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Researcher's drum kit can sing, strum, toot and tinkle . . Beat that!

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Published Date: 03 October 2008
THE 20-minute drum solo is generally seen as the nadir of the most self-indulgent rock gig.
But a city academic has worked out a way of giving frustrated drummers their hour of glory and still keep the fans happy.

Napier University researcher Bryden Stillie, 34, has invented an electronic drum kit that can do the work of an entire band.

Now drum solos – usually associated with the worst excesses of heavy metal and prog rock – can strum, tinkle and even sing.

Bryden can programme his drum kit so that, as well as a variety of drum beats, it can produce a guitar chord, piano note or even a voice singing lyrics.

Creating such as kit has been a dream of the former Musselburgh Grammar student turned wedding band drummer ever since he got his first toy drum pad as a boy.

He said: "My first drum pad was a little Yamaha thing and I was fascinated with it, and I eventually graduated to drumming in function bands at weddings and the like.

"There's only so many times you can play Brown Eyed Girl in your life before you start to look for something more challenging. I was lucky enough to get a job as lecturer at the Ian Tomlin School of Music at Napier where I could indulge myself with the latest technology."

For his early prototypes, Bryden went back to the very beginning, buying one of the original Yamaha kiddies' drum pads he had as a boy and taking it to pieces to find out how it worked.

He has now graduated to top-of-the-range Roland electronics and has wired up musical patches to his pads to create the range of musical notes every time he thumps a snare or stomps the kick drum.

The £4500 kit can potentially control 140 different sounds at any one time, boasting six bass pedals, one hi-hat pedal, three trigger modules containing numerous trigger pads, and a mixer.

The pedals are used to create drum and bass sounds, whilst the trigger pads play individual notes.

He added: "I've been focussing on creating a new style of dance music, and I've already played a gig at the Voodoo Rooms alongside DJ Solar Eye. When the crowd saw what I was doing their jaws dropped!

"They just couldn't believe I was making all those sounds using just my feet and sticks.

"I've been using it to create my own compositions, but the technology could also be used to create an accurate representation of, say, a tune by the Chemical Brothers or The Prodigy.

"Once I've got my act together, I hope to take the kit to some of these bands to offer them an extra dimension to their live act.

"It's clear that dance audiences really respond to elements of the music being played live, as opposed to a DJ standing playing records all night.

"My machine requires a lot more versatility than a normal drum kit, and I'm still getting to grips with it myself, but hopefully once it's all sussed out it will revolutionise the way bands make music."


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 03 October 2008 2:18 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Evening News video archive
 
1

Joe Smith.,

Moscow 03/10/2008 12:25:25

That's nothing, I can make a TR-808 sound like a lot of bees.
2

alex paterson,

edinburgh 03/10/2008 12:26:46
With this he can go busking in town as a one man band.
3

Howard Moon,

03/10/2008 12:28:48
Bill Bruford was doing more with his Simmons kits 20 years ago.
4

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 03/10/2008 13:18:52
"THE 20-minute drum solo is generally seen as the nadir of the most self-indulgent rock gig."

Only by uneducated philastines with no musical awareness.

A drum kit is supposed to be a drum kit. End of story.

Can anyone really imagine the greats of the drumming world using this thing?

Real drummers like Buddy Rich, Gene Krupa, John Bonham, Mitch Mitchell and Keith Moon would have shunned this as some sort of ridiculous labour saving device.
5

Joe Smith.,

Moscow 03/10/2008 13:36:13

Wasn't there some eejit from Auchinairn who actually changed his name to Synthesizer?

I think he went by the name of Synthesizer Patel and played in a band called Giraffe.
6

Howard Moon,

03/10/2008 13:39:33
#7

Your shout for the finest drum solo you've ever seen?
I'm torn. Bill Bruford for finesse, perhaps Tommy Aldridge for pure power.

Neil Peart's 'Anatomy Of A Drum Solo' DVD is well worth checking out.

Also, drum solo fans must check out Jacob Armen on youtube. Unbelievable.
7

Joe Smith.,

Moscow 03/10/2008 13:56:05

Neil Peart's "Anatomy Of A Drum Solo" sounds fairly disgusting to me. It would be like Geddy Lee's dvd "Autopsy Of A High Pitched Yodel".

Hip folks like myself will of course recommend the work of Christian Vander, drummer with French prog rock band Magma.

8

Joe Smith.,

Moscow 03/10/2008 13:58:33

Steven Morris, Larry Mullen, etc. you may as well pack up and go home:

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=jN8ncmwAofk
9

hassan i sabbah,

edinburgh 03/10/2008 14:58:21
Keith le Blanc had a similar set up in t 80's
meh.
10

Howard Moon,

03/10/2008 16:07:31
#13

Open that mind of yours a bit further Mario. I don't always want to listen to stuff I know I could rustle up with a couple of mates in a couple of hours.

Check out some 80s Bill Bruford - his drums often providing the key melodies for the other guys to play under and around. Great stuff.
11

Joe Smith.,

Moscow 03/10/2008 16:57:51

#16 First person to mention Weather Report gets reported to the mods.
12

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 03/10/2008 17:08:50
#9:

I'm a bit more retro, so I go for the live version of Moby Dick (John Bonham) and Dance With the Devil (Cozy Powell). As well as solo breaks, check out Mitch Mitchell playing with the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Roger Taylor's playing with Queen, not forgetting of course, the dynamaite (literally sometimes) Keith Moon with The Who.

Even local Edinburgh bands have had their moments too. Thinking back to the 80s, I remember hearing some fantastic solos from Toto McNaughton when he was playing with Charlie McNair's band in the Preservation Hall.

 

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