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I've been talking to a lot of drummers lately about getting a good drum sound at live gigs and it seems that a lot of them have the same problem. Even with the use of various dampners etc there still seems to be a problem in getting a good in particular tom and bass drum sound. For example we are using Sennheiser e604's on the main kit and AKG D112 on the bass drum. We are also using dbx 266xl Compressor/ Gates with the kit to try and achieve that BIG sound. This is probably down to operator error mostly but is their an idiots guide or something similar to getting a good drum sound live using compressors etc or even without using them. Cheers in advance.

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BobRogers Mon, 04/06/2009 - 06:50

Caution: Old guy talk coming on.

Back in the day recording engineers tried to get recordings to sound like a live drum set. With the advent of lots of tracks it became possible to mike each drum separately and modify each sound individually. These individual sounds gradually got to sound less and less like an actual live drum. They got "bigger." People liked these sounds and for many these sounds became the standard by which drums are judged. Some of us are a bit bored by it, but we are a very small minority.

The problem with getting these sounds live is that they are not the sounds made by real drums. To get them you have two choices. (1) Repeat the process with which they were produced in the studio: mic individually, gate, compress, eq. This takes a lot of equipment and a good sound monkey who can make adjustments in real time. Go back and read the threadson recording drums and transfer to your live equipment. (2) Use triggers and samples. There are those who think this is cheating. F*%# them if they can't take a joke. It's no more cheating than using a rack of pedals on an electric guitar.

Good luck.

moonbaby Mon, 04/06/2009 - 07:54

Ah, the ever-elusive live drum sound...And yet another old fart chiming in.
The trick to a good drum sound is:
Good drums+properly-tuned drums+a good drummer. And that last one will supercede the others. I work with a drummer who can get a great sound out of a kit that hasn't seen a tuning key in an eon.
As far as those mics you listed are concerned, the D112 is the last kick mic I'd use. They are very sensitive to their relative placement, and make it super-easy to get that "bouncing basketball" tone when you don't want it. In fact, the ONLY time I'll use that mic is when the drummer provides it and knows exactly where it should be placed. And even then, I know a place where I'd like to put it...!
I don't know how many of the dbx266's you are using, but I'd limit their use (pun intended) to 1 channel on the snare, the other on the kick. Set them so that they are only "nipping" at the peaks with a 3-4 dB GR on the meter. The 266 is not known for its' headroom or gating action, I'd minimize its' use here.
Finally, there's this train of thought with a lot of drummers that the more the mics you have on the kit, the bigger the sound. Nothing could be further from the truth. Try using (3) mics:
Snare
Kick
And a single overhead.
You might be surprised at what that rig can do.

anonymous Mon, 04/06/2009 - 10:03

Even with the use of various dampners etc there still seems to be a problem in getting a good in particular tom and bass drum sound.

That is your problem. what sounds good to the drummer behind the set doesn't sound good to the audience. It's all about sounding NATURAL as was pointed out. I don't compress toms. I usually compress the kick. I usually compress the snare. Cymbals don't (shouldn't) need compression. When it comes to micing, try micing the edge of the snare and toms.

And most importantly, as moonbaby said,

Good drums+properly-tuned drums+a good drummer

anonymous Mon, 04/06/2009 - 14:02

Try using (3) mics:
Snare
Kick
And a single overhead.
You might be surprised at what that rig can do.

Moonbaby- I have thought about micing my kit that way. I compress the kick drum only. Everytime Ive put compression on the snare even in small amounts I lose dynamics. Thats what really seperates good drummers from decent drummers. Drummers have to learn to play even dynamics with both hands, how to hit the drum to pull the sound out, not bash into it like most drummers with no training. This goes a long way in getting a good sound from the drum. (Watch Vinnie Colaiuta, he plays hard but with perfect dynamics and finesse.) After that no need to be real technical or overplay. Most people (unless your playing a gig in front of other musicians) will not notice anyway. Lay down that back beat right on the 2 & 4 and your golden!

