Thanks to Warby Parker for sponsoring this video! Visit warbyparker.com/rdr to try on 5 pairs of glasses at home for FREE! Home Try-Ons are only offered in the US.
Bro...... NO. Just Noooooo! Warby Parker??? Spend the few extra bucks and go to to an Optician. For instance, I would've NEVER let you walk out of my office without the anti-relective coating on your lenses. ESPECIALLY if you're gonna be on camera!!
I use the mesh head as resonant trick, but it’s cos I use the mesh heads for when I’m practicing at home and have clear heads for gigs, so just a matter of turning toms upside down!
You ever seen the marketing poster they made thats nine squares of different torture tests? I just remember using it as a hammer, dropping from like 50 ft onto hard floor and submerged in a pitcher of beer and still worked after that haha.
I feel like someone ether lit that mic, froze it or dropped in water and recorded a song with it.. At least that’s what I’ve heard once.. This thing can take a beating and stand the rest of time.
I was recording once in a buddy's basement "studio" but we forgot to bring the subkick to properly mic the bass drum so we lowered a mic in through the hole for the tom stands and taped the cable for the mic so that it was suspended in the center of the drum. It turned out to be one of the best sounding kick drums I've heard
The microphone hack was hilarious. One hack I've tried with some success is waxing the unfinished edges of wood drums with good paste wax intended for furniture. I polished the edges to a fairly high shine before I put the heads on. Many years ago, I also used (get ready) WD-40 on the edges of metal snares, to help the head slide on the edge while it was tensioned. I just wiped the edge with a cloth soaked in WD-40 before installing it to give it a slight amount of that substance. Seemed to help, to be honest. I got the idea from the need to lubricate large sheets of metal when forming it on a die. The best/worst (i.e., hilarious crazy thought but works, hilarious crazy thought and doesn't work) hack I can recall was the suggestion to line the inside of a snare with maxi-pads to quell ring (you may have tried that already), from back in the "how much more dead can we make a drum sound?" 70's. Surprised shag carpet as a snare liner wasn't used then, instead.
Thanks for sharing! The bass drum / mic beater is hilariously ridiculous, or ridiculously hilarious! I have a hack for the overstretched snare side head: Take another old trashed head, and cut the Mylar completely off and throw away. Use the rim from the old head to place between the current head and the rim to create a spacer which allows about 1/4” additional tightening potential for the head.
On the V-Belt in a steel shell hack, years ago I picked up a Ludwig Hammered Bronze 6.5x14 snare in a pawn shop. Only had one die-cast hoop. Brought it home and put a new set of die-cast hoops on it and it had a lot of ring. I also had a new set of 30 ply maple hoops in my shop. Put them on the snare and I loved the sound as well as the looks. To date, those hoops are still on that snare. It has a nice warm tone to it with just enough ring to it.
Hi David, I think I discovered a good bass drum hack to make it sound clicky/Electronic.depends on the size.Use a loose bass drum head,Or any one ply batter,That’s at least 3 inches undersized.Take two coins preferably quarters.tape them to the batter outside of the hack,Where the beaters impact. Then take the “prepared” head and it should rest inside the clamp on the hoop bottom.the top of the resting head will fall forward.Then tape just the 12oclock position.it’s ready.The coins should be hitting indirectly from inside that patch. Thanks
@@liamfitzdrums Ha! No bubbles bursted here.I know that fact.Mine is slightly different.Sorry for not being clear.Vinnie taped his with the coins facing the beaters directly.With the possibility of the beaters sticking to the tape as it heats up from playing.Mine is a hack that can be placed against the head or quickly removed for the booming regular tone.My coins are hitting from the underside of the head/Hack
Great to see the old Royal Star mentioned. I have a Royal Star kit (possibly early 1960s ‘oil-slick’ blue) with all the original hardware AND skins! I’ve had it since 1987, and absolutely love it. I use modern hardware and skins (though I still use hydro-heads, which are well out of fashion and getting harder to find replacements) and the original stuff is ‘protected’ in old gear bags.
Hi David, I'm not too sure where I got this hack from but putting cotton balls in all of my toms really helped to get rid of overtones and that's the only sort of mufling I use now!
