@EMCProductions Do you mean the issue with the Tune Bot giving inaccurate readings/ measurements a portion of the time? Or do you mean the issue of the Tunebot's limited Tonal headroom/ range (when you tuned the 8 inch tom Drum Piano you had to do the last four by ear but it was not shown). Those are the two times when you found an issue with tune bot services in this video during the small Drums Segment. I also noticed that During the Bass Drum section you omitted the lug to lug matching in the bass drum segment of the video and skipped to the fundamental pitch to confirm your intervals.
My personal experience with the Tune-Bot for drumset has been pretty positive, really for getting the lugs in tune with themselves. I've never had a great ear for cutting through the overtones during lug tapping so this helps a lot for me. I also have a DrumDial and this works a lot better.
I own a Tune Bot. To get the higher ranges, hold the blue FILT button for 3 seconds. "Hi Range" will appear in the screen. Per manual: Tuning Range: 30 - 400 Hz, 1C - 4G# Hi Range: 30 - 450 Hz, 1C - 4A
@@ItsABOUTflamTIME if I had to guess, since it's a higher pitch, the Tunebot probably adds a high pass filter to cut out any unneeded low frequencies it's picking up to make the reading more accurate.
the drumset is tuned to E+(b9/11)/C# or alternatively a F/C#min polychord The two sets of tenors are somewhat tuned to the F# major pentatonic scale, one found across many cultures around the globe. This forms an F#6/9 chord nice your snare is a G/G# the pitch is a little bit unclear the megatenors form a C7(b9/13) chord, lines up well with the harmonic series
The thing is, all drums have multiple "pitches", as in multiple frequencies resonating due to different things making noise. On a drum with two heads, the top head and bottom head both resonate, and the shell resonates. But if you tune both heads to the same pitch, you won't always get that pitch from the drum overall. In addition, the stick hitting the drum head produces a pitch (which is likely what was confusing your tune bot at the upper registers since stick noise is pretty high). I believe there is a feature on it to recognize higher pitches, but still, knowing the physics behind it is important. On a snare drum, when you tune the top and bottom head to different pitches because they're at different thicknesses, you'll get an overall pitch change, so when tuning drums, you may want to check the individual heads by dampening them, checking the pitch, and then checking the pitch of the drum overall. For example, when I tune my snare, my bottom head sits around F#, the top sets around C#, and the drum overall resonates around an A. Of course, you could also opt to not use tune bots or other devices like this and trust your ears to tell you what's good. As you figured out with the top bass, sometimes a drum can't stick around the pitch you want it to even though it could in the past. That can be due to the heads stretching and aging, or the effect of humidity and temperature on the drums. I generally don't use devices like this, instead I feel for tension, pitch-match the lugs to each orher and tune to nice intervals. I have perfect pitch so I have a leg up and know where I like my drums to be generally, but I think its important for people to develop their ears and trust them to know what their drums should sound like. Bob Gatzen and Bill Bachman have taught me most everything I need to know about tuning, the rest comes from experience doing it. Great content as always dude, keep it up!
I have one...isolating the drum you are trying to tune helps. Doing so might kill any resonance from other drums which might throw the tune off a bit. Plus if you hold one of the buttons for 3 seconds...which button is different for every model..you can tune for higher pitched drums.
I think that if you'd use the tune bot outdoors, you'd get much better and quicker accuracy. The acoustics of the room probably sends the sound out as say a C# and comes immediately back around to the bot as an F. Try it outside brother and do a video to show if there's any difference in accuracy.
@@ItsABOUTflamTIME I'd also be surprised if that changed the pitch. You can get room resonances that artificially create additional pitches, or emphasize overtones, but it shouldn't be that much of an issue with close mics.
@@nibblrrr7124 and THAT is exactly what I'm talking about! The resonance does it but hey...what do I know? Still, it'd be great to have this tested outdoors just for Pete's sake. I may want to order the device so with what I've seen so far I wouldn't trust my room to be good for this.
1:40 That bag of candy is nostalgic because over the summer our school actually boosted enough money for a SUPER nice sound system for us pit percussion, and the candy was one of the first things we saw lmao
I would think that the overtones and sympathetic vibrations from other drums would greatly interfere with the device's ability to properly register the singular frequency you're aiming for. I use a DrumDial for my drum set which measures tension on the head near each lug. While this doesn't specifically help with determining a specific pitch, it helps ensure even tension which allows for me to better dial-in on the intervals between the drums.
