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Steel Pan (tenor) Image 1 1000 x 612 780 x 472 |
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Steel Pan (tenor) Image 2 1000 x 612 780 x 472 |
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Name: Steel Pan (tenor) Alternate Name(s): Tenor Pan Geographic Region: Caribbean Country of origin: Trinidad and Tobago Climatic type: Tropical Time period: 20th century to present. Classification: Idiophone Material: SvH No.: 111.2
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Physical Description This instrument consists of one drum with the shortest "skirt" or side length of the steel pan family at approx. 12-15 cm (Blake, 106). The notes are "raised" from the concave bowl in a now-standard circle of fifths arrangement. The lowest notes found along the circumference of the bowl are U-shaped, while the higher octave notes are either oval or circular-shaped inside. The tenor pan must be suspended on a stand or rack to allow the drum to resonate and is played with thin rubber mallets Tuning The tenor has a chromatic range between D4 and G6, with 28 to 30 chromatic notes (Blake, 109). The tenor pan can be found in several styles, dependent upon the individual tuner, including the "open bore" style (in which several holes are drilled into the pan to create a brighter tone) and the over-sized tenor (dubbed the "mega pan"), which extends the lower range for solo performance. History It is generally accepted that the tenor pan developed from the early "ping pong," a small zinc pan which could play simple melodies (such as children's songs, and simple calypso choruses) of three to five notes (Goddard 38, Stuempfle 40). Sometime after the end of WWII, however, it was discovered that the larger 55-gallon oil drums borrowed from the American naval base could produce more notes. By the early 1950s, the tenor became a fully-chromatic instrument. Today, the tenor pan is the primary melodic and virtuosic instrument of the contemporary steel band. It is also the instrument most frequently played solo outside of the traditional steel band context. References See Steel Band. Last Modified: 05-May-2005 TOP |