Moonbaby- What kick and overhead mics do you like?

anonymous Mon, 04/06/2009 - 14:10

Everytime Ive put compression on the snare even in small amounts I lose dynamics. Thats what really seperates good drummers from decent drummers. Drummers have to learn to play even dynamics with both hands, how to hit the drum to pull the sound out, not bash into it like most drummers with no training. This goes a long way in getting a good sound from the drum.

Hogwash. Even the greatest drummers are compressed. The greatest bassists are compressed. The greatest vocalists are compressed. The greatest guitarists... well, electric guitars are already really compressed. :lol: Josh Freese is very compressed, along with Ty Smith and Brooks Wackerman. These drummers could wipe the floor with just about anyone else. Sure, we're not talking nuclear limiting, but they are very compressed on everything I've heard them on. Great tone = bashing the crap out of drums. Of course, there is technique to this, because no one wants any broken wrists and/or drumheads and cymbals, but if you're hitting the drums really hard to get good tone out of them, then guess what? You're gonna need a lot of compression; I don't care how good you are, and I don't care what style you play. Hitting drums softly will never get great tone, unless you're one of those people who think that those old, paper-thin jazz and classic rock drum sounds are good, and then I think you need to get your hearing checked. :D

MadMax Mon, 04/06/2009 - 22:49

SERIOUSLY old fart chiming in... with 46 years behind the kit.

1. Try different heads on top and bottom
2. Tune the drums to the fundamental tone (most drummers tune the drum well below, or well above the correct pitch)
3. Let the drums ring... only dampen overtones
4. Squeeze the hell out of the kick
5. Squeeze the snare more
6. Try 4 mic's.... kick, snare and a pair of OH's, with the OH's just above your shoulders... (google the string method)
7. Use a smaller stick (I use a 7A and can usually cause people to wince in pain if I really lay into it) but a smaller stick with the proper technique will give you more control and a richer tone out of the drum... and you DON'T have to wail the piss out of a drum to get a good tone, if you're worth a shit, that is.

You should be able to match the volume and energy of the music and your tone shouldn't change. If it does, you need to work on your technique, tuning and/or different heads and/or a decent set of drums.

moonbaby Tue, 04/07/2009 - 08:39

allenk wrote: Try using (3) mics:
Snare
Kick
And a single overhead.
You might be surprised at what that rig can do.

Moonbaby- I have thought about micing my kit that way. I compress the kick drum only. Everytime Ive put compression on the snare even in small amounts I lose dynamics. Thats what really seperates good drummers from decent drummers. Drummers have to learn to play even dynamics with both hands, how to hit the drum to pull the sound out, not bash into it like most drummers with no training. This goes a long way in getting a good sound from the drum. (Watch Vinnie Colaiuta, he plays hard but with perfect dynamics and finesse.) After that no need to be real technical or overplay. Most people (unless your playing a gig in front of other musicians) will not notice anyway. Lay down that back beat right on the 2 & 4 and your golden!

Moonbaby- What kick and overhead mics do you like?

Well, let's see. I have a Heil PR-40, a couple of A-T ATM25's, E-V RE-20's, a few Sennheiser MD421's, a Shure 52, an Audix D6. I have used others, too. As for the OH, I like the Shure SM81, E-V RE-200, and in a pinch, the venerable Sennheiser MD421 does pretty well, too. And I have to say that a bit of compression-like I said "nipping the peaks"- helps the snare stay in "the pocket".

anonymous Tue, 04/07/2009 - 12:27

You should be able to match the volume and energy of the music and your tone shouldn't change.

Can you prove this argument? Let's apply this to the acoustic guitar: playing softly and loudly will have the same tone, or, only the volume will be changing. That is obviously not the case. People who play acoustic guitars softly have anorexic tone, because they aren't moving the wood and air. The louder you hit the drum, the more overtones will come to the surface (I don't know a better way to word it), and the more the wood itself will resonate. Sustain also will be better for obvious reasons. I realize that sometimes bashing drums is not an option due to people having delicate ears (I go through this every Sunday and Wednesday at my local fellowship :roll: ), but the more air you move, the fuller the tone will be. Think of it like a bowl of water; if you plunk a drop in, you get a few surface ripples, but if you drop more water in the bowl at once, you get more of a disturbance. The same thing happens with sounds waves. DRUMS SOUND VERY DIFFERENT WHEN HIT HARDER. And yes, there is a right way to do it; a lot of drummers these days will leave the stick in contact with the heads too long, thus choking the head resonance and cramping the tone, so to speak. But when proper technique is used, there is a definite tonal difference between loud and soft hits.