You know the trick to fatten a snare by putting an upside down head on it? Try it on a floor tom, it can sound pretty good and resonates well if the batter head is tuned a little low
When it comes to the silicone filled bearing edge hack, Tama actually makes a snare that way (the Soul Toul signature model). I think it's JDM exclusive
alright, david, we are going to need you to test every mic you have in every position on that beater you can imagine. clearly the problem here was not the idea but it was your execution. Sincerely, your entire audience without any exceptions.
Wouldn't it make more sense if the mic was stationary? If it were in a fixed position and you struck it with a beater that would make a lot more sense to me. Iv watched a guy play a kick mic with a felt beater and a few socks wrapped around the mic for padding. It actually worked pretty well.. it was consistent and had low frequency, what more do you need? Seems like phasing was a big issue considering he was literally moving the mic every half second. Besides also getting the wobble and spring sound of the pedal.
David, David, David I suspect you might be just a tad young to know about the original reason for fan belts & silicone in flanges & beards. It wasn't dampening, it was directing the air column inside the drum over the entire bottom head. Hopefully increasing the sensitivity. The dampening factor was just an unexpected benefit. We would epoxy the fan belts in place. It was most common to just epoxy a fan belt in the flange that made the bottom bearing edge. Of course people started filling the bead & the top flange as well & that's probably when the dampening factor started to get noticed.
6:10 my drumset that i play shows with does not have reso heads on the toms. i have the rims on however so the bearing edge is safe. i mic up the toms from the bottom and they sound even better they did when i still had resos and would mic from the top. surprisingly a great thing to do to your kit for shows!
I used alien gel tape for my muffling! You can get a roll of it off Amazon or Lowes or about $10. Its shock resistant, leaves no residue when you take it off, and you can wash it and reuse it!
My son got a pack of superhero window decals that worked perfectly for muffle gel. Captain America was always on my snare and the hulk on the floor tom
@@freelance_commie close. They were similar to moongel but opaque. They also seemed higher quality; didn’t get dirty as easily and didn’t bleed color into coated drum heads. I wish I knew what brand they were, or where to get more, but it was something my son got for Christmas years ago and I sort of stole them lol
I use a old couch cushion cut to a 22" circle pushed against the head...Mainly to reduce the volume but it sounds great..I use a 20 lug bass drum with a Natal double bass pedal..thanks for your videos
practical twist on the mic trick: Check out the kick sound Tejas, by ZZ Top. Supposedly the mic slipped and was resting on the head during recording, but it ended up sounding great.
I like that silent stroke reso head trick a lot. Seems to really reign in those toms and make them sound more controlled. Probably wouldn't need a gate for them live. Also, won't have to worry about a big PA system causing any sort of floor tom sympathetic feedback resonance, which I have run in to in the past with a super resonant floor tom. I wonder if it works on a snare drum to make it not so damn loud lol. Sometimes my band plays some places with really challenging acoustics, and the snare just clatters around in there. Every band that plays there has that problem, not just us, but that doesn't mean that I'm not interested in finding a solution lol.
The Mic on the kick pedal is definitely an interesting hack. Wonder how it would sound if you had a small towel taped to the head to absorb some of the impact. I know it not practical at all but is an interesting concept.
How you need to try smaller bike tubes for the snare and toms. Maybe try something like half an old shirt across the tube when you pump it up. Maybe wrap around the tube and staple the cloth back on to itself, then do again on the opposite side.
A small woven rug draped on a kick makes a very lovely dampening effect. (And also allows you to place things like a wallet or keys on your kick without fear of them falling off.)
I’ve been doing this with a few blankets. Just didn’t have anywhere to put them! But was wondering if it’s good for the sound to bleed less from the kick into other mics maybe.
I once had to mic a kick where this dude had a chunk of 2x4 glued (i think it was glued) to his kick so that his wood beaters would smack it. You know 'to get that good attack'. Yeah. It was ... ooof.
The "mic as a beater" trick turned your kick sound into "Default crappy keyboard MIDI kick" instantly. I am curious as to what a cheap contact mic attached to either the beater or the beater pad would sound like though. Although now I've written it down, it does just sound like I'm reinventing a drum trigger
Thank you for trying the bike tire! Really tempted to try it now on a kit that never leaves a rehearsal space that doubles as an engineer's smaller studio. Sounded good to me! Glad you enjoy Sylvia's book as much as many others have!
