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DRUM MAKING CONNECTIONS
by Keeley Hope Harding
I pull the
long piece of rawhide through a hole in the horsehide stretched over the round
cedar frame. I instinctively know the pattern and how tight to pull the
rawhide, as my mother and I alternate lacing it back and forth around the twelve
inch frame of the drum, forming a sixteen-pointed star across the back and
stretching the hide tighter across the front. My mother’s two brothers and
parents and my brother hover around us at the kitchen counter in our rented
beach house in Yachats on the Oregon Coast. My father says “Once a drum maker,
always a drum maker.”
It has been almost
sixteen years since my father and I made our first Native American drum. We
participated in a workshop at Cedar Mountain Drums in Portland, Oregon. The
store provided the materials and our teacher, of Cherokee descent, presoaked the
hides for twelve hours. We chose elk hide for our drum, to bring out emotional
healing, trust, endurance and the inner child. My father knew I would
appreciate the experience and I felt special because he had wanted me, his
little seven-year-old daughter, to make it with him. I took it very seriously
and my father said he was the one helping me. We wrote our names inside the
frame as a written record of the day, October 9, 1993.
I think of that day every
time we play the drum, but only this year did I truly remember how important the
experience of making it with my father was for me.
My parents wanted another
drum in honor of my mother’s birthday. During Spring Break my brother, my
mother and I went back to Cedar Mountain Drums and picked out the frame, beater
stick and head, and a thick horsehide, to bring out the Shaman energies.
Wet, the coloring of the
horsehide is like that of a batch of homemade apple cider. This time my mother
soaks the hide and one afternoon when we are taking a break from watching the
waves break on the bluffs, she starts reading the directions for the drum. I
leave a game of cards and climb onto a stool at the counter and emerge myself in
distant memories of drum making. I am unsure at first and we rely on the
directions to get started.
Finished with the initial
lacing, we retrace our steps and further tighten the length of the rawhide.
Then we divide the spokes of lacing into four sections and tightly wrap them at
the center with the remaining rawhide to form an equal-armed-cross-shaped
handle. Finished, we look at it and realize that the handle is off center.
Everyone thinks we will have to redo it, but I just grab the handle and pull it
towards me slowly but firmly and it gives just enough. It’s not conscious
knowledge; the drum is talking to me and it feels like the natural thing to do.
Everyone marvels. I act
modest but I can’t help feeling proud.
Finally, we tack the
puckered edge sections of the hide to the rim of the frame so it will dry in the
right shape.
The next day when the
drum has dried and claimed its voice, we take turns playing it on the the edge
of the land as the waves sparkle in the sun and splash against the dark bluffs
at our feet. Where a drum is made is important and this drum will always be
home at the ocean. The whole family goes down to hear it. This drum has a
rich, deep voice and mingles with the crashing waves of the rising tide.
Making a drum is very
spiritual for me and I know that making one with each of my parents is one of
the best and most lasting gifts we can give each other. My parents plan on
giving me my own drum next weekend when I go home from college. In this world
of digital technology, I have chosen a moosehide drum. I was born in Alaska and
moose will bring out my inner Alaskan. Moose drums empower the feminine
energies, emotional honesty, spontaneity, self esteem and the inner child.
These are all qualities to which I aspire.
The moment I beat a new
drum for the first time, and free its voice, I know I have created something
truly unique that will always be a part of me. Drums are the heartbeat of the
earth and they connect me to my parents and my spirituality.
(This piece was for Keeley's magazine article writing
journalism class
at U of O. We'd like to thank her for sharing it with us!)
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