Codemonkey Tue, 04/07/2009 - 14:35

My thoughts:

If I stand in a room and mutter something, I won't hear the reflections from it.
If I stand in that same room and yell the same thing, I WILL hear the reflections.

The echo is there in both cases - but because the muttering is so quiet, the reverb (which is maybe 30dB down from the original speaking volume) falls too low to be heard by the human ear.

If you amplify a soft tom hit, it'll sound like a harder hit. There might be a slight variation in the sound but that's more to do with the change in the way the drum gets hit.

To clarify, 40dB with reflections at 40-30dB is going to sound dry.
90dB with reflections at 90-30dB is going to sound pretty wet.

dvdhawk Wed, 04/08/2009 - 00:07

You can cherry pick from all the responses above, there's certainly lots of good information there - but there are too many variables to say "do this, buy this, and you will reach drum nirvana tonight".

I have the great pleasure of working with a GREAT veteran drummer who:

A) keeps good heads on his kit,
B) who knows how to tune his drums with the very best of them,
C) uses very little damping, just a little moongel here and there,
D) has several kits and brings the one best suited for the venue,
E) owns good mics, - but nothing spectacular
F) and he can really, really play.

Using the mics you listed (more or less), and no compressors and no gates, he sounds like a million bucks when we use my PA, and when we're doing the occassional big outdoor show through a pro tour-caliber system. Through the tour system, he still uses his own mics and the most jaded high-end soundmen will say, "come look at this, there isn't any EQ on his drum kit anywhere and it sounds amazing".

The e604 wouldn't be my first (second, third, or fourth) choice for snare. It's a little dark for my tastes on the snare, but it will work OK. The e604 works really well on a well-tuned tom. As noted, the D112 is not a mic you can put just anywhere, but it's capable of sounding great.

Hopefully the drummers you're dealing with have the appropriate tone for the style of music they're playing. If they do, there are specific mics that are better suited for a particular style.

With the drummers you're talking to:

What kind of music are they doing?
What is their PA comprised of?
Is there a method to where they're placing the mics?

Good luck.

Davedog Wed, 04/08/2009 - 08:39

Older than the hills fartster chiming in....I'm not a drummer....I'm the Bass Player and I can get great drums. Anywhere.

I will reiterate....

1. Really good heads (lately we are both into the Evans EC series...snap,thud,and the right length)
2. Really good drums (my drummer has the Mahogany Gretsch set...the tone kills straight up before you mic em)
3. Tuning....not a city in China
4. Drum technique (theres books on this)
5. Drummer who really cares ( I have kilt off all the ones around here who didnt)
6. Good mics and the knowledge of where to put em.

I am not a fan of the 112 mic. I do like it on a bass cabinet if it has tens...Live I like the ATM25 or the D6 on the kick...i5 or 57 on the snare although a 414 does a snare quite well also...Audix D2's on the toms...excellent control, bullet proof and easy to place and not dark at all, they're kinda 421ish...I have secret weapon overheads so I cant tell ya or I'd have to kill ya kinda thing.

We dont need no stinkin compression or limiting. The drums have very very little dabs of moongel and they are open and as loud as you need em to be.

dvdhawk Wed, 04/08/2009 - 11:08

Davedog wrote: ...the tone kills straight up before you mic em

There ya go! When you've got a drummer with all that going for them - you would have to work to make them sound bad.

Again, I'm betting Davedog's PA is pretty tight from 20Hz - 20kHz too. The quality of the speakers, amps, cables, console, and electricity ALL come into play as much as mic selection.

