RM110.70

Drum & Percussion

Vic Firth SRH2CO Corpsmaster Signature “Chop-Out” Snare Drumsticks, Ralph Hardimon

The Hardimon “Hammer” with a rubber tip. The ultimate workout stick! DCI Hall of Fame inductee Ralph Hardimon is a percussionist, teacher, composer and clinician. He is best known for his work in the areas of marching percussion, rudimental drumming, drum & bugle corps and marching band. Hardimon was the Director of Percussion for the Santa Clara Vanguard in 1981 and kept that position through 1990, during which time SCV won four High Percussion awards and three DCI World Championships. Since, Ralph has written and arranged music for many other drum corps, college percussion ensembles and marching bands, and in 2011, Ralph will return to the DCI activity as the percussion arranger for the Blue Knights Drum & Bugle Corps. Ralph’s latest Vic Firth Signature products are unique in that they are closely related through their practice stick implications — with one designed as a wood tip model and the other with a rubber tip. “When thinking about chop building, I knew there was something unique we could bring forth,” states Hardimon. “The idea of a stick that would work on a pad and drum was one angle, but adding the same model with a rubber tip really made for an exciting concept!” Ralph Hardimon “Hammer”- The profile of a scaled down Hardimon snare stick made in Sta-Pac for added weight and sound production. Plays “through” Kevlar heads for maximum snare and batter head response.

 

Model: SRH2CO

SPECIFICATIONS

Diameter

.705"” | 1.79cm

Length

17.125” | 43.5cm

Taper

Long

Series

Corpsmaster® Snare

Surface Coating

Paint

TIP Material

Rubber

Tip Shape

Rubber Tip

Brand

Vic Firth

Many people believe this company, which was established in Boston, Massachusetts, to be the largest supplier of drum sticks, mallets, and accessories in the world. All of these products are made in Newport, Maine. Vic Firth, the man behind the brand, was a percussionist and drummer who had spent years studying music and performing with a variety of musicians in the 1940s and 1950s.