01-24-2013 07:45 AM

01-24-2013 08:32 AM
I moved from Zildjian to a mix of Zildjian/Sabian, to mostly Sabian. I think the only things not Sabian right now are a vintage Zildjian Deep Ride cymbal, an LP/Wuhan China cymbal, a handful of Paiste Accent Cymbals, and a set of Paiste 2002 Sound Edge hats that are locked closed near my ride cymbal (they were free).Otherwise, lots and lots of Sabian.
I will say, for the random effects brass, Paiste cannot be touched.Also, Sabian is making Zildjian look pretty geriatric.
01-24-2013 09:05 AM
01-24-2013 10:55 AM
I forget what I made that cymbal out of.Wish I had another one to make
01-24-2013 02:03 PM
01-24-2013 02:05 PM - edited 01-24-2013 02:07 PM
Double post. Can't delete.
01-24-2013 03:42 PM
All of mine were A Customs for the longest time. I have added a few Wuhan chinas from 12-16" cause I love them, and due to a deal I couldnt refuse, I ended up with a 22" Sabian AA China and 15" AA Med Hats. Ive also got Factory Metal accessories, if those count.
At the end of the day, Sabians and Zildjians are almost identical. These AAs are so similar to my dads Zil&Cie A hats that I makes me want to add more from this line in the future.
01-24-2013 08:05 PM
Merlin Coryell wrote:All of mine were A Customs for the longest time. I have added a few Wuhan chinas from 12-16" cause I love them, and due to a deal I couldnt refuse, I ended up with a 22" Sabian AA China and 15" AA Med Hats. Ive also got Factory Metal accessories, if those count.
At the end of the day, Sabians and Zildjians are almost identical. These AAs are so similar to my dads Zil&Cie A hats that I makes me want to add more from this line in the future.
Sabian seems to be able to offer a wider range of loud music options while Zildjian does the hand-hammered dry jazz sound better. Just an opinion, of course, and there is plenty of model overlap. However I have really enjoyed breaking away from the Ziljdian A's and playing with the Explosive Crashes and Stage Crashes. I even use my 19" HH Explosive as a ride cymbal because the bell is extremely defined, as opposed to my poor old Deep Ride's bell.
01-25-2013 10:26 AM
I'll provide today's question. In light of learning that Brad Wilk is playing drums on the new Black Sabbath CD...
Who surprised you the most upon learning it was them playing on a song or album?
For me, it's a tie between hearing a song by The Corrs ("Toss the Feathers") and learning it was Simon Phillips on the kit, and hearing that Josh Freese played on one of Michael Buble's albums!
01-25-2013 11:40 AM
Hearing that Eric Clapton played on some of the Beatles later songs
01-25-2013 01:17 PM
Just looking at the insane list of people that John 5 has played with. That was a cool surprise.
01-25-2013 06:59 PM
For me it was either Vinnie C on that Megadeth CD, or Bozzio with Korn.
01-28-2013 01:11 PM - edited 01-28-2013 01:11 PM
Ive got one.
What type of kick/bass drum beater do you prefer and why?
Ive used felt, plastic, rubber, and wood of different sizes. For the past 2 years Ive pretty much used the standard wood beaters, a little smaller and lighter than the Red Danmar type. I always liked the added attack from solid beaters, and the rounded wood sure feels like it rebounds much more like a stick, than my flat Speedball plastic and rubber ones. I will still use the rubbers if I am doing a more blues oriented or quieter set, but the wood seem best for my feel all around.
01-28-2013 01:17 PM
I have felt, rubber and wood. For most of the stuff that I do, (blues) I use the felt. When I'm doing a Zydeco show I choose rubber as I get a little more punch, and if I'm doing a hard rock show I go with wood as it gives me more volume than the rubber. If I had to choose only one beater for all around use I think I would go with rubber.
01-28-2013 01:50 PM
I use the IC wood beaters, because they are light. Before that it was DW beaters, but those things are tanks. I tried the sonic hammers that came with my Axis pedals, and they lasted all of 10 minutes on the pedals because they are super heavy.
01-29-2013 06:36 AM
Great question, and one that's been on my mind lately. Different genres of music call for different sounds, but sometimes we only identify one piece at a time: finding the right snare... the right ride or hats... it was only a little while ago I started thinking about "the right bass drum attack" for certain bands.
In hard rock, I love a good punchy attack, so I used the plastic beaters from Tama's Iron Cobra. Once I moved into a new project, but to support my cover band, I've been using the felt beaters that came with the pedal, which still has punch but less of the "click" attack.
Now, with my original band borderline on soul and pop, I'm thinking of getting a softer felt beater, though I believe it was KMart who gave the idea of chopping up a wool sock and tossing it over the beater with an elastic band to lessen the attack but still give the thud. I'm thinking the bass drum sound from John Mayer's "Waiting for the World to Change."
01-29-2013 11:50 AM
02-01-2013 07:51 AM
02-01-2013 08:25 AM
Humble Pie wrote:
Here's one for you guys. What is the earliest piece of equipment acquired that you still use?
Nice question! I don't have much old gear, but I have a Yamaha single-braced cymbal stand that's probably 15+ years old. I got it back in high school from some dude...
02-01-2013 08:29 AM
Somewhere between 1956 and 1958 a drummer from a band that my parents took me to see, gave me his woodblock and a pair of sticks. I still have; and still use; that woodblock.
As for actual purchases, I still use a 22" Zildjian "A" ride and 14" Zildjian "A" hats that I bought in 1964. At that time I was playing a Whitehall 3 piece set that is long gone, but I still have, and still play my 5 piece Ludwig set that I bought in 1967.
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