The Sleishman design challenges the very concept of conventional drum construction.
Looking back in history, ethnic, tribal and marching drums were made very simply. A shell was covered with skins which were stretched over the top with leather, twine and rope.
As the metal age evolved, the shell then had to take the tension by the means of bolted fittings.This is still the way that drums are constructed today.
In bolting lugs to the shell, the drums' performance is reduced in 2 ways:
1. The shell's natural vibration is inhibited.
2. The shell is locked & unable to move in concert with the drum heads' natural vibrations.
With the Sleishman drum, the shell rests inside the skins allowing unsurpassed resonance.
How did we come to this invention?
We simply observed the natural sound laws which apply to all acoustic musical instruments.
All of these instruments employ two basic principles for sound production. These are:
1. The Basic Sound Source
A. String instruments - The string
B. Brass/Woodwind - The mouthpiece
C. Drums - The skin
2. The Acoustic Chamber
A. String instruments - Body of instrument
B. Brass/Woodwind - The horn/bell
C. Drums - Shell
Combining the two together gives us the tone we are used to hearing. The Basic Sound Source is activated (struck, blown or plucked), then the Acoustic Chamber adds the tonal character and amplifies the sound.
If the Basic Sound Source (skin) is activated but the Acoustic Chamber (shell) is choked or inhibited in some way, then the sound waves will be interfered with.
A more simple approach would be to compare the drum to the violin.
The town of Cremona in Italy is famous for its high concentration of violin makers. They have worked painstakingly for years to achieve the perfect marriage between the Basic Sound Source (string) and the Acoustic Chamber (hollow violin body). When achieving the perfect rich sound depends on the tiniest detail, they would never dream of bolting metal fittings into the body. The sound that this would produce would be much like that of a solid body electric guitar without amplification.
Don Sleishman is a prolific inventor and a master craftsman. He took this philosophy and applied it to the acoustic drum.
This concept became evident to him in the early 1970's. He held a drum shell from the inside, on the tip of his thumb. Then he tapped it and found that it gave a warm and resonant tone. By drilling and bolting just one tension block on the shell, he found that the shell lost its tone and resonance. And so began the race to develop the world's first drum without shell-drilled fittings since the African rope drums.
We dreamed of a system which could surround the Acoustic Chamber without interfering with it. A system which would simplify tuning a drum. A system which would allow the shell to float between the heads like no other drum; not just for swapping of shells or cleaning purposes, but for sound.
This dream was turned into a reality by Don, and as countless Sleishman drum owners can attest, the Sleishman system Works! |