I've been thinking about trying mesh heads on the resonant side of my toms and kick. Mostly so I can have a quiet practice kit and loud rehearsal/gigging kit with just one kit (not a lot of space at mine, so I can't have multiple kits). Just a few slight mods would be needed. But it seems pretty simple... in my head at least. The biggest being adding extra leg brackets to my floor tom and possibly extra spurs on the kick drum. Which isn't much.
Back in the early 70's a few guys used a big pooffy beater directly onto a Shure SM57. Unlike the way you did it - backwards - mount the mic where the head would be.
Bonus benefit with the concert Tom thing is you could try to flip the drums over and you go from a real kit to a practice kit easy! The floor and the kick may be a little wonky though.
Layer some socks over the bass drum beater maybe? For the snare, the easiest option is probably to just own a second snare for practice. Maybe one that doesn't actually have snares.
Thanks for these awesome videos David!! I just had to sell my drum kit. I was building it but by bit and ran into financial issues. These videos help me get by since I can't drum!! Thank you!!
Since silent strokes came out I’ve been hoping someone would try that out. I immediately thought that it would be a great use for playing at regular volumes.
You should try and mic your snare bottom by facing it under the snare parallel to the bottom instead of pointing at it, can sometimes get a much smoother sound
Love your channel keep up the awesome content! Wanted to suggest if you ever get into sampling sounds to a drum module that kick mic sound was very interesting! I think this would give you more control. Happy Holidays!
I made some drum rings out of old drum heads and thair asome.what about mounting a tennis ball 🎾 on a foot pedal beater the threads have to be long enough to tighten up the bolts.
I strongly suggest you try my personal favourite hack, and one I came up with myself (at least as far as I know). Buy a couple of door draft stoppers at the Dollar Store. I suggest 2, one against the batter head and one against the reso (taped in place) inside the shell. I use both and get many compliments on my kick sound. And it’s super cheap, about $6 for two of these bean bag snakes.
And as has been pointed out to me, yes I’m aware that Remo had a similar product out, years ago, that came with Velcro clamps etc. It cost $50…my idea $6 😊
Love this channel but with Heads, em, use coated heads!! both sides, and tune to pitch. Never muffle, including bass drum, with felt strip across on front, with no holes! Tuning!
It seems the problem with the last one was inertia. Maybe try a condenser mic that weighs almost nothing? It will almost certainly need some degree of covering, quite possibly more than its normal wind screen can provide, but perhaps the ball cage of an SM-58 can be added to that without adding a ton of weight.
One of the ideas I came up with in a drum shop, is to get one of those giant water balloons, fill it with water, and put it into a bass drum as muffling. Never got around to it though
An actual decent drum trick for your bass/kick drum For some fast double bass drum notes, if you don’t want to use so much muscle or it’s just so fast that it is physically impossible, and you do not have two bass/kick drums, a technique you can try is that right before you do the double bass drum notes, you slide your foot back in a way so only the front part of your shoe is touching the middle of the pedal, and you quickly slide your foot forward until the whole foot rests on the pedal. It should hit the kick drum twice, and it should be much faster than just brute forcing it.
Thanks to Warby Parker for sponsoring this video! Visit warbyparker.com/rdr
to try on 5 pairs of glasses at home for FREE! Home Try-Ons are only offered in the US.
god your drums sound incredible
Shure SM-58 is a vocal mic, SM-57 is optimized for instruments. 58 has limited frequency response on both high an low ends.
Bro...... NO. Just Noooooo! Warby Parker??? Spend the few extra bucks and go to to an Optician. For instance, I would've NEVER let you walk out of my office without the anti-relective coating on your lenses. ESPECIALLY if you're gonna be on camera!!
Ya know... Apparently piezo sensors can work as contact mics..
Hint hint
Ya know... Apparently piezo sensors can work as contact mics..
Hint hint
Instead of hitting a drum set with sticks, why not hit a microphone set with drums? It's the future.
🤣😁🤘
actually, the youtuber simonthemagpie did this for a video once
My Thought !!! 😂👍
You only need 3 mics no matter the setup
@@tepetti may I ask, what mic configuration?
