“Build it and they will drum.” Dedicated to research, study and comparisons of field drums. Our purpose is to collect information about historical U.S. drums (manufacture, preservation, conservancy, repair, market) for use by scholars, collectors and others. Photographs of drums, and anything related, together with informative narratives, are welcome. Interested readers will find archived postings a good resource. Reach us at emirsky@gmail.com.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
The Drumslingers: LES PARKS UN-TRADITIONAL SNARE GRIP
Thank you for sharing my blog post. To my horror, I recently deleted that post and lost the link while "experimenting" with the updated Blogger features. Here is a new link with that article re-posted: https://thedrumslingers.blogspot.com/2020/07/les-parks-un-traditional-snare-grip.html
Thank you for sharing my drumblog link about the Les Parks grip method. Recently, I was "experimenting" with my blog settings and to my horror, I inadvertently deleted the original post. I re-posted it today (07/26/20.) I am sorry for the inconvenience. Here is the new link: https://thedrumslingers.blogspot.com/2020/07/les-parks-un-traditional-snare-grip.html
Thank you for sharing my blog post. To my horror, I recently deleted that post and lost the link while "experimenting" with the updated Blogger features. Here is a new link with that article re-posted: https://thedrumslingers.blogspot.com/2020/07/les-parks-un-traditional-snare-grip.html
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing my drumblog link about the Les Parks grip method. Recently, I was "experimenting" with my blog settings and to my horror, I inadvertently deleted the original post. I re-posted it today (07/26/20.) I am sorry for the inconvenience. Here is the new link: https://thedrumslingers.blogspot.com/2020/07/les-parks-un-traditional-snare-grip.html
ReplyDelete