In a drum kit, the bass drum is much smaller than in traditional orchestral use, most commonly in diameter. Sizes range from in diameter while depths range from , with being normal. Vintage bass drums are generally shallower than the current standard of . Sometimes the front head of a kit bass drum has a hole in it to allow air to escape when the drum is struck for shorter sustain. Muffling can be installed through the hole without taking off the front head. The hole also allows microphones to be placed into the bass drum for recording and amplification. In addition to microphones, sometimes
trigger pads are used to amplify the sound and provide a uniform tone, especially when fast playing without a decrease in volume is desired. Professional drummers often choose to have a customized bass drum front head, with the logo or name of their band on the front. The kit bass drum may be more heavily muffled than the classical bass drum, and it is popular for drummers to use a pillow, blanket, or professional mufflers inside the drum, resting against the batter head, to dampen the blow from the pedal, and produce a shorter "thud". Different beaters have different effects, and felt, wood and plastic ones are all popular. Bass drums sometimes have a
tom-tom mount on the top, to save having to use (and pay for) a separate stand or rack. Fastening the mount involves cutting a hole in the top of the bass drum to attach it; "virgin" bass drums do not have this hole cut in them, and so are professionally prized.
Bass drum pedal In 1900, Sonor drum company introduced its first single bass drum pedal.
William F. Ludwig made the bass drum pedal workable in 1909, paving the way for the modern drum kit. A bass drum pedal operates much the same as the hi-hat control; a footplate is pressed to pull a chain, belt, or metal drive mechanism downward, bringing a beater or
mallet forward into the drumhead. The beater head is usually made of either felt, wood, plastic, or rubber and is attached to a rod-shaped metal shaft. The pedal and beater system are mounted in a metal frame and like the
hi-hat, a tension unit controls the amount of pressure needed to strike and the amount of recoil upon release.
Double bass drum pedal was an early user of double bass drums in
hard rock and
heavy metal music. A double bass drum pedal operates much the same way as a single bass drum pedal does, but with a second footplate controlling a second beater on the same drum. Most commonly this is attached by a shaft to a remote beater mechanism alongside the primary pedal mechanism. One notable exception to this pattern is the symmetrical Sleishman twin bass drum pedal. Alternatively, some drummers opt for two separate bass drums with a single pedal on each, for a similar effect.
Drop-clutch When using a double bass drum pedal, the foot which normally controls the
hi-hat pedal moves to the second bass drum pedal, and so the hi hat opens and remains open. A
drop clutch can be used to keep the hi-hat in the closed position, even with the foot removed from the pedal.
Pedal techniques There are 3 primary ways to play single strokes with one foot. The first is heel-down technique, where the player's heel is planted on the pedal and the strokes are played with the ankle. This stroke is good for quiet playing and quick syncopated rhythms. The next technique is heel-up, where the player's heel is lifted off of the pedal and the strokes originate from the hip. The ankle is still flexed with each stroke, but the full weight of the leg can be used to add additional power for louder playing situations. Lifting the heel allows access to several double stroke techniques as well. The third primary technique is the floating stroke where the heel is lifted off the pedal as in heel-up, but the stroke is played primarily from the ankle as in heel-down. This motion can allow greater speed and higher note density at louder volumes but is not efficient for slow tempos or sparse rhythms. Drummers such as
Thomas Lang,
Virgil Donati, and
Terry Bozzio are capable of performing complicated solos on top of an
ostinato bass drum pattern. Thomas Lang, for example, has mastered the heel-up and heel-down (single- and double-stroke) to the extent that he is able to play dynamically with the bass drum and to perform various
rudiments with his feet. In order to play "doubles" on the pedal, drummers can employ 3 main techniques: slide, swivel, or heel-toe. In the slide technique, the pedal is struck around the middle area with the ball of the foot. As the drum produces a sound, the toe is slid up the pedal. After the first stroke, the pedal will naturally bounce back, hit the toe as it slides upwards, and rebound for a second strike. In the swiveling double, the pedal is struck once in the normal manner for the first note, then the heel is immediately rotated around the ball of the foot to the side of the pedal while simultaneously playing a second stroke. This rotation can be to the inside or outside, either will work, and results in a faster second stroke than is ordinarily possible. In many forms of
heavy metal and
hard rock, as well as some forms of
jazz,
fusion, and
punk, two bass drums are used, or alternatively two pedals on one bass drum. If two drums are used, that is often to give a more impressive appearance on large stages, but sometimes, the second drum is pitched differently to provide some variety in the notes, thus creating a more nuanced sound. The first person to use and popularize the double bass drum setup was jazz drummer
Louie Bellson, who came up with the idea when he was still in high school.
Ray McKinley was, by 1941, using this setup as well. Double bass drums were popularized in the 1960s by rock drummers
Ginger Baker of
Cream,
Keith Moon of
The Who,
Mitch Mitchell of
the Jimi Hendrix Experience, and
Nick Mason of
Pink Floyd. After 1970,
Billy Cobham and
Narada Michael Walden used double kick drum with the jazz fusion project
Mahavishnu Orchestra,
Chester Thompson with
Frank Zappa and
Weather Report,
Barriemore Barlow with
Jethro Tull, and
Terry Bozzio with Frank Zappa. For these genres the focus was 'odd-meter grooves and mind blowing solos'. Double bass drumming later became an integral part of heavy metal, Donati is regarded as the first drummer to successfully use inverted double strokes with both feet, in addition to complex, syncopated ostinato patterns. Roddy, Hoglan and Kollias are acknowledged as the leaders of extreme metal drumming with their use of single strokes at 250+ beats per minute, while, Jarzombek and Haake's double bass drumming influenced the
djent genre. The history and development of double bass (as well as notated playing instruction) can be traced in the books
Encyclopedia of Double Bass Drumming written by
Bobby Rondinelli and
Michael Lauren and
The Complete Double Bass Drumming Explained written by
Ryan Alexander Bloom. In addition to these books,
Double Bass Drumming written by
Joe Franco and
Double Bass Drum Freedom written by Virgil Donati are also commonly used resources for double bass instruction. ==In marching bands==