| Top End Bodhran Technique |
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Top end is an emerging style of bodhrán playing, particularly popular with North of Ireland players but becoming seen everywhere. The style has arisen from seminal developments in drum skins. It has encouraged stylistic, technical and academic study elevating the bodhrán into a performance instrument capable of displaying virtuosity, a far cry from it's pulse-keeping roots ..
The style
is characterised by the
The stick is held between the tip of the thumb and the middle knuckle of the first finger, some players hold it between the thumb tip and the finger tip. I have seen another style of grip where the hand is held more like a fist enclosing the tipper. The '05 Down & Ulster junior Champion Niall Quinn plays very effectively in this style.
Tippers usually
have a top section that extends beyond the thumb as shown above, this permits
the use of Kerry-style triplets.
Playing the top end
style involves making the 'strumming' hand movements indicated in the graphics,
with the drum being struck on both the downstroke and the upstroke (forward and
backward to be precise). Most of the action and required flexibility is in the
wrist but the whole lower arm does rotate. As with drumset playing, fingertip
control is used for fine A common and useful stroke is the Down Down Up (DDU) stroke and the many variations that exist there. There are several exercises on the rudiments pages. Most commonly, the top end is blended with the conventional Kerry style, there are many ways of combining styles in your rhythm arsenal and you start making stylistic decisions.
There are few makers in the world who make drums that I can personally recommend. I can only recommend those I have played. O'Kane, Metloef and Eckermann stand above the rest. My personal & professional opinion is that Waltons or Roundstone instruments are fit for display only. I recommend that you don't get a bodhrán from a shop, there are many makers producing drums. Good makers will usually sell directly makers links...,and will custom build or will have a range of tried and tested designs. If you make bodhráns and want me to review one of your drums, please send me one, I'll and other players will try it and I'll review it here on the dojo. Preferred drums for Top end style. Seamus O'Kane - Dungiven, Co Derry, N Ireland. The originator of the use of the Lambeg skin. One style of drum, plain construction, screwdriver tunable. Super consistent in sound and construction, this is the global standard against which 'Top end' drums are judged. Seamus has a huge waiting list and is not taking new orders Metloef - Rob Forkner - Texas USA - Custom built, warm sounding, multi octave drums, beautifully constructed and finished, Lambeg skins or kangaroo skins used generally. Very reliable drums for sound and build. Rob is the originator of the thumbscrew method of toolless tuning, thank you!. We designed & Rob built the Gemini drum, I also have a 12 x 5 popcorn bodhrán which is my favourite squeeze. Rob makes top drawer instruments- I have 3 Norbert Eckermann Austria - tabla bodhrán - beautiful finish, reliable throughout for sound and build. The left hand skin is polished to a glass-like shine and is silent. It is a full sounding drum and reacts well to both tipper and skewers. The skin is fairly hard which gives extra clarity and bite. There is a secondary skin under the outer edge instead of tape, this gives supreme definition to the upper octaves |
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Tipper
The left hand tonality
is the second defining aspect of top end playing, it is the voicebox of the drum
and through movement, pressure and delicate touches, the drum can be coaxed into
producing an extremely wide and dynamic vocabulary of sounds from deep booms
& pitch bends to high pops & trills. Good bodhrán playing is all
about seducing the sound from the skin.
The tippers used tend
to be thin, 7-12" long, in the range of 8-12mm diameter and of a hard wood.
Often a section of a
My own preference (left)
is a shorter tipper which I use in a pseudo-Limerick style, the tipper top is
held at the thumb in this case. This latter grip I find to be somewhat lighter
and faster but at the cost of triplets.
The other favourite
tipper type is a homemade 'hot rod' made from bamboo barbeque skewers. Generally
7 or 19 are used.
The drummakers
whose drums are used for this style generally prefer the use of thin goatskins,
the preferred skins come from the 






