| 11. | Tenor drums are played with mallets or drumsticks.
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| 12. | Marching tenor drums ( also called quads, quints, tom-toms or multi-tenors ) are single-headed tonal drums.
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| 13. | There are also single head tenor drums.
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| 14. | The tone of the tenor drum is similar to a bass drum, however it is often higher pitched.
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| 15. | The instrumentation of the drumline is further broken down into snare drums, bass drums, tenor drums, cymbals, and mallets.
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| 16. | Most of the time, tenor drums are tuned relatively tightly, giving them a high-pitched sound that carries well outdoors.
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| 17. | It is equivalent to the tom-tom in the non-Brazilian drum kit or to the tenor drum in marching bands.
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| 18. | Marching tenor drums can weigh anywhere between 30 and 60 pounds, depending on the model, and number of drums.
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| 19. | The infantry used the side drums ( snare / field, long drum / tenor drum and the bass drum ).
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| 20. | Tabards are applied only on the bugles and glockenspiels, as well as in the snare and tenor drums if applicable.
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