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percussion, a rimshot is performed by placing one drum stick with the stick head near the middle of the drumhead, and the shaft pressed against the rim, and striking with the other stick. This produces a less powerful sound, and is easier to execute than a typical rimshot. This variation is also
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Sometimes, the comedian would react to the rimshot as if they did not expect it and in doing so, pass the reaction and responsibility for the rimshot on to the drummer, when in fact, the comedian had previously instructed the drummer when to use and when not to use the rimshot. Despite having
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The rimshot is often confused with the cross stick technique, in which the tip of a drum stick is placed on the head near one of the bearing edges and the shaft of the stick is struck against the rim opposite the tip, thus creating a dry, high-pitched "click" similar to a set of
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A rimshot when used to accent the punchline of a joke being told by a live comedian may or may not simultaneously be played with a small cymbal crash. This was popularized in standup comedy by comedians performing at the resorts in the
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The sound of rimshots can be described as "part normal snare and part loud, woody accent", or "generally sharper, brighter and more cutting ", since the technique produces large amounts of
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previously been scripted into the routine by the comedian, these were designed to appear to be improvised by the drummer, so as to accentuate the joke.
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used a drummer to play rimshots after his fast-paced, one-liner type of jokes; his most famous line was "Take my wife… please!"
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players use rimshots near the edge of the head, but these sound very different from gocks in marching percussion.
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The musical phrase played on percussion instruments used to punctuate jokes is known in percussion jargon as a
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Continuum
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region. Many of these comics were of Jewish heritage and were known as "
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LGBT slang § Terms related to transgender and non-binary people
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comics", after a vacation spot in the
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