I used to use a DrumDial and it gets you VERY close for sure but the issue I always had with mine is that every drumhead has differing manufacturers' tolerances that keep the head from being tuned exactly the same way every time. It got close but at the end of the day, I'd still have to tune by ear to get the final tune. TuneBot helps a lot but the quickest method is still just tuning by ear.
Hey there! I work MIT for the Blue Man Group in Chicago and use the tune bot almost everyday. At 13:11, you noted that the bot was giving you the same note/hz as the previous drum. This will happen quite commonly with the bot whenever drums are very close together. More often than not it will pick up the resonance/vibrations of the neighboring shell/head and get confused. The fix for this problem is to remove the bot from the rim and either A) Move the bot above the head about 6"-12", or B) Move the bot directly under the shell to encapsulate (only works with single head drums). When it comes to the bot not giving a consistent answer, just tap the head a bunch instead of doing 1 tap and waiting for the resonance to dissipate. Works a bit like a tap metronome and you just take the average. Usually it'll lean more towards 1 hz than any other. (PS - this strat works really well with high pitched drums like spocks. You just have to keep hitting it and you'll want to get very sharp with your hits (sharp>hard/upstroke>downstroke)). Love these tuners a lot and I'm happy to see it works well with marching equipment! Thanks for this video!
12:33 I'm hearing a G on the snare. I'd have to look at a spectrum analyzer to determine the octave. Disengaging the snare wires could help make the pitch clearer. Another trick is to play a recording of it back at half the speed (twice the speed for bass notes).
11:00 it’s a bit difficult to configure but to easily say….it’s a FminorMajor7/C# or technical terms C#Major7(#9, b13) Way I got it was get the root note C# and get the rest of the notes C#1=Root E2= sharp 9 G#2=Fifth C3= seventh F3=Third A3= flat thirteenth
@@phenylmusic In the context of a C#min chord, the 7 would be a B natural, but we have a C natural so It would be a #7. a b11 is most certainly a thing for the same reason a 13 is, it's an upper structure, and in this case that F natural is the flat 4 of the chord up an octave so it's the flat 11. Good call on the 13 though, I have no clue where I got that sharp from.
@@CalemDestinyMus i think youre looking at it from a minor scale perspective but the thing is even thought its a minor chord you have to look at it from a major scale perspective, meaning you have b3 and b7 normally the rest can be explained by this
I would love to see a video specifically about snare tuning, I'm entering year 2 of drumline instruction and I'm terrible at tuning marching snares and break a lot of falams snare side heads
Tunebot rules. Every drummer should have one; especially if you have a home recording studio. I found toms tuned to certain notes cut through mixes much better and require very little processing. For example, my 12, 14 and 16 are tuned to 2nd octave C, G and D. I tried different notes and intervals, but when I use that tuning, the toms really stand out in guitar heavy mixes.
The reason you were having inconsistent readings and some which said a couple drums were the same, were because the drums were too close together. One drum would make the other resonate and the Drumbot hears both (or several)
This is an interesting experiment. The comparison of the octa-tenors to the full size set was most revealing to me; the shell of a drum has a big influence on the pitch of the drum. I have so many more thoughts about this (harmonics, top/bottom head combos, shell/head combos). BTW : check the bearing edge on that top bass when you change heads next time. If it’s not the drum head pulling from its hoop (failing to maintain pitch); check the bearing edge (I’ve had a bearing edge fail on me before.)
11:04 Well it’s kinda like a C# minor and F major poly-chord (FM/C#m), but if you want it to be one giant chord it’s technically an F major 7 with #9 and b13 (FM7 #9 b13). Yes I’m sad that I took the time to figure that out too.
My TuneBot purchasing decision went like this: Thumbnail photo - Buying it! 👍🏼 Video at 12:30 - Doesn’t work for Snare. Not buying it. 😐 Having issues with tuning a WhiteMax batter on a Pearl FFX. Perhaps I’m a bit too meticulous? I used Virtuoso (iPhone piano app) for my tenors and the snare side Falams XT.
