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Drum Art Maple Gloss Snare £597

Choosing a top-flight snare drum is difficult enough and these beautifully made wooden snares just make it harder

The MusicRadar Team, Tue 23 Oct 2007, 12:12 pm UTC

Drum Art snares are completely handmade by a team of four craftsmen in Italy

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Drum Art is a company name you may be unfamiliar with. However, the exquisite, solid-shell snare drums it produces are clearly not the work of novices. The company was founded in 2004 by Silvano Biancucci and is based in Petritoli, Italy. Mr Biancucci is a master craftsman who previously worked as a percussionist.

Ideally qualified to design drums, he spent years perfecting his vision of a snare drum. After settling on a staved construction method, his first prototype found its way into the hands of a percussionist at the La Scala opera house in Milan. He was amazed at the drum and its reputation quickly spread among Italian classical percussionists.

With orders flooding in, Mr Biancucci created the Drum Art company. Drum Art remains an intimate operation, with just three other craftsmen working under Mr Biancucci. The emphasis is on producing as many of the components as possible in-house. The only drums that Drum Art makes are snares, though the company does manufacture its own range of accessories.

New snares on the block

The principal defining feature of Drum Art snares is the shells. A wide range of woods is available for shell material (some familiar, some exotic) including imbuja, olive, spruce, padouk, Mutenia walnut, maple and African rosewood. We have drums in maple, padouk and Mutenia walnut to review.

Depending on the type used, the wood is seasoned for between three and 12 years, and each piece is individually selected before being worked. The chosen wood is shaped by hand into 27mm thick staves (16-20 per drum). The staves are joined together by a slotted peg made from the same wood, then glued. The joins are incredibly neat and precise and, if you draw an imaginary line across the centre of the head, the staves are absolute mirror images of one another.

The shells feel understandably solid and Drum Art offers a lifetime guarantee on each shell. The staves are not turned to a smooth-edged circle inside the shells. Instead, a segmented circle is formed from the shallow angles where adjacent staves meet. This should not hinder the drums’ performance.

The shells slope away from the head area (the exact gradient varies according to wood used). The angle of bearing edge is also dictated by the choice of wood. Drum Art uses four different profiles of bearing edge. Visually, only the tiniest sliver of the thick shells makes contact with the head. This is to be expected, but there is an air of grace in the execution.

Going natural

Two of the review drums have a Natural Matt finish, while the third sports an enamel gloss lacquer (a choice restricted to maple and spruce drums). Another option is to have a completely customised finish, at extra cost.

The lugs are Drum Art’s own models and are machined from aluminium. Their sleek, unadorned look is matched by their single fixing point to the shell. The tuning rods are also Drum Art’s and are fashioned from stainless steel. They culminate in a hex-key socket rather than a conventional square bolt. Each drum comes with its own double-ended drum key, but if you lost it at a gig you might find yourself scrabbling around for an Allen key of the correct dimensions.

Drum Art also manufactures the precise and smooth Micron Tune snare strainer and its requisite snare butt. While the snare wires are locked into the butt clamp by way of hex-key sockets, the equivalent clamp on the strainer is closed with the aid of standard square bolts. Just as well that drum key is double-headed… The only hardware that is bought in are Puresound snare wires and hoops.

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MusicRadar rating

4 of 5

Pros

Beautifully made, fabulous-sounding, relatively rare drums.

Cons

Hopefully demand doesn’t outstrip supply.

Verdict

These snares have been designed by someone with a musical ear and a real affinity with wood, and they sound stunning. At this price point, nothing could be described as affordable, but they are competitive for the territory. Drum Art is a small company and recent new endorsees such as Jonathan Mover and Mel Gaynor will undoubtedly help in bringing the brand to a wider audience.

Review Policy

All MusicRadar’s reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.

Specification Show

Maple Gloss Snare

Price:
£597
Country of Origin:
Italy
Finish:
High Gloss
Includes Bag:
1
Includes Drum Keys:
1
Lugs Material:
Alluminium
Snare Shell Thickness:
27
Snare Size:
14 x 5
Turning Rods Material:
Stainless Steel
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