The Score Magazine March 2020 issue | Page 35

Getting the Hang of SHAURYA SINGH THAPA ‘the Hang’ A Unique Drum and its Drummer In 2000, a new millennium was born as well as a unique music instrument called the Hang. It was a drum that was played by hand, placed on the player’s lap. The people behind its creation were two individuals from Switzerland, Felix Rohner and Sabina Scharer. After introducing this percussive instrument in a German trade fair in the next year, the Hang began to draw quite some attention. In terms of anatomy, the Hang comprises of two metallic shells glued to each other in a concave fashion, wit the inside of the instrument being hollow. The creators have acknowledged the fact that steel drums from various countries Trinidad and Tobago, and India, have been a large influence on the Hang, but it differs from its predecessors in terms of sound. The Hang has buttery, raindrop-like sounds, rather than metallic notes. ‘The Hang in its original form was of Swiss origin but the company building it has stopped production. There are other variants but the Hang or the handpan is virtually an extinct instrument.’, says Delhi-based handpan player Ashim Bery. Bery is referencing to Felix and Sabina’s company PANArt Hangbau AG, which announced in 2013 that they wouldn’t be making any more specimens of Hang, as they are focusing on other sound and instruments. The handpan is extremely similar to the Hang. For laypersons, the handpan can be described as the non- patented Hang. Production of handpan is being taken over to India too recently. Bery remarks that some of his fellow musicians have been making their own handpans. An already-trained tabla player, Bery got introduced to the handpan through another vaguely similar instrument called the steel tongue drum. It was on a Goa beach in 2016 when he saw a man playing the same. This introduced him to a new world of percussion. ‘The steel tongue drum on the surface might look similar to the handpan but its sound is too metallic. The handpan on the other hand, has a wavy, more resonant sound.’ Bery explains the differences between the two instruments. Studying tones and sounds in metallic drums, he finally picked up the instrument in 2018. He has been ‘playing around with it’ ever since. Bery is one of the rare few proponents of the drum in India, a country where we aren’t totally aware of even the sound of a handpan or the Hang. Bery laughs at this, describing how his audiences are charmed as his fingers tap the notes of the handpan. ‘It is really hard to explain the tonality of the instrument in a simple manner. People are quite amused when they see me playing this ulta tawa (inverted pan)!’. As he continues to play and promote the handpan, Ashim Bery doesn’t stick to the instrument for just music. He tries to explore the handpan’s rhythmic influence further by collaborating with dancers and theatre artists too. Having already dropped an instrumental album called Kalkaji to Khirkee-The First Draft, he’s working on an EP where he’s planning to combine the handpan’s sound with other varied elements and influences like violin or electronic music. The Score Magazine highonscore.com 33