tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-702460502853399807.post756339831299734905..comments2023-09-21T07:35:17.883-04:00Comments on Field Drums (a/k/a Field of Drums): Clayton Holmes Drum, 1937Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-702460502853399807.post-76088615885502806732008-06-11T07:38:00.000-04:002008-06-11T07:38:00.000-04:00A fabulous find! Old Clayt Holmes was like many ot...A fabulous find! Old Clayt Holmes was like many other CT Valley drummers of the early 20th c who sought to replicate the increasingly harder-to-find drums made by Eli Brown in Bloomfield, CT. However, he deviated somewhat from the more or less "square" dimensions utilized by Brown in the 1830s and 40s; I suspect the increased height was Holmes' tribute to the "long" drums popularized in the 1930s by such eminent makers as Sanford "Gus" Moeller. In any event, Holmes' trademark, so to speak, is the romantic figure (never ribald, always tasteful) carved in bas relief [bas-relief - A French term meaning "low-raised work." This art, along with high relief, is known collectively as relief sculpture -- meant to be seen primarily from one direction -- as opposed to sculpture which is in the round or full round. (pr. bah'ruh-leef') http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/b/bas-relief.html]opposite the vent hole of most of his drums (I have seen only one without such a figure). The creative and constructive license Holmes took was much unlike the methods of [NAME WITHHELD AS POSSIBLY DEFAMATORY], whose attempts to replicate the Brown drum construction were so meticulous they required an accomplice, printer-friend [DITTO], who replicated the very labels used by Eli Brown. I have found that the only sure way to tell a Ventres drum from an original Brown is the hand-written notation Ventres sometimes (!) left inside the shell. ;-) [Comment by "Susan" (lastname not provided to this blog)]Ellis Mirskyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08059186096779798410noreply@blogger.com