C13(#13#15) with the way its written, but I'd normally write something like that out as C7b9 add 13 (assuming the A# would be written as a Bb, and the C# as a Db for those jazzy upper extensions, even though the A# and C# are an octave above the triad and should be listed as the #13 and #15 respectively)
13:06 I don't claim to have perfect pitch, but the Tunebot was right. The second tom was a bit flat, but otherwise sounded almost the same. This is where I would suggest you get creative. Tune one up to G# or tune one down to Gb...
When tuning with the Tune Bot, you should use a towel to mute all the other heads in the room so you can get the most accurate reading. Also, the room's acoustics could affect the reading quite a bit. I assume the Tune Bot would get better readings in a room with acoustic treatment.
One thing that could also perhaps help with the tuning would be a just the head size to the head size of the drum because that should also help with finding the pitches as well
you and rdavidr should take a marching snare, tune it down, take a set of tenors apart, take a marching bass drum and finally, take some marching band cymbals and take the straps off, to make a drum set out of marching band stuff
13:02 -I'd say those are actually the same note, with the first a bit sharp and the second a bit flat, just like the tuner says.- _[EDIT: on re-listening, I now hear an F and a D.]_ Since they're close together and even physically connected, hitting one leads the other one to resonate as well, but the effect doesn't seem to work equally strong in both directions, perhaps leading to a different sound? _[EDIT: I'm pretty sure sympathetic vibration from the adjacent drum adds to the confusion.]_ You could try dampening all other drums (wallet/pack of tissues/towel...) except the one you're tuning, though obviously that's a bit of a pain. Another idea would be lightly put a finger on the rim to dampen the overtones, as they can be louder/more prominent than the fundamental sometimes, which may throw off the tuner. Also, even if they're tuned to the same pitch, if they're different builds/sizes/head tension/woods..., they still will have a different timbre with different overtones being emphasized more or less (same reason middle C sounds different on e.g. a trumpet and a clarinet).
I’m guessing it’s either a limitation of the algorithm it uses to determine the note OR a limitation of the sensor they used as far as the higher frequencies that drummers don’t normally encounter in standard drum kits.
One of the problems at the tenors could be mechanical coupling between the drums. Every drum head resonates when you hit one of the drums. To the ear it might not be recognizable but the measurement maybe has a different opinion on which note was the loudest. Try to cover the drums which are not being tuned with a blanket or something, maybe that helps.
I know someone probably already did it but the notes on that drumset make up a Db minMAJ7 flat 13 or F MAJ second inversion /Db min there might be a better way to describe it though
I've noticed on my tunebot that if you slightly touch the middle of the head to mute the overtones on the drum (not enough to tighten the head therefore changing the pitch), the bot becomes more accurate when hitting around the lugs.
I would probably call it Dbmaj7#9, as the most basic version of what it could be (you would spell it Db, F, Ab, C, E) but it could be different in context (I didn't include the snare because you never hear the pitch of a snare and it was easier not to include it). Also I think your snare is D4.
I was thinking in terms of orchestration choices - he's got Fmaj7 and F7 on the top of the kit. And an augmented fifth with the kick (2nd inversion)? which for playing rock or blues makes a lot of sense actually.
have to be careful when tuning drums close to each other because it picks up the vibrations from the surrounding drums - which is why it had trouble with tenors
Especially with the last one, you might want to try tuning them in isolation. The resonance of all of the last drums, is likely to have carried over as you were testing... just a thought... That might explain differently tuned drums registering the same pitch. It is a microphone, so with many drums, if some were in harmony, you would get "noise" when trying to do your tuning.
tl;dr you would likely get more accurate results if you removed the drums and tuned them individually and then rebuilt the kit(I know it's a lot of work, but likely yields more accurate results. Same thing goes for the bass drums etc.(tune them alone in a room without the other drums...)
Ok watching the video I’m curious if you were able to figure out the high and low frequency modes. The tune bot according to instructions can only go up to 450Hz and you gotta be in the high frequency range.
