About Handpan Instrument
The handpan or “hang” is a convex steel drum played with the hands and tuned with multiple notes. Each handpan is tuned to a particular scale such as major, natural minor, harmonic minor, hijaz, mixolydian, etc. Sonically the handpan is an overtone-emitting instrument that has the capacity to create many layers of sound and ethereal effects and works very well with drone instruments. Originally called the hang (pronounced “hah-ng”) the handpan was invented in 2001 by a little company in Switzerland. We’ll tell you why you should not call it a “hang drum” in a little bit, but first:
Origin of the Handpan/Hang
In the 1970s the Trinidad steel drum sparked a phenomenon throughout Europe. Felix Rohner had been playing the steel pans for twenty years and by the 1990s, he founded his own company, PanArt, for the creation of these concave instruments. Sabrina Scharer, who would become his long-term business partner, signed on to PanArt shortly after.
A Swiss jazz and steel pan musician, Reto Weber, traveled to India and approached PanArt looking for a way to play the steel drum with his hands, as he had done with the Indian ghatam (clay drum) asking, “Can you make a ghatam with notes?” The inspiration for the Hang and what was later to be called the Handpan was born.
Felix and Sabrina revolutionized the Trinidad steel drum by flipping a custom hand-hammered metal pan from a concave to a convex position. Each of the seven to eight notes were then made profoundly sensitive to the lightest touch, allowing musicians to play the instrument by hand. The center note of the instrument, referred to as “the ding” bubbles out from the middle while the notes of the musical scale circling around the ding and up the sides of the pan are sunken into the metal as you would see with a traditional Trinidad steel pan, except with an additional dimple in the center of the note.
The tuned convex pan was then sealed together with a powerful adhesive and resonating chamber of thicker steel with an opening in the middle (called the “Gu” that can also be played percussively when the instrument is flipped upside down), creating an aesthetically mysterious UFO shape.
hand pan hang drumFelix and Sabrina called the instrument “the Hang” (pronounced hah-ng), simply meaning, “hand” in their Swiss-German dialect. They took legal rights over the name “Hang” under PanArt. The Hang was officially presented to the public in 2001 in Frankfurt, Germany and instantly the instruments became popular for their beautiful and mysterious tone and unique scales. The desire for the Hang began to grow rapidly. However, Felix and Sabrina approached the Hang as a work of art, not a commodity and refused to mass-produce their creation, making only a limited number each year by hand.
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Three PanArt Hangs, the oversized original prototype, and an Indian ghatam at PanArt’s workshop. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia
Felix and Sabrina introduced a policy where potential Hang customers had to submit a hand-written letter as to why they wanted to purchase the instrument to PanArt. Those who simply visited the PanArt workshop without invitation in Bern, Switzerland were sent home without welcome. PanArt stopped producing the instrument in 2013 to the dismay of thousands in order to preserve the mystique, value, and elusiveness of the instrument. Felix stated, “The Hang is not something to put in a shop window. It belongs to the flow of the gift. This is the idea we would like to be communicated.”
Instrument makers in Europe and the United States began to make their own version of the Hang beginning in 2007 but due to legality, the name “Hang” is limited only to instruments created by PanArt. Thus, the name “handpan” was born, which now refers to any type of “Hang” type steel pan created by a manufacturer other than PanArt.