I use the mesh head as resonant trick, but it’s cos I use the mesh heads for when I’m practicing at home and have clear heads for gigs, so just a matter of turning toms upside down!
big brain moves right there!
@@rdavidr It's been another long day. Thanks for the microphone-beater -based laugh at the end of the vid--I needed that.
David that freeze frame part at 1:43 was so funny it caught me totally off guard
At 2:09 he starts talking perfectly on beat
😂 you're right
Hahahahaha
Observant guy
Yea...
Like he was rapping 😂
Starts spitting fire
I've been meaning to try the mesh resonant thing forever but have just been too lazy/cheap to get around to it, glad to see it kind of works!
The fact that SM57 survived that kinda beating is just a testament to that mics durability!
You ever seen the marketing poster they made thats nine squares of different torture tests? I just remember using it as a hammer, dropping from like 50 ft onto hard floor and submerged in a pitcher of beer and still worked after that haha.
I feel like someone ether lit that mic, froze it or dropped in water and recorded a song with it..
At least that’s what I’ve heard once..
This thing can take a beating and stand the rest of time.
I'll tell you what a 57 doesn't survive, 15 years of snuff spittle...that really cakes it up and assures that no one else will use your mic 😎😎
I was recording once in a buddy's basement "studio" but we forgot to bring the subkick to properly mic the bass drum so we lowered a mic in through the hole for the tom stands and taped the cable for the mic so that it was suspended in the center of the drum. It turned out to be one of the best sounding kick drums I've heard
The microphone hack was hilarious. One hack I've tried with some success is waxing the unfinished edges of wood drums with good paste wax intended for furniture. I polished the edges to a fairly high shine before I put the heads on.
Many years ago, I also used (get ready) WD-40 on the edges of metal snares, to help the head slide on the edge while it was tensioned. I just wiped the edge with a cloth soaked in WD-40 before installing it to give it a slight amount of that substance. Seemed to help, to be honest. I got the idea from the need to lubricate large sheets of metal when forming it on a die.
The best/worst (i.e., hilarious crazy thought but works, hilarious crazy thought and doesn't work) hack I can recall was the suggestion to line the inside of a snare with maxi-pads to quell ring (you may have tried that already), from back in the "how much more dead can we make a drum sound?" 70's. Surprised shag carpet as a snare liner wasn't used then, instead.
Babe wake up the best beard on RUclips posted
Yessir 😍
No I'm tired
stop simpin
Thanks for sharing! The bass drum / mic beater is hilariously ridiculous, or ridiculously hilarious!
I have a hack for the overstretched snare side head: Take another old trashed head, and cut the Mylar completely off and throw away. Use the rim from the old head to place between the current head and the rim to create a spacer which allows about 1/4” additional tightening potential for the head.
On the V-Belt in a steel shell hack, years ago I picked up a Ludwig Hammered Bronze 6.5x14 snare in a pawn shop. Only had one die-cast hoop. Brought it home and put a new set of die-cast hoops on it and it had a lot of ring. I also had a new set of 30 ply maple hoops in my shop. Put them on the snare and I loved the sound as well as the looks. To date, those hoops are still on that snare. It has a nice warm tone to it with just enough ring to it.
Did you use a belt?
@@arheru no, just used the 30ply Maple Hoops.
I didn’t know Jim Root was so good on drums! 😂 🥁 Cool hacks…
he doesn’t even look like him, lmfao.
Hi David, I think I discovered a good bass drum hack to make it sound clicky/Electronic.depends on the size.Use a loose bass drum head,Or any one ply batter,That’s at least 3 inches undersized.Take two coins preferably quarters.tape them to the batter outside of the hack,Where the beaters impact. Then take the “prepared” head and it should rest inside the clamp on the hoop bottom.the top of the resting head will fall forward.Then tape just the 12oclock position.it’s ready.The coins should be hitting indirectly from inside that patch. Thanks
I apologize for bursting your bubble but I'm pretty sure that's exactly what Vinnie Paul was doing on those Pantera albums to get his bass drum sound.
