by Bachikaze » Tue Apr 24, 2007 5:25 am
In the past 10 years, I've been around djembes and played them. I had a hot djembe made by a djembefola from Bamako out of dogura wood. I've heard all kinds of djembes with all kinds of wood and heads.
African djembes come from Ivory Coast, Senegal, Mali, and Burkina Faso, among other nations in the Sahel/Niger River Basin area. They are made from a wide variety of hardwood trees. They also come in a wide variety of shapes: wide and shallow, tall and narrow, long pipe, short pipe, big heads, small heads. They come with antelope, and male and female goat skins.
So, there is no one wood or shape or head material that is magical. A wood doesn't have to be from an African (or Brazilian for that matter) rainforest to sound good. I have heard hot djembes made of common hardwoods. The drum doesn't know if the wood is African or Canadian. Maple, ash, walnut, and some oaks have excellent sound quality, each with their own character, just as African woods each have their own character.
My point is: a cheap djembe from Africa sounds bad because it's cheaply made for mass consumption, with an uneven bearing edge and a skin from an under-nourished elderly goat. A well-made drum made of North American hardwood and a choice skin will sound every bit as good as the best from Africa.
I think drummers romanticize African drums. I think it's part of a false mythology that surrounds them. But, from what I've heard, the traditional drum was an undecorated, crummy-looking piece of log with a warped, asymetrical shape. It was burned at the end of the year and a new one made to replace it. These polished, intricately-carved models are for Westerners.
It's the drummer (and a good, tight head) that makes the difference.
Edited By Bachikaze on 1177392486