Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 10, 2026

Ring-repique

The ring-repique is a percussion instrument originated in Brazil. It is a small drum commonly made of aluminum, and unlike the hand-repique, has two drumheads, and a different, much deeper timbre. In Brazil, this instrument is used mainly to play Samba and its variants, such as Pagode. The ring-repique has this name because traditionally, the musician wears one or more rings to play it, striking the body of the instrument with his fingers and using his thumb to play on the bottom or top skins. Normally the free hand hits the top skin, and this technique allows the player to perform more than one rhythm. The ring-repique was invented in Rio de Janeiro in the 1970s by musician Doutor.

Last revised
Jun 10, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
162 w
Citations
1
Source
Ring-repique
Percussion instrument
InventorDoutor
Developed1970s
Related instruments
Musicians
Doutor

The ring-repique is a percussion instrument originated in Brazil. It is a small drum commonly made of aluminum, and unlike the hand-repique, has two drumheads (top and bottom, commonly made out of animal skin), and a different, much deeper timbre. In Brazil, this instrument is used mainly to play Samba and its variants, such as Pagode. The ring-repique has this name because traditionally, the musician wears one or more rings to play it, striking the body of the instrument with his fingers and using his thumb to play on the bottom or top skins. Normally the free hand hits the top skin, and this technique allows the player to perform more than one rhythm. The ring-repique was invented in Rio de Janeiro in the 1970s by musician Doutor.1

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Bolão, Oscar. Batuque É Um Privilégio [Batuque Is a Privilege] (in Portuguese and English). Rio de Janeiro: Irmãos Vitale. p. 45. ISBN 8585426853.