Your drumset is a... C# min add (b8,b11,b13) I’m sure there’s a better name but looking at the components, the C#minor triad in the bottom stands out to me so I called everything else a compound interval of that, no 7 so it has to be an add chord in that case. Also your spocks on the quads sound like an f# in the lower, and a b in the higher. Also if you want the snare note turn the snares off
My High School Had issues with those bass heads, our top two basses maxed out the heads I think its because of the foam on the inside Also the chord was a c# minor major 7 chord with a b11 and an added b13... maybe
*Video 23* of Loopy Grandma asking Lil' Peanut dressed as a surfer dude to play -Wipe Out by the Ventures- *Any surfer song* !!! ... Great for another video using the kit!!! And I know you are very creative, so I expect something EPIC! (Wipe Out would cause video to be copywrite claimed! ...
You've got a lot of over/under tones coming off the drums you're not playing for this test. It's very "real world" use and there's nothing wrong with that, but I'm curious if the tuners would work better without the additional drums in there. My general suggestion for tuning marching snares is to find a tone on top heads that you can focus on and tell whether it's flat or sharp. There are so many tones coming out of the high tension head, that I personally can't say it's "this" note when tuning, just that the snare sound matches across the drums.
I just received my Tunebot and start tuning my drum head Evans Hydraulic Blue. How do i set my Tama Stagestar 14in Snare to 196.0Hz/G3, if there is any link how to Tune do share with me, cheers. Thanks
Could post a video about how to tune and tips to fine tuning drums because I’ve been struggling for a while now trying to figure out how to fine tune my drums
So with all the notes you have on your drumset it makes an FMm Augmented/C# chord. Meaning you have an FMm chord with 2 more major steps after the Mm. so the chord youd play without the inversion would be, F, A, C, E, G#, C#, making quite a nasty chord.
*Update* I tried the high frequency setting and still had the same issues with the small drums
It's so strange its brain dies with those higher notes. Thanks for the insight!
@EMCProductions Do you mean the issue with the Tune Bot giving inaccurate readings/ measurements a portion of the time? Or do you mean the issue of the Tunebot's limited Tonal headroom/ range (when you tuned the 8 inch tom Drum Piano you had to do the last four by ear but it was not shown). Those are the two times when you found an issue with tune bot services in this video during the small Drums Segment. I also noticed that During the Bass Drum section you omitted the lug to lug matching in the bass drum segment of the video and skipped to the fundamental pitch to confirm your intervals.
My personal experience with the Tune-Bot for drumset has been pretty positive, really for getting the lugs in tune with themselves. I've never had a great ear for cutting through the overtones during lug tapping so this helps a lot for me. I also have a DrumDial and this works a lot better.
Don’t “cut through the overotones”. Use the overtones to fine tune.
I own a Tune Bot. To get the higher ranges, hold the blue FILT button for 3 seconds. "Hi Range" will appear in the screen.
Per manual:
Tuning Range: 30 - 400 Hz, 1C - 4G#
Hi Range: 30 - 450 Hz, 1C - 4A
it seems strange to me that they have a special high range mode that gives you a whole extra *one* semitone.
@@ItsABOUTflamTIME True. It's not that much more range, Lol
That’s only a half step, doesn’t seem like that would be very helpful
@@ItsABOUTflamTIME if I had to guess, since it's a higher pitch, the Tunebot probably adds a high pass filter to cut out any unneeded low frequencies it's picking up to make the reading more accurate.
Good to know. I am just getting to know my tune bot.
the drumset is tuned to E+(b9/11)/C# or alternatively a F/C#min polychord
The two sets of tenors are somewhat tuned to the F# major pentatonic scale, one found across many cultures around the globe.
This forms an F#6/9 chord
nice
your snare is a G/G# the pitch is a little bit unclear
the megatenors form a C7(b9/13) chord, lines up well with the harmonic series
Steven Sassafras has the most precisely tuned flub drum ever. He retunes between every note. Checkmate snared drummers.
The thing is, all drums have multiple "pitches", as in multiple frequencies resonating due to different things making noise. On a drum with two heads, the top head and bottom head both resonate, and the shell resonates. But if you tune both heads to the same pitch, you won't always get that pitch from the drum overall. In addition, the stick hitting the drum head produces a pitch (which is likely what was confusing your tune bot at the upper registers since stick noise is pretty high). I believe there is a feature on it to recognize higher pitches, but still, knowing the physics behind it is important. On a snare drum, when you tune the top and bottom head to different pitches because they're at different thicknesses, you'll get an overall pitch change, so when tuning drums, you may want to check the individual heads by dampening them, checking the pitch, and then checking the pitch of the drum overall. For example, when I tune my snare, my bottom head sits around F#, the top sets around C#, and the drum overall resonates around an A.
