THE KETTLEDRUMS
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The
kettledrums
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John
J. Pole, Geneva, New York, United States
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circa
1890?
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wood,
metal, skin
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70 cm (diam.),
35 cm (depth,
40 cm keys included),
65 cm (H on its feet)
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St.
Boniface Museum
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Made of wooden planks put together with a hoop like a barrel,
the body of this kettledrum is shaped like a dome. A metal band
holds a stretched skin on the body. Seven metal screw keys are
attached to the band and can be turned by hand to adjust the tension
of the skin. This changes the pitch of the instrument's sound.
The kettledrum is set on a simple metal tripod. It was manufactured
by John J. Pole, Geneva, New York, around 1890.
Kettledrums are played with felt mallets in groups of two or three
or even more. These percussion instruments were adopted by the
symphony orchestra during the XVIIIth century.
This kettledrum
came to the museum's collections through Marius Benoist of St.
Boniface. A sometime historian, this musician, composer and orchestra
conductor played a leading role on the musical scene in French
Manitoba.
Marius Benoist was born in 1896 at Sainte-Anne-des-Chênes in Manitoba
and studied the piano, organ and singing in St. Boniface and Montreal.
In addition to being choirmaster of St. Boniface Cathedral for
40 years, he was the founder and director of a number of musical
ensembles: the Sinfonietta symphony orchestra, the choir of the
Gounod Lyric Society as well as the Calixa-Lavallée Society, a
youth orchestra made up of his music students.
Benoist produced
many musical compositions including one, "La légende du vent",
that won the Etrog Award (today the Genie Award) of the Canadian
Academy of Cinema and Television in 1973. He took up the baton
for the last time in 1978 as the Sinfonietta celebrated its fiftieth
anniversary.
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