@@liamfitzdrums Ha! No bubbles bursted here.I know that fact.Mine is slightly different.Sorry for not being clear.Vinnie taped his with the coins facing the beaters directly.With the possibility of the beaters sticking to the tape as it heats up from playing.Mine is a hack that can be placed against the head or quickly removed for the booming regular tone.My coins are hitting from the underside of the head/Hack
Great to see the old Royal Star mentioned. I have a Royal Star kit (possibly early 1960s ‘oil-slick’ blue) with all the original hardware AND skins! I’ve had it since 1987, and absolutely love it. I use modern hardware and skins (though I still use hydro-heads, which are well out of fashion and getting harder to find replacements) and the original stuff is ‘protected’ in old gear bags.
Hi David, I'm not too sure where I got this hack from but putting cotton balls in all of my toms really helped to get rid of overtones and that's the only sort of mufling I use now!
I use that too. Old school and works perfectly.
You know the trick to fatten a snare by putting an upside down head on it? Try it on a floor tom, it can sound pretty good and resonates well if the batter head is tuned a little low
The best muffling solution that I've found for the bass drum is a remo muff'l ring and a falam patch.
The mic beater is the funniest thing I've seen in a while.
The two inner tubes actually sounded really punchy, surprisingly good sound honestly.
To be honest with his mics anything will sound good.
When it comes to the silicone filled bearing edge hack, Tama actually makes a snare that way (the Soul Toul signature model). I think it's JDM exclusive
I also saw the other day on Instagram where you put actual corn kernels in a popcorn snare instead of snares. Cant wait to try it! Lol
That's basically a wave drum. Small ones work quite well as snare drums.
alright, david, we are going to need you to test every mic you have in every position on that beater you can imagine. clearly the problem here was not the idea but it was your execution.
Sincerely, your entire audience without any exceptions.
Wouldn't it make more sense if the mic was stationary?
If it were in a fixed position and you struck it with a beater that would make a lot more sense to me.
Iv watched a guy play a kick mic with a felt beater and a few socks wrapped around the mic for padding. It actually worked pretty well.. it was consistent and had low frequency, what more do you need?
Seems like phasing was a big issue considering he was literally moving the mic every half second. Besides also getting the wobble and spring sound of the pedal.
David, David, David I suspect you might be just a tad young to know about the original reason for fan belts & silicone in flanges & beards. It wasn't dampening, it was directing the air column inside the drum over the entire bottom head. Hopefully increasing the sensitivity. The dampening factor was just an unexpected benefit. We would epoxy the fan belts in place. It was most common to just epoxy a fan belt in the flange that made the bottom bearing edge. Of course people started filling the bead & the top flange as well & that's probably when the dampening factor started to get noticed.
I screamed laughed so hard when I saw the image of the mic drum beater 🤣
6:10 my drumset that i play shows with does not have reso heads on the toms. i have the rims on however so the bearing edge is safe. i mic up the toms from the bottom and they sound even better they did when i still had resos and would mic from the top.
surprisingly a great thing to do to your kit for shows!
Best way to start my day off great is at @5:56 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💝 and now you have concert times
Your toms seem to have more character as concert toms. Pretty cool sound!
There are times I really love a good honky snare.
Enjoyed the In The Air Tonight fill snuck in there.
Thanks for featuring my flip the bottom head hack! 🤠
I used alien gel tape for my muffling! You can get a roll of it off Amazon or Lowes or about $10. Its shock resistant, leaves no residue when you take it off, and you can wash it and reuse it!
My son got a pack of superhero window decals that worked perfectly for muffle gel. Captain America was always on my snare and the hulk on the floor tom
@@honkytonkinson9787 like just vinyl static cling (or whatever is holding them up!) decals?
@@freelance_commie close. They were similar to moongel but opaque. They also seemed higher quality; didn’t get dirty as easily and didn’t bleed color into coated drum heads. I wish I knew what brand they were, or where to get more, but it was something my son got for Christmas years ago and I sort of stole them lol
Always such a pleasure watching your videos. Keep em' coming!
🤘
I use a old couch cushion cut to a 22" circle pushed against the head...Mainly to reduce the volume but it sounds great..I use a 20 lug bass drum with a Natal double bass pedal..thanks for your videos
Fun fact: My friend took the original pic of the SM57 kick beater while working at a recording studio. It was a slow day.