Of course, you could also opt to not use tune bots or other devices like this and trust your ears to tell you what's good. As you figured out with the top bass, sometimes a drum can't stick around the pitch you want it to even though it could in the past. That can be due to the heads stretching and aging, or the effect of humidity and temperature on the drums.
I generally don't use devices like this, instead I feel for tension, pitch-match the lugs to each orher and tune to nice intervals. I have perfect pitch so I have a leg up and know where I like my drums to be generally, but I think its important for people to develop their ears and trust them to know what their drums should sound like. Bob Gatzen and Bill Bachman have taught me most everything I need to know about tuning, the rest comes from experience doing it.
Great content as always dude, keep it up!
I have one...isolating the drum you are trying to tune helps. Doing so might kill any resonance from other drums which might throw the tune off a bit. Plus if you hold one of the buttons for 3 seconds...which button is different for every model..you can tune for higher pitched drums.
I think that if you'd use the tune bot outdoors, you'd get much better and quicker accuracy. The acoustics of the room probably sends the sound out as say a C# and comes immediately back around to the bot as an F. Try it outside brother and do a video to show if there's any difference in accuracy.
The acoustics of the room can't change the note of the drum like that. And when you have a mic so close to a drum, the room sound hardly matters.
@@ItsABOUTflamTIME I'd also be surprised if that changed the pitch. You can get room resonances that artificially create additional pitches, or emphasize overtones, but it shouldn't be that much of an issue with close mics.
@@nibblrrr7124 and THAT is exactly what I'm talking about! The resonance does it but hey...what do I know? Still, it'd be great to have this tested outdoors just for Pete's sake. I may want to order the device so with what I've seen so far I wouldn't trust my room to be good for this.
1:40 That bag of candy is nostalgic because over the summer our school actually boosted enough money for a SUPER nice sound system for us pit percussion, and the candy was one of the first things we saw lmao
I would think that the overtones and sympathetic vibrations from other drums would greatly interfere with the device's ability to properly register the singular frequency you're aiming for.
I use a DrumDial for my drum set which measures tension on the head near each lug. While this doesn't specifically help with determining a specific pitch, it helps ensure even tension which allows for me to better dial-in on the intervals between the drums.
for a company named overtone labs they should really not have as much problem with this
I used to use a DrumDial and it gets you VERY close for sure but the issue I always had with mine is that every drumhead has differing manufacturers' tolerances that keep the head from being tuned exactly the same way every time. It got close but at the end of the day, I'd still have to tune by ear to get the final tune. TuneBot helps a lot but the quickest method is still just tuning by ear.
Hey there! I work MIT for the Blue Man Group in Chicago and use the tune bot almost everyday.
At 13:11, you noted that the bot was giving you the same note/hz as the previous drum. This will happen quite commonly with the bot whenever drums are very close together. More often than not it will pick up the resonance/vibrations of the neighboring shell/head and get confused. The fix for this problem is to remove the bot from the rim and either A) Move the bot above the head about 6"-12", or B) Move the bot directly under the shell to encapsulate (only works with single head drums).
When it comes to the bot not giving a consistent answer, just tap the head a bunch instead of doing 1 tap and waiting for the resonance to dissipate. Works a bit like a tap metronome and you just take the average. Usually it'll lean more towards 1 hz than any other. (PS - this strat works really well with high pitched drums like spocks. You just have to keep hitting it and you'll want to get very sharp with your hits (sharp>hard/upstroke>downstroke)).
Love these tuners a lot and I'm happy to see it works well with marching equipment! Thanks for this video!
12:33 I'm hearing a G on the snare. I'd have to look at a spectrum analyzer to determine the octave.
Disengaging the snare wires could help make the pitch clearer. Another trick is to play a recording of it back at half the speed (twice the speed for bass notes).
Yeah that's what I got too
The unidentified candy was probably a root beer barrel! Yummy! (You made me finally open my candy. ... I had smarties in mine, too! ... no fireball)
11:00 it’s a bit difficult to configure but to easily say….it’s a FminorMajor7/C# or technical terms C#Major7(#9, b13)
Way I got it was get the root note C# and get the rest of the notes
C#1=Root
E2= sharp 9
G#2=Fifth
C3= seventh
F3=Third
A3= flat thirteenth
Happy Birthday Eric!!!!! Hope you continue to have success with your channel!
