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(c)Paul Marshall 2004
The job in hand was to re-head the bendir using the Lambeg skin. I have tried to take photos at each critical step to help illustrate. If anything is unclear, please e-mail me and I'll try to fill in the blanks. What you need.
First thing is to lay the drum skin flat on the ground with the playing side face down, Mark around the skin with your sharpie leaving 2" or so all around. This provides a skirt that can be pulled upon to place the initial tension on the drum. Cut around this line
Take the skin and soak it in a bucket of cold water, you may have to fold it, that's fine. With a skin this thin it only needs 20 minutes or so to become soft and pliable. If it gets mushy or starts to become 'fat' then it's overdone. If you haven't yet had the pleasure of the smell of goat then you have a new experience coming your way. If it stinks then chances are it's from a billy. Nannys make the best drums I believe.
When the skin is ready, take it out and let the excess moisture drain back into the bucket. Place the skin on an old towel (I keep one just for skins) roll it up and wring it. This really sucks the excess moisture out of it and from this point in you're on a clock as the skin will start to dry and harden. For my own skins, I then take the skin, roll it into a cylinder and stretch it as hard as I can pull, I do this in all directions. This will help to break up the fibres in the skin and will stop it from de-tuning so much when the skin is fresh. You may be surprised at how much stretch is in the skin. You will not break it unless you use some mechanical stretching device. You may or may not choose to do this, it works for me.
After application of the glue, I laid the damp skin flat on the towel again with the playing side face down.
Now comes a big tip. LEAVE IT ALONE!! Seriously. Every drum that I have skinned where I have tried to advance the progress by continuing working on it before it has completed the drying stage has suffered some sort of negative effect because of it. I am reminded of a chinese proverb about a farmer who went out into his fields and uprooted all his crop to see if it was growing. By all means tap the head and check the pitch, check for touch dryness but do not play it at full tilt and do not attempt to trim the edge of the skin until the 'skirt' becomes rock hard. If the drum is tunable do not try and bring it to playing pitch. The bit of skin below the string that you can't see will remain damp for longer than the rest of the skin plus the shell will maintain some of the moisture inside after the skin is touch dry. It is still vulnerable to being moved, ripped or otherwise affected. I'd advise waiting 24 hrs before carrying out the next step. The Next Day... Using a sharp hobby knife trim the excess skirt of skin off the drum. As with any sharp tool, let common sense prevail. Think twice before you cut once. A framedrum can survive a slice normally because of lowish tension but it may deteriorate when playing or may simply be unsightly. In any case, you didn't go to all this trouble just to undo all your hard work. In the case of this drum, that cutting is made straightforward because there is a routed groove and the string provides a natural smooth edge against which to run the knife. I should get a neat job. In the case of a drum which doesn't have any natural cutting edge, I'm afraid that you'll need a steady hand. I have had mixed success with placing something under the skirt of skin and in being able to slice through the small collar of skin 'ramped' between the lower and higher levels. For pure aesthetics, I'd avoid cutting directly into the drumshell if possible unless you are confident that you'll leave a straight enough line for you to use again. When the skin is trimmed, that's it, the drum is ready. It will decrease in pitch slightly initially as the skin relaxes into its new position but will soon settle. |
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