Totally enjoyed your video. Thank you. My favorite was the mic/beater. I totally cracked up.
practical twist on the mic trick: Check out the kick sound Tejas, by ZZ Top. Supposedly the mic slipped and was resting on the head during recording, but it ended up sounding great.
5:15 - sounds great to me. Maybe a bit reverb-y, but definitely great.
I like that silent stroke reso head trick a lot. Seems to really reign in those toms and make them sound more controlled. Probably wouldn't need a gate for them live. Also, won't have to worry about a big PA system causing any sort of floor tom sympathetic feedback resonance, which I have run in to in the past with a super resonant floor tom. I wonder if it works on a snare drum to make it not so damn loud lol. Sometimes my band plays some places with really challenging acoustics, and the snare just clatters around in there. Every band that plays there has that problem, not just us, but that doesn't mean that I'm not interested in finding a solution lol.
The Mic on the kick pedal is definitely an interesting hack. Wonder how it would sound if you had a small towel taped to the head to absorb some of the impact. I know it not practical at all but is an interesting concept.
9:50 should definitely come as an effect to an e-drum module.
I'm confident I speak for everyone when I say... We need more like this.
My first thought on using a microphone as a kick drum beater is using a Shure Beta 56.
How you need to try smaller bike tubes for the snare and toms. Maybe try something like half an old shirt across the tube when you pump it up. Maybe wrap around the tube and staple the cloth back on to itself, then do again on the opposite side.
Everytime I see you've posted my day is made! Thank you for being amazing 😊
I thank you for making this video from the bottom of my heart. It gives me some idea to improve my video recording.
Using the Pyle mic for the beater was a nice throwback, that budget recording video got me into your channel!
A small woven rug draped on a kick makes a very lovely dampening effect.
(And also allows you to place things like a wallet or keys on your kick without fear of them falling off.)
I’ve been doing this with a few blankets. Just didn’t have anywhere to put them! But was wondering if it’s good for the sound to bleed less from the kick into other mics maybe.
I once had to mic a kick where this dude had a chunk of 2x4 glued (i think it was glued) to his kick so that his wood beaters would smack it. You know 'to get that good attack'. Yeah. It was ... ooof.
The "mic as a beater" trick turned your kick sound into "Default crappy keyboard MIDI kick" instantly. I am curious as to what a cheap contact mic attached to either the beater or the beater pad would sound like though. Although now I've written it down, it does just sound like I'm reinventing a drum trigger
You make such great and well polished videos. I really like your editing and approach to content production. Thanks!
Thank you for trying the bike tire! Really tempted to try it now on a kit that never leaves a rehearsal space that doubles as an engineer's smaller studio. Sounded good to me! Glad you enjoy Sylvia's book as much as many others have!
Imma be honest, the mic kick actually has a cool sound. Kinda reminds me of like movie montage bass hits.
There we go! Love the channel! 💯🥁
I've been thinking about trying mesh heads on the resonant side of my toms and kick. Mostly so I can have a quiet practice kit and loud rehearsal/gigging kit with just one kit (not a lot of space at mine, so I can't have multiple kits). Just a few slight mods would be needed. But it seems pretty simple... in my head at least. The biggest being adding extra leg brackets to my floor tom and possibly extra spurs on the kick drum. Which isn't much.
Variation on the last one: use a good beater, attach a small lavaliere mic to the shaft, below the beater head.
The concert tom/silent head trick was pretty slick. I'm doing that!
Back in the early 70's a few guys used a big pooffy beater directly onto a Shure SM57. Unlike the way you did it - backwards - mount the mic where the head would be.
Bonus benefit with the concert Tom thing is you could try to flip the drums over and you go from a real kit to a practice kit easy! The floor and the kick may be a little wonky though.
never even thought about that!
@@rdavidr it’s worth a try! have an extra snare with a mesh head ready, swap it out and boom! Lol
Use a rubber camping mat and cut it into a circle for the bass drum is what I do. Works well
Layer some socks over the bass drum beater maybe? For the snare, the easiest option is probably to just own a second snare for practice. Maybe one that doesn't actually have snares.
The last one sounded like a good les claypool impression
I use a small pillow filled with buckwheat husks (?) that works great. Also Tell Warby Parker to offer glass lenses!!