11:06 I’d consider it an Fmaj/C#min, but it could also be thought of as a C#min(add#7,b11,#13)
c#mmaj7b13add3
its not a #7 its a maj7, there is no such thing as a b11 that would just be a 3, and its a b13 not a #13
@@phenylmusic In the context of a C#min chord, the 7 would be a B natural, but we have a C natural so It would be a #7. a b11 is most certainly a thing for the same reason a 13 is, it's an upper structure, and in this case that F natural is the flat 4 of the chord up an octave so it's the flat 11. Good call on the 13 though, I have no clue where I got that sharp from.
@@CalemDestinyMus i think youre looking at it from a minor scale perspective but the thing is even thought its a minor chord you have to look at it from a major scale perspective, meaning you have b3 and b7 normally
the rest can be explained by this
Perfect pitch boi here: If I had to put 12:37 at a pitch I'd say it's a G.
perfect pitch here. The marching snare seems to be tuned to roughly a G4. interestingly, a rimshot seems to be a Bb4, a minor third above
I would love to see a video specifically about snare tuning, I'm entering year 2 of drumline instruction and I'm terrible at tuning marching snares and break a lot of falams snare side heads
Just can't get over how cool the spockinspiel is and how I want one. lol!
Tunebot rules. Every drummer should have one; especially if you have a home recording studio. I found toms tuned to certain notes cut through mixes much better and require very little processing. For example, my 12, 14 and 16 are tuned to 2nd octave C, G and D. I tried different notes and intervals, but when I use that tuning, the toms really stand out in guitar heavy mixes.
The reason you were having inconsistent readings and some which said a couple drums were the same, were because the drums were too close together. One drum would make the other resonate and the Drumbot hears both (or several)
This is an interesting experiment. The comparison of the octa-tenors to the full size set was most revealing to me; the shell of a drum has a big influence on the pitch of the drum.
I have so many more thoughts about this (harmonics, top/bottom head combos, shell/head combos). BTW : check the bearing edge on that top bass when you change heads next time. If it’s not the drum head pulling from its hoop (failing to maintain pitch); check the bearing edge (I’ve had a bearing edge fail on me before.)
11:04
Well it’s kinda like a C# minor and F major poly-chord (FM/C#m), but if you want it to be one giant chord it’s technically an F major 7 with #9 and b13 (FM7 #9 b13).
Yes I’m sad that I took the time to figure that out too.
EMC, I sent you my band homework!
Happy Birthday EMC! cool to share a birthday
5:37 YOO LETS GOO
My TuneBot purchasing decision went like this: Thumbnail photo - Buying it! 👍🏼 Video at 12:30 - Doesn’t work for Snare. Not buying it. 😐
Having issues with tuning a WhiteMax batter on a Pearl FFX. Perhaps I’m a bit too meticulous?
I used Virtuoso (iPhone piano app) for my tenors and the snare side Falams XT.
C13(#13#15) with the way its written, but I'd normally write something like that out as C7b9 add 13 (assuming the A# would be written as a Bb, and the C# as a Db for those jazzy upper extensions, even though the A# and C# are an octave above the triad and should be listed as the #13 and #15 respectively)
13:06 I don't claim to have perfect pitch, but the Tunebot was right. The second tom was a bit flat, but otherwise sounded almost the same. This is where I would suggest you get creative. Tune one up to G# or tune one down to Gb...
13:07 the first one was G 3/4 Sharp or Ab Half Flat and the second one was G Half Flat
Happy Birthday, Eric! 🎂🎈🎁
When tuning with the Tune Bot, you should use a towel to mute all the other heads in the room so you can get the most accurate reading. Also, the room's acoustics could affect the reading quite a bit. I assume the Tune Bot would get better readings in a room with acoustic treatment.
