general,
timpanists reserve this term for passages where the performer must
change the pitch of a drum in the midst of playing – for
example, playing two consecutive notes of different pitches on the
same drum. Early 20th century composers such as Nielsen,
Béla Bartók,
Samuel Barber, and
Richard Strauss took advantage of the
freedom pedal timpani afforded, often giving the timpani the bass
line.
Muffling
Muffling or
damping is an implicit part of
playing timpani. Often, timpanists will muffle notes so they only
sound for the length indicated by the composer. However, early
drums did not resonate nearly as long as modern timpani, so
composers often wrote a note when the timpanist was to hit the drum
without worrying about the sustain. Today, timpanists must use
their ear and the
score of the piece to
determine the actual length the note should sound.
The typical method of muffling is to place the pads of the fingers
against the head while holding onto the timpani stick with the
thumb and index finger. Timpanists are required to develop
techniques to stop all vibration of the drumhead without making any
sound from the contact of their fingers.
Muffling is often referred to as
muting, which can also
refer to playing the drums with mutes on them (
see below).
Extended techniques
It is typical for only one timpano to be struck at a time, but
occasionally composers will ask for two notes to be struck at once.
This is called a
double stop, a
term borrowed from the
string
instrument vocabulary.
Ludwig
van Beethoven uses this effect in the slow movement of his
Ninth Symphony. These
demands tend to be made by more modern composers who sometime
require more than two notes at once. In this case, a timpanist can
hold two sticks in one hand much like a
marimbist, or more than one timpanist can be
employed.
Hector Berlioz writes fully
voiced
chord for eight timpanists,
each playing a pair of drums, in
Grande Messe des morts.
When the timpani are struck directly in the center of the head, the
drums have a sound that is almost completely devoid of tone and
resonance.
George Gershwin uses this
effect in
An American in
Paris. A variation of this is to strike the head while two
fingers of one hand lightly press and release spots near the
center. When done correctly, the head will vibrate at a
harmonic, much like the similar effect on a string
instrument. Resonance can also cause drums not in use to vibrate
causing a more quiet sound to be produced. In orchestral playing,
timpanists must avoid this effect, called
sympathetic resonance, but
composers have exploited this effect in solo pieces, such as
Elliot Carter's
Eight Pieces for Four
Timpani. Resonance is reduced by damping or muting the
drums, and in some cases composers will specify that timpani be
played
con sordino (
with mute) or
coperti (
covered), both of which indicate that
mutes should be placed on the head. Timpani mutes are typically
small pieces of felt or leather. The degree the head is dampened
can be altered by placing the mute at different spots on the head.
Barber specifies that the timpani be played
con sordino in
a section of
Medea's Meditation and Dance of Vengeance.
Additionally, mutes are often placed on unused drums to prevent
sympathetic resonance.
Composers will sometimes specify that the timpani should be struck
with implements other than timpani sticks. It is common in timpani
etudes and solos for performers to play with their hands or
fingers.
Leonard Bernstein calls
for
maracas on timpani in both the "Jeremiah"
Symphony and Symphonic Dances from
West Side Story.
Edward Elgar attempts to use the timpani to
imitate the engine of an ocean liner in his
"Enigma" Variations by requesting the
timpanist play with
snare drum sticks.
However, snare drum sticks tend to produce too loud a sound, and
since this work's premiere, the passage in question has been
performed by striking the timpani with coins.
Robert W. Smith's
Songs of Sailor and Sea
calls for a "whale sound" on the largest timpano. This is achieved
by moistening the thumb and rubbing it from the edge to the center
of the drumhead. This effect can be used on other percussion
instruments, notably the
Tambourine where
it is called a "thumb roll". Amongst other techniques used
primarily in solo work, such as John Beck's
Sonata for
Timpani, is striking the copper bowls. Timpanists tend to be
reluctant to strike the bowls at loud dynamic levels or with hard
sticks, since copper can be dented easily.
On some occasions a composer may ask for a metal object, commonly
an upside-down
cymbal, to be placed upon the
drumhead and then struck or rolled while executing a glissando on
the drum.
Joseph Schwantner used
this technique in
From A Dark
Millennium.
History
Pre-orchestral history
It has been said that the first recorded use of early Tympanum, was
in "ancient times when it is known that they were used in religious
ceremonies by Hebrews."
