DPA PICTURE ALLIANCE/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO
PERFORMING LIVE: Beatboxer Butterscotch at a jazz festival in Germany
Beatboxers have an amazing ability: These musical artists perform incredible percussion solos, incorporating the sounds of bass drums, snare drums, cymbals, and many other instruments. But they don’t use drumsticks, mallets, or synthesizers. All these sounds come straight from beatboxers’ mouths.
Beatboxing emerged from hip-hop music in the 1980s. Pioneers like Doug E. Fresh wowed audiences with vocal percussion that imitated sounds made by electronic drum machines called beatboxes. Beatboxing gets its name from these devices. Today’s beatboxers, like Nimisha Patil, perform in a range of styles, both as solo artists as well as alongside vocal or instrumental music. Patil started beatboxing in high school. “I always wanted to learn drums but never got the chance,” she says. “So I started mimicking drum sounds with my mouth.”
Beatboxers have an amazing skill. These musical artists perform stunning percussion solos. They produce the sounds of bass drums, snare drums, cymbals, and other instruments. But they don’t use drumsticks, mallets, or synthesizers. All these sounds come straight from beatboxers’ mouths.
Beatboxing came from hip-hop music in the 1980s. Doug E. Fresh and other pioneers amazed audiences with their vocal percussion. They sounded just like electronic drum machines called beatboxes. Beatboxing gets its name from these devices. Today’s beatboxers, like Nimisha Patil, use a range of styles. They perform both as solo artists and along with vocal or instrumental music. Patil started beatboxing in high school. “I always wanted to learn drums but never got the chance,” she says. “So I started mimicking drum sounds with my mouth.”