One thing that could also perhaps help with the tuning would be a just the head size to the head size of the drum because that should also help with finding the pitches as well
My chord for your drum set going in order from bottom to top is an E augmented addb9 add11 over C#. Have fun jazz composers
13:28 i believe it is a C major add #8, 12,#12
Love the Daria poster! 👁️
13:32 C6#13#15
you and rdavidr should take a marching snare, tune it down, take a set of tenors apart, take a marching bass drum and finally, take some marching band cymbals and take the straps off, to make a drum set out of marching band stuff
The big tenor drum one is a C7(b9 13) which unlike the drum kit is like an actual chord which is cool
I’m a tune bot believer. Money well spent.
🤣 omg the spockenspiel, SO GOOD
4:00 you should try tuning a piano or a guitar that has a floyd rose tremolo system
13:02 -I'd say those are actually the same note, with the first a bit sharp and the second a bit flat, just like the tuner says.- _[EDIT: on re-listening, I now hear an F and a D.]_ Since they're close together and even physically connected, hitting one leads the other one to resonate as well, but the effect doesn't seem to work equally strong in both directions, perhaps leading to a different sound? _[EDIT: I'm pretty sure sympathetic vibration from the adjacent drum adds to the confusion.]_
You could try dampening all other drums (wallet/pack of tissues/towel...) except the one you're tuning, though obviously that's a bit of a pain. Another idea would be lightly put a finger on the rim to dampen the overtones, as they can be louder/more prominent than the fundamental sometimes, which may throw off the tuner.
Also, even if they're tuned to the same pitch, if they're different builds/sizes/head tension/woods..., they still will have a different timbre with different overtones being emphasized more or less (same reason middle C sounds different on e.g. a trumpet and a clarinet).
Video 22 of commenting until EMC makes a front ensemble out of spocks
I’m guessing it’s either a limitation of the algorithm it uses to determine the note OR a limitation of the sensor they used as far as the higher frequencies that drummers don’t normally encounter in standard drum kits.
2:00 'cause sock is looking at meeee
Hmm 🤔 12 days ago? Alright cool. I just got my tune bot studio in the mail a few days ago so it’s nice to see a recent video.
One of the problems at the tenors could be mechanical coupling between the drums. Every drum head resonates when you hit one of the drums. To the ear it might not be recognizable but the measurement maybe has a different opinion on which note was the loudest. Try to cover the drums which are not being tuned with a blanket or something, maybe that helps.
The snare was tuned to C#
The chord that the drum set is tuned to is a C#maj7(#9,b13)
And the mega tenors are tuned to a C7(b9)
He literally tuned his lower basses into a power chord. man this shit is metal af
The best chord names I could come up with was:
C#m(maj7,b11,b13) for the drum set, and
C7(b9,13) for the mega-tenors
Very jazzy
I am coveting your Spockenspiel. Going to have to make that happen for myself.
I recently played timpani with our county honor band and I can tune pretty accurately with a pitch pipe and my ears
I know someone probably already did it but the notes on that drumset make up a Db minMAJ7 flat 13 or F MAJ second inversion /Db min
there might be a better way to describe it though
my marching band instructer tunes my 14 inch bass drum to an e4 and ive heard cracking when he tunes it
alternative title: EMC learns why drum sets have different sized drums
I've noticed on my tunebot that if you slightly touch the middle of the head to mute the overtones on the drum (not enough to tighten the head therefore changing the pitch), the bot becomes more accurate when hitting around the lugs.
they were basically the same note on the Xtreme tenors... but the one was a littttttle more flat than it said
I would probably call it Dbmaj7#9, as the most basic version of what it could be (you would spell it Db, F, Ab, C, E) but it could be different in context (I didn't include the snare because you never hear the pitch of a snare and it was easier not to include it). Also I think your snare is D4.
I was thinking in terms of orchestration choices - he's got Fmaj7 and F7 on the top of the kit. And an augmented fifth with the kick (2nd inversion)? which for playing rock or blues makes a lot of sense actually.
doesn't quite feel like it the E is lower than the F, so for me it is more of a minor quality if C#/Db is the root
The tenor chord is a CMm7#9 with a 6 thrown in
13:37 A# diminished with a major 7 and an added major 3
have to be careful when tuning drums close to each other because it picks up the vibrations from the surrounding drums - which is why it had trouble with tenors
Especially with the last one, you might want to try tuning them in isolation. The resonance of all of the last drums, is likely to have carried over as you were testing... just a thought... That might explain differently tuned drums registering the same pitch. It is a microphone, so with many drums, if some were in harmony, you would get "noise" when trying to do your tuning.
tl;dr you would likely get more accurate results if you removed the drums and tuned them individually and then rebuilt the kit(I know it's a lot of work, but likely yields more accurate results. Same thing goes for the bass drums etc.(tune them alone in a room without the other drums...)
