Guys you are awesome 😎. It really helps me to understand what is going on with plastics and drums. I using tunebot studio for 8 months but never really develope my ears. Actually your video is listening as a podcast so great😂
Great question! If you’re a house tech then I recommend spending everyday trying to practice it a little bit. The more you do it the faster you will develop an ear for it. If you aren’t ask to borrow a friends drum or buy a cheap one to learn how it works. Never ask to tune a drummers kit if you aren’t sure you can improve a sound/fix a problem for sure or you end up making a fool of yourself and it’s not a good way to steward that relationship. The goal is to serve the drummer and help them sound their best.
Hi, I don’t do anything like that. I don’t have time in live sound to get that granular. For bass mic and Di I like to take the Di and distort it, and use 175 and below on the mic. I flip the phase to get what I want the mic to add. It’ll either add subs or it’ll add punch to the Di.
@@thepowerplaceproduction cool! Thanks for the quick response. I’ve been looking into purchasing either the classic maple or the legacy mahogany. From a live and studio standpoint, does the classic maple handle those jobs well? Also if you have experience with the mahogany kit, could I hear your thoughts on that?
Classic maple always sound good to me. Especially with a black beauty snare. It can do pretty much anything you need it to. The mahogany kits are a sweet tone but it doesn’t always work. It’s great for striped down sounding rock stuff where you want it really dry. Live and Studio I prefer the maple.
George of the jungle. Will never forget this advice. Thanks!
Guys you are awesome 😎. It really helps me to understand what is going on with plastics and drums. I using tunebot studio for 8 months but never really develope my ears. Actually your video is listening as a podcast so great😂
You are amazing. I’ve never seen someone explain drum tuning as well as you. Talk about sincere and empathy. Thanks for the great video and help.
To me the floor tom sounds higher?
Awesome video, loved this one and the black beauty tuning video! Question, how does a non drummer get into teching drums? Lol
Great question! If you’re a house tech then I recommend spending everyday trying to practice it a little bit. The more you do it the faster you will develop an ear for it. If you aren’t ask to borrow a friends drum or buy a cheap one to learn how it works. Never ask to tune a drummers kit if you aren’t sure you can improve a sound/fix a problem for sure or you end up making a fool of yourself and it’s not a good way to steward that relationship. The goal is to serve the drummer and help them sound their best.
This helped me a lot. Thank you. Do you have a tutorial on micro drum phases ( MIC BASS/di bass ) etc.. with the wave inphase plugins ?
Hi, I don’t do anything like that. I don’t have time in live sound to get that granular. For bass mic and Di I like to take the Di and distort it, and use 175 and below on the mic. I flip the phase to get what I want the mic to add. It’ll either add subs or it’ll add punch to the Di.
Great tutorial!
What Ludwig kit is that?
Thanks! Classic Maple Pro Beat 24 I think. It’s one of my favorites! Always sounds great when it’s in tune.
@@thepowerplaceproduction cool! Thanks for the quick response. I’ve been looking into purchasing either the classic maple or the legacy mahogany. From a live and studio standpoint, does the classic maple handle those jobs well? Also if you have experience with the mahogany kit, could I hear your thoughts on that?
Classic maple always sound good to me. Especially with a black beauty snare. It can do pretty much anything you need it to. The mahogany kits are a sweet tone but it doesn’t always work. It’s great for striped down sounding rock stuff where you want it really dry. Live and Studio I prefer the maple.
@@thepowerplaceproduction awesome thanks for the feedback, I appreciate it!