The correct way to play ruffs (or drags if you prefer) on the snare drum is an extremely attractive topic for repeated, endless debate. Evidently. I’ve seen it again and again, people going nuts for the topic.
The major burning issues seem to be:
a) What they should be called— ruff or drag.
b) How to play the embellishment— double stroke, multiple bounce, or…?
Around here we call them ruffs, and my concept of correctness playing them came from a kind of Charles Dowd / Tony Cirone / Fred Sanford axis. Mainly, most of my teachers and corps instructors, and many professional acquaintances, were students of one or all of them. Dowd and Sanford both studied with Cirone. Dowd and Cirone both studied with Saul Goodman— primarily known as a timpanist, but played and taught all orchestral percussion instruments. He’s as important a figure as anyone in modern percussion. All four of those individuals taught many thousands of professionals over many decades, so there’s a sizable community of players for whom this is part of their frame of reference, at least.
Summarizing my views, and what I teach, this is from Cirone’s book Orchestral Techniques Of The Standard Percussion Instruments:
Except: in drum corps, we played them multiple bounce, not double stroke, with the buzz very tight against the main note. I believe that way of playing them in that setting was likely Fred Sanford and Bob Kalkoffen’s innovation. More traditionally they were played with a double stroke.
Also in corps: in practice, the term drag didn’t refer to a specific rudimental pattern, but to a single metered open double played as part of an ongoing rhythm, which might be referred to as a drag passage, like:
A real traditional rudimental geek could analyze each of those phrases as a series of named rudiments, and I’m glad I never learned that way. For me this was always just a continuing rhythm with some of the strokes doubled. In fact there are some passages from traditional rudimental solos that could be interpreted that way, with the drag strokes metered. This line from Charley Wilcoxon’s Roughing The Single Drag:
Could be played:
Continuing with the common ruff (or drag) here’s another excellent description from Percussion For Musicians by Robert McCormick, edited by Cirone:
So McCormick and Cirone are talking about interpreting that notation, and performing it on the snare drum in orchestra, wind ensemble, and other concert snare drum settings, and that is my baseline standard for how to do things. There are other reputable professionals who say they should be played with a double stroke— they are amply represented on YouTube— all you have to do is think the word ruff and you’ll be presented with a lot of videos telling about that. I think they are offering incomplete information if they don’t mention anything about the performance context.
Friend/friend of the site and excellent drummer Ed Pierce (and author Alain Rieder) has pointed out that there is a Porcaro/Igoe/Henry Adler/Al Lepak lineage of players who refer to any three note single stroke pattern as a ruff. Ralph Humphrey as well. That’s different from what we’ve been talking about— you would not read a snare drum part, or etude, with the above ruff notation and automatically play them as single strokes. In fact I don’t know how that interpretation would be applied to written music, other than to assign a rudimental name to a written rhythm (calling a 1e& 2e& rhythm ruffs, for example). With this usage we’re just giving that name to a simple rhythm structure, a cluster of three notes.
There is an exception: you do play ruffs as alternating singles when you encounter that notation for most other percussion instruments— timpani, for example.
This all may beg the question: what even is the purpose of doing it one way or another? Why does doing it “correctly” according to a certain school of thought matter? Who decides what’s correct to begin with?
I don’t believe there’s any real technical or hand-conditioning benefit to doing it one way of the other— it’s purely a question of convention, taste, and musical effect and expression.
If you’re involved in concert snare drumming, you’ll be working with conductors, band directors, other percussionists, professors and other teachers, and miscellaneous judges— via competitions, juries, auditions— each of whom may have opinions or demands about how you should play, which may be difficult to ignore completely.
In rudimental drumming it is decided by the individual organization— marching bands, drum and bugle corps, other drum lines, will each have their individual style standards that players need to follow. Much of the rehearsal process is about learning those standards, you don’t necessarily need to have them prepared in advance.
As individual players, we’re generally free to do whatever we want— hopefully guided by some kind of sound idea, and a good musical ear. Generally it’s best to to have a baseline of ability that fits with what the rest of the drumming world is doing, doing things the way other good players do them, until you’re experienced enough to form a different idea about it. Someone doing something in a grossly unconventional way in a formal performance setting is most often taken as evidence the player doesn’t know what he or she is doing.
Postscript: In the comments there’s a good question about diddles as distinct from drags.
Are what you said were called drags in drum Corp now commonly known as diddles ?
As always, good post by the way.
Thank you! Diddles to me are double strokes at the same rate as the surrounding notes– usually 16ths. Maybe implying running doubles, or mixed paradiddle stickings– they might call that phrase a "diddle passage."
That's the way both terms were used when I was in corps. Nobody ever defined them explicitly, but what they referred to, and the distinction between them (and between them and ruffs), always seemed clear. There would be a paradiddle exercise that included some running doubles, and that's what they called that portion of it. Then we'd have a drag exercise that specifically dealt with single 32nd note doubles within running 16ths, played with the R and L hands.
That interpretation– of drag referring the double itself– was pretty inescapable both by the language, and the way we played them, and the way they were written– like in my examples. The doubles aren't attached to a main note, the way a normal ruff is. And they weren't grace notes, they were played at full volume.