I'm going to make that beater for myself. Um, the Vic Firth one. Definitely not the 57!
Thanks for these awesome videos David!! I just had to sell my drum kit. I was building it but by bit and ran into financial issues. These videos help me get by since I can't drum!! Thank you!!
the mic thing would probably sound better just putting a contact mic on the head on top of where the patch goes so a normal beater can hit it.
Hilarious 🤣 The mic against the bass drum.
I used fabric strip to cover the kicking side head and sound fine
LoL. The "Mic/Beater" thing cracked me up.
I like how he keeps the drum key on a tension screw while he is playing with the silocone dampened snare
that Colliseum snare!! 😍
Tungsten or lead wheel balancing weights could work inside a snare shell to add mass and deaden the shell (or at least lower it’s frequency).
Last clip got me like 😂...What the flip was that
dude really forged his own kick drum mic adapter for this video. major credit
Since silent strokes came out I’ve been hoping someone would try that out. I immediately thought that it would be a great use for playing at regular volumes.
You should try and mic your snare bottom by facing it under the snare parallel to the bottom instead of pointing at it, can sometimes get a much smoother sound
I’ve once heard Vinnie Paul from Pantera would tape quarters to his bass drum where the beater hit so that it gave a clicky sound.
Love your channel keep up the awesome content! Wanted to suggest if you ever get into sampling sounds to a drum module that kick mic sound was very interesting! I think this would give you more control. Happy Holidays!
best drum youtuber about
The mic beater....just hilarious!!!
Good promo for Shure because that SM57 will still sound good after
“So how do you wanna mic your set”
“Yes”
His look of pure disappointment at 9:48 as he looks down at the mic haha
I made some drum rings out of old drum heads and thair asome.what about mounting a tennis ball 🎾 on a foot pedal beater the threads have to be long enough to tighten up the bolts.
Laughing my ass off that last one bro 🤣😆
At least we all know that an sm-57 is a good choice since they can take a beating.
I strongly suggest you try my personal favourite hack, and one I came up with myself (at least as far as I know). Buy a couple of door draft stoppers at the Dollar Store. I suggest 2, one against the batter head and one against the reso (taped in place) inside the shell. I use both and get many compliments on my kick sound. And it’s super cheap, about $6 for two of these bean bag snakes.
And as has been pointed out to me, yes I’m aware that Remo had a similar product out, years ago, that came with Velcro clamps etc. It cost $50…my idea $6 😊
really enjoyed the mesh head reso sound.
mic beater? if you want distorted clipping for a kick maybe. inner tubes was interesting.🍻
I love that tire kick sounds!
Love this channel but with Heads, em, use coated heads!! both sides, and tune to pitch. Never muffle, including bass drum, with felt strip across on front, with no holes! Tuning!
Resident Times sounds like an HOA publication at a high end gated community
It seems the problem with the last one was inertia. Maybe try a condenser mic that weighs almost nothing? It will almost certainly need some degree of covering, quite possibly more than its normal wind screen can provide, but perhaps the ball cage of an SM-58 can be added to that without adding a ton of weight.
For the playing alone always worth a watch but by eck you do a good job of testing stuff sir, nicely done as always
One of the ideas I came up with in a drum shop, is to get one of those giant water balloons, fill it with water, and put it into a bass drum as muffling. Never got around to it though
I really liked the mic hack - it sounded loke a cross between a kick drum and someone dropping a mike
6:56 dear god that tone is massive
Putting that mic on kicks is insane😂
8:32 oh shit I miss playing my 1957-9 metal Ludwig snare drum…….
Wow 😊
An actual decent drum trick for your bass/kick drum
For some fast double bass drum notes, if you don’t want to use so much muscle or it’s just so fast that it is physically impossible, and you do not have two bass/kick drums, a technique you can try is that right before you do the double bass drum notes, you slide your foot back in a way so only the front part of your shoe is touching the middle of the pedal, and you quickly slide your foot forward until the whole foot rests on the pedal. It should hit the kick drum twice, and it should be much faster than just brute forcing it.
I wanna see the buried cymbal for patina and darker sound!
I like how at the end you can see his reflection as he turns off the camera XD