The
Moon of
Pejeng
, also known as the Pejeng Moon, in
Bali
, the largest single-cast bronze kettle drum in the world, is more than two
thousand years old. The Moon of Pejeng is "the largest known
relic from Southeast Asia's
Bronze Age
period. According to Balinese legend, the Pejeng Moon was a wheel
of the chariot that pulled the real
moon
through the night sky.
One night, as the chariot was passing over
Pejeng
, the wheel detached and fell to earth, landing in a tree, where it glowed nearly as
brightly as the real moon. This light disturbed a thief who,
annoyed, climbed the tree and urinated on it; the thief paid for
his sacrilege with his life. The moon eventually cooled and has
been preserved as a sacred relic by the local villagers.The drum is
in the
Pura Penataran Asih
temple."
In 1188,
Cambro-Norman chronicler
Gerald of Wales wrote, "
Ireland
uses and delights in two instruments only, the harp namely, and the
tympanum."
Arabic
nakers, the direct ancestors of most
timpani, were brought to 13th century
Continental Europe by
Crusader and
Saracens.
These drums, which were small (with a
diameter of about 20–22 cm or 8–8½ in)
and mounted to the player's belt, were used primarily for
military ceremonies. This
form of timpani remained in use until the 16th century.
In 1457, a
Hungarian
legation sent by King Ladislaus V
carried larger timpani mounted on horseback to
the court of King Charles VII
in France
. This
variety of timpani had been used in the
Middle East since the 12th century. These drums
evolved together with
trumpets to be the
primary instruments of the
cavalry. This
practice continues to this day in sections of the
British Army, and timpani continued to be
paired with trumpets when they entered the
classical orchestra.
Over the next two centuries, a number of technical improvements
were made to timpani. Originally, the head was nailed directly to
the shell of the drum. In the 15th century, heads began to be
attached and tensioned by a counterhoop that was tied directly to
the shell. In the early 16th century, the bindings were replaced by
screws. This allowed timpani to become tunable
instruments of
definite pitch.
Timpani in the orchestra
Jean-Baptiste Lully is the first
known composer to have scored for timpani, which he included in the
orchestra for his 1675
opera Thésée.
Other seventeenth-century composers soon followed suit. At that
time, timpani are almost always tuned with the
tonic note of the piece on the high drum and
the
dominant on the low drum –
a
perfect fourth apart. Timpani are
often treated as
transposing
instruments in the music of this period: the notes were written
as C and G with the actual pitches indicated at the top of the
score (for example,
Timpani in D–A).
Later in the
Baroque era,
Johann Sebastian Bach wrote a secular
cantata titled "
Tönet, ihr
Pauken! Erschallet,
Trompeten!", which translates roughly to "Sound off, ye
timpani! Sound, trumpets!" Naturally, the timpani are placed at the
forefront: the piece starts with a timpani solo and the chorus and
timpani trade the melody back and forth. Bach reworked this
movement in part 1 of the
Christmas
Oratorio.

Although by the early 19th century,
timpani were most commonly found in orchestras, ceremonial trumpet
and timpani ensembles still existed.
Ludwig van Beethoven
revolutionized timpani music in the early 19th century. He not only
wrote for drums tuned to intervals other than a fourth or fifth,
but he gave a prominence to the instrument as an independent voice
beyond programmatic use (as in Bach's "Tönet, ihr Pauken!"). For
example, his
Violin
Concerto (1806) opens with four solo timpani strokes, and the
scherzo of his
Ninth Symphony (1824) sets the
timpani against the orchestra in a sort of
call and response.
The next major innovator was
Hector
Berlioz. He was the first composer to indicate the exact sticks
that should be used – "
felt-covered",
"wooden", etc. In several of his works, including
Symphonie fantastique (1830), he
demanded the use of several timpanists at once.
Until the late 19th century, timpani were hand-tuned; that is,
there was a sequence of screws with
T-shaped handles,
called
taps, which altered the tension in the head when
turned by players. Thus, tuning was a relatively slow operation,
and composers had to allow a reasonable amount of time for players
to change notes if they wanted to be sure of a true note. The first
'machine' timpani, with a single tuning handle, was developed in
1812.
The
first pedal timpani originated in Dresden
in the 1870s
and are called Dresden timpani for this reason.
However, since
vellum was used for the heads
of the drums, automated solutions were difficult to implement since
the tension would vary unpredictably across the drum. This could be
compensated for by hand-tuning, but not easily by a pedal drum.
