Rope-tuned skin-covered goblet drum played with bare hands, originally from West Africa.
Sinónimos
Examples for "jem"
Examples for "jem"
1JEM pulled out this year accusing the government of attacking its positions.
2The days were long, Jem was eleven, and the pattern was set:
3JEM troops have clashed with the army throughout North and South Darfur.
4JEM has long-term political ambitions that could be satisfied by a deal.
5The army said JEM was on the move because of internal divisions.
1Like the Pied Piper of Hamelin, De Jimbe lured curious onlookers to the steps of the National Concert Hall with loud rhythmic beating of drums.
1John was on his way to travel around Europe with a djembe.
2Barika tells Amelia about the djembe and gives her a drumming demonstration.
3African djembe drums upon which the player sits replaced timpani.
4Flash kissed his teeth and rapped out a sudden irritable tattoo on the djembe.
5Highlights included djembe drumming and a raffle competition run by Pestana Chelsea Bridge Hotel and Spa.
6It is made from wooden branches and white canvas with pictures of Jesus, candles, crosses and an African djembe drum.
7Turn it into a djembe or conga and the different parts of the "skin" respond as you'd expect a real drum to.
8When I was 16, I started playing the djembe, but as I began playing it, it sounded like I had been playing for years.
9By the time he'd dismounted, the horse had become a djembe drum, and his outfit was a red dashiki, white jeans, and leather sandals.
10Two rows of about 20 men and women between the ages of 24 and 50 harmonise backed by a djembe, a skin-covered drum.
11Then, suddenly, African djembes began to dominate, as they do today.
12We sent self-diagnosed rhythm-phobe Anthonie Tonnon to see the Ted X show and learn to jam on the Djembe with John and Lucie.