You should see if a clip on guitar tuner would work for drums
that marching snare was tuned to popcorn.. i don't think it is meant to be a note ... is is somewhere between popcorn and sped up machine gun
The "I don't know what that is,"piece of candy was a root beer barrel.
Ok watching the video I’m curious if you were able to figure out the high and low frequency modes. The tune bot according to instructions can only go up to 450Hz and you gotta be in the high frequency range.
Your drumset is a...
C# min add (b8,b11,b13)
I’m sure there’s a better name but looking at the components, the C#minor triad in the bottom stands out to me so I called everything else a compound interval of that, no 7 so it has to be an add chord in that case.
Also your spocks on the quads sound like an f# in the lower, and a b in the higher.
Also if you want the snare note turn the snares off
The drumset chord is basically just an F major over c# minor polychord
My High School Had issues with those bass heads, our top two basses maxed out the heads I think its because of the foam on the inside
Also the chord was a c# minor major 7 chord with a b11 and an added b13... maybe
On the ultimate tenors it’s probably the overtones the tuner is hearing so it’s probably interpreting it as the base
Hi Emc!
The mega tenors are a C Major b9 sus6 #13 or something like that lol
great video, you are cool. I hate tuning drums, but when I do so I prefer to use a drone.
The drum set chord is C#minor-Major7, add b11, b13.
Also, your tenors are tuned to the first four notes of the F# major pentatonic scale, which makes a large majority of what sounds "good" in melodies.
Would a drum dial be better for the marching snares and tenors for finding a consistent tuning with multiple drums in a line?
The Snare is tuned to a D.
Hey, how can I send you a piece I wrote so you can review it?
*Video 23* of Loopy Grandma asking Lil' Peanut dressed as a surfer dude to play -Wipe Out by the Ventures- *Any surfer song* !!! ... Great for another video using the kit!!! And I know you are very creative, so I expect something EPIC! (Wipe Out would cause video to be copywrite claimed! ...
Based off what I heard, I think your mega tenors make some sort of dominant 7 chord with a sharp 5!
You've got a lot of over/under tones coming off the drums you're not playing for this test. It's very "real world" use and there's nothing wrong with that, but I'm curious if the tuners would work better without the additional drums in there.
My general suggestion for tuning marching snares is to find a tone on top heads that you can focus on and tell whether it's flat or sharp. There are so many tones coming out of the high tension head, that I personally can't say it's "this" note when tuning, just that the snare sound matches across the drums.
The drum set chord is technically a C#maj7#9b13 but it’s not really an actual chord.
drum set chord is C#maj7(#9) add(#5) i believe
2nd inversion F major over C# minor or a C# major and minor with both a 5th and a minor 6.
(didn't bother with the 2nd one)
That drum set chord is some weird cross of diminished 3rd and major third with from F with a major 7
I flubbing love your shirt
Awesome
The marching snare sounds like G#
I just received my Tunebot and start tuning my drum head Evans Hydraulic Blue. How do i set my Tama Stagestar 14in Snare to 196.0Hz/G3, if there is any link how to Tune do share with me, cheers. Thanks
Could post a video about how to tune and tips to fine tuning drums because I’ve been struggling for a while now trying to figure out how to fine tune my drums
Video #1 of commenting until EMC makes a set of tenors using snares.
Pro tip:
Flatten bass 2 by 14 cents to get a just intonated major 3rd
I play drum set vs band drums but the first instrument with all the toms sounded SUPER good and in tune to me. My guess for the snare is G?
I also got a G
So with all the notes you have on your drumset it makes an FMm Augmented/C# chord. Meaning you have an FMm chord with 2 more major steps after the Mm. so the chord youd play without the inversion would be, F, A, C, E, G#, C#, making quite a nasty chord.
the snare was a fairly sharp g flat
Did you try the bottom and marching snare if it registered the tune-bot
I think I would call it an F/C#m(maj7) polychord.
Video 1 of getting Eric to play a 20 minute chicken solo