Mechanisms continued to improve in the early 20th century.
Despite these problems, composers eagerly exploited the
opportunities the new mechanism had to offer. By 1915,
Carl Nielsen was demanding
glissandos on timpani in his Fourth
Symphony—impossible on the old hand-tuned drums. However, it took
Béla Bartók to more fully
realize the flexibility the new mechanism had to offer. Many of his
timpani parts require such a range of notes that it would be
unthinkable to attempt them without pedal drums.
Timpani outside the orchestra

This 1976 photograph shows marching
timpani
grounded with legs extended.
Later, timpani were adopted into other classical music ensembles
such as
concert bands. In the 1970s,
marching bands and
drum and bugle corps, which
evolved both from traditional marching bands and concert bands,
began to include marching timpani. Unlike concert timpani, marching
versions had fiberglass shells to make them light enough to carry.
Each player carried a single drum, which was tuned by a hand crank.
Often, during intricate passages, the timpani players would put
their drums on the ground by means of extendable legs, and
performed more like conventional timpani, yet with a single player
per drum. In the late 70's and early 1980's marching arts-based
organizations allowance for timpani and other percussion
instruments to be permanently grounded became mainstream. This was
the beginning of the end for marching timpani: Eventually, standard
concert timpani found their way onto the football field as part of
the
front ensemble, and marching
timpani fell out of common usage.
Timpani are still used by the Mounted Bands of the
Household Division of the
British Army.
As
rock and roll bands started seeking
to diversify their sound, timpani found their way into the studio.
Starting in the 1960s, drummers for high profile rock acts like
The Beatles,
Led
Zeppelin,
The Beach Boys, and
Queen incorporated timpani into their
music. This led to the use of timpani in
progressive rock.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
recorded a number of rock covers of classical pieces that utilize
timpani. More recently, rock band
Muse
has incorporated timpani into some of their classically-based
songs, most notably in Exogenesis: Symphony, Part I
(Overture).
Jazz musicians also experimented with timpani.
Sun Ra used it occasionally in his Arkestra
(played, for example, by percussionist Jim Herndon on the songs
"Reflection in Blue" and "El Viktor," both recorded in 1957). In
1964,
Elvin Jones incorporated timpani
into his drum kit on
John Coltrane's
four-part composition
A Love
Supreme.
Jonathan Haas is one of the few
timpanists who markets himself as a soloist. Haas, who began his
career as a solo timpanist in 1980, is notable for performing music
from many genres including jazz, rock, and classical. In fact, he
released an album with a rather unconventional jazz band called
Johnny H. and the Prisoners of Swing. Glass's
Concerto
Fantasy, commissioned by Haas, put two soloists in
front of the orchestra, an atypical placement for the
instruments.
Music samples
See also
References
Further reading
- Adler, Samuel. The Study of Orchestration. W. W.
Norton & Company, 3rd edition, 2002. ISBN 0-393-97572-X
- Del Mar, Norman. Anatomy of the Orchestra. University
of California Press, 1984. ISBN 0-520-05062-2
- Ferrell, Robert G. " Percussion in
Medieval and Renaissance Dance Music: Theory and Performance".
1997. Retrieved February 22, 2006.
- Montagu, Jeremy. Timpani & Percussion. Yale
University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-300-09337-3
- Peters, Mitchell. Fundamental Method for Timpani.
Alfred Publishing Co., 1993. ISBN 0-7390-2051-X
- Solomon, Samuel Z. How to Write for Percussion.
Published by the author, 2002. ISBN 0-9744721-0-7
- Thomas, Dwight. Timpani: Frequently Asked Questions.
Retrieved February 4, 2005.
- Zoutendijk, Marc. Letters to Flamurai. February 8, 2005.
- "Credits: Beatles for Sale". Allmusic. Retrieved February 18,
2005.
- "Credits: A Love Supreme". Allmusic. Retrieved February 18,
2005.
- "Credits: Tubular Bells". Allmusic. Retrieved February 18,
2005.
- "Kettledrum". 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica as
retrieved from [20781] on February 26, 2006.
- "William Kraft Biography". Composer John Beal.
Retrieved May 21, 2006.
- "Timpanist - Musician or Technician?". Cloyd E. Duff,
Principal Timpani - retired - Cleveland Orchestra.
- "Timpani"
External links