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Encyclopedia > Steel pan

Steelpan (also known as Pan or Steel drum, and sometimes collectively with the musicians as a Steelband) is a musical instrument and a form of music originating in Trinidad West Indies.

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A treble pan from Tobago

The pan is a chromatically pitched percussion intrument made from a 55 gallon drum of the type that stores oil, and is one of the most recently invented musical instruments. Drum refers to the steel drum containers from which the pans are made; the instument is correctly called a pan (and pans are not--technically--regarded as drums).

Contents

Origins

In 1939, Winston "Spree" Simon took an old oil drum, and while beating it with a corn cob discovered the first sounds of steelpan music. The first record on a pan band in the press was in a report of the Carnival in the Trinidad Guardian dated Tuesday, February 6, 1940.


Early bands were essentially rhythm bands. However during the 1940s discarded 55-gallon steel oil drums became the preferred type of pan and, perhaps noticing that constant drumming changed the tone of the pans, techniques were developed to tune them to enable melodies to be played. Ellie Mannette is credited as the first to use the oil drum in 1946. By the late 1940s the music had spread to neighbouring islands.


In 1951 the Trinidad All Steel Percussion Orchestra (TASPO) took the music to the Festival of Britain in the United Kingdom - pan music still features in the annual Notting Hill Carnival.


In 1957, Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery formed what became the US Navy Steel Band, which toured the world as ambassadors for the U.S. Navy until 1999.


During the 1960s the tuner Anthony Williams developed a pan - the fourths and fifths - that has since become the standard design used today.


Two Americans, George Whitmyre and Harvey J. Price, have secured a US patent for "the process of formation of a Caribbean steelpan using a hydroforming press". This patent is being challenged by the Trinidad and Tobago Legal Affairs Ministry, since many Trinbagonian drum makers have used similar methods for years.

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Steel drum musician in England

Construction

Pans are constructed by pounding the top of the oil drum into a bowl-like shape, known as "sinking" the drum. The drum is "cooked" over a fire and allowed to cool. Then the notes are laid out, shaped, grooved, and tuned with a variety of hammers and other tools. The note's size corresponds to the pitch - the larger the oval, the lower the tone.


The size of the instrument varies from one pan to another. It may have almost all of the "skirt" of the steel drum cut off and around 30 soprano-range notes; or may be use full-length drum with 3 bass notes, in which case one person may play 6 such pans. The pans may either be painted or chromed.


The Pan Family

There are 11 instruments in the pan family:

  • Spiderweb Lead/Tenor
  • Invader Lead/Tenor
  • Double Tenors
  • Double Seconds
  • Quadduet (an extension of Double Tenor or Double Seconds with two Cellos)
  • Quadrophonic
  • Guitars/Gittas (Two, Three and Four Pan Variations)
  • Cellos
  • Tenor Bass
  • Six Bass
  • Nine Bass

Famous Pan Players, Composers and Arrangers

  • Ellie Mannette
  • Ray Holman
  • Ken "Professor" Philmore
  • Jit Samaroo
  • Len "Boogsie" Sharpe
  • Jim "Boss" Wharton
  • Andy Narell
  • Liam Teague
  • Robert Greenidge

See Also

External links

  • PanTrinbago | The World Governing Body for Steelpan (http://www.steelpan.net/)
  • Review of Forty Years in the Steelbands (http://www.seetobago.com/trinidad/pan/goddard/ggbkfram.htm) by George Goddard
  • Mannette Steel Drums (http://www.mannettesteeldrums.com)
  • Americans patent pan plan (http://www.trinicenter.com/Terryj/2002/Apr/162002.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Steel pan info - Brief history of Steel pan (600 words)
There are many type of steel pans but the lead steel-pan is one of the most widely used of all steel pans, it carries the range of the soprano.
This steel pan traditionally carries the melody in a steelband orchestra.
The Steel pan (Pan) also known as Steel drum, is a percussion instrument made from a 55 gallon drum.
Steel Pan Tuning - A Handbook for Steel Pan Making and Tuning (0 words)
In 1979 Kronman went to the Caribbean and fell in love with the steel pan - a unique instrument and the only genuinely new invention in acoustic musical instruments during the twentieth century.
In 1987 he started to systematically investigate the manufacturing process and the acoustics of the pan, using advanced facilities of the Department of Music Acoustics at the Royal Institute of Technology.
Kronman has combined his keen interest in the making and tuning of pans with his knowledge of acoustics to produce this book - a thorough and detailed documentation of the steel pan and how to make it and tune it.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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