Note: D112s can change tone over the years. I don't know if the diaphragm changes or gunk builds up in the internal windscreen, cummulative moisture damage - I don't know. When I first started working with this drummer years ago, he had a phenomonal sounding kit, as always, and he had an old 112 in the kick. For the first month or so we had to spend a lot of time moving the mic looking for the sweetspot. Although the mic looked perfectly normal, after a while I started suspecting it might be the mic and brought a new one from my collection. It was like presto, no more standing on your head to find the sweet spot. Not that you could put it just anywhere, but it was a lot richer, beefier tone and a lot more forgiving than his old one regarding placement.

But on the other hand I have a vintage D12e, that still sounds great. But as D12e's get more and more valuable I get less and less inclined to take it to a live gig. Warm, punchy, a very substantial bass instrument & kick mic.

I think if you just want live BOOM a PL-20 is nearly idiot-proof, if you're doing more aggressive music and want that snappy beater sound a 421 is really cool.

Compressors, reverb, and whatnot should be the icing on the cake, not the cure for bad tone.

MadMax Thu, 04/09/2009 - 03:48

NCdan wrote: Can you prove this argument? Let's apply this to the acoustic guitar:

Think about what you said here;

The louder you hit the drum, the more overtones will come to the surface (I don't know a better way to word it), and the more the wood itself will resonate.

Let's go back to your pebble in the water example for a minute.

Take a 5 gal bucket of water and simply drop a pebble into it from a short distance. Look at the ripples... they have a set of defined wave pattern that will propagate at a frequency.

Take the SAME pebble (that's the key here) and throw it in the water as hard as you can. The ripples will NOT change frequency! They will only be higher in amplitude. They will last longer in duration, but they will NOT change frequency.

The reason is that the mass of the pebble (drumstick) has not changed, only the energy which the pebble is experiencing has.

If you change the size, shape or any other aspect of the pebble, you will get a difference in frequency, true. But as my percussion professor in college pointed out many, MANY times... with proper technique, the only difference should be that the drum only gets louder. If it does anything else, you're screwing up.

To put it another way, what you are saying is that if I set my finger to play a G on a guitar softly, I get a G flat, if I play it hard, I get a G#... If that's the case... then something is wrong... seriously wrong.

If I set my finger to play a G, and when I play softly, I don't have the ability to capture all of the overtones via a microphone, or ear, unless I have my ear very, very close to the guitar, or unless I gag the gain of my pre-amp. If I play it harder, yes, the overtones are louder, but the overtones and the initial fundamental frequency of the string vibration is still the same... or it damn well should be, anyway.

anonymous Thu, 04/09/2009 - 10:57

To put it another way, what you are saying is that if I set my finger to play a G on a guitar softly, I get a G flat, if I play it hard, I get a G#... If that's the case... then something is wrong... seriously wrong.

No, that isn't what I'm saying. That would be sort of magical if hitting an instrument at different velocities changed its pitch. Think of it as "richness." I stated that playing an acoustic guitar softly sounds "anorexic" or thin. Think of it like tubes: the more juice it gets, the more saturated it gets, and there is a tonal change. Now, I'm not saying they're exactly the same, but just the basic concept. The PITCH itself won't change, just the lushness, richness, whateverness of the sound.

Davedog Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:00

NCdan wrote:

To put it another way, what you are saying is that if I set my finger to play a G on a guitar softly, I get a G flat, if I play it hard, I get a G#... If that's the case... then something is wrong... seriously wrong.

No, that isn't what I'm saying. That would be sort of magical if hitting an instrument at different velocities changed its pitch. Think of it as "richness." I stated that playing an acoustic guitar softly sounds "anorexic" or thin. Think of it like tubes: the more juice it gets, the more saturated it gets, and there is a tonal change. Now, I'm not saying they're exactly the same, but just the basic concept. The PITCH itself won't change, just the lushness, richness, whateverness of the sound.

The tonality of an acoustic instrument in relation to the dynamics cannot be compared to the physics involved in something like a tube amp.

They are not the same thing.

While I agree in principle that what you 'hear' when you strike the drum with more force is a 'different' sound, a microphone has no internal filtering like your brain does and will simply react to the sound complete with all the anomlies that were present when it was struck softly.

Playing my acoustic guitar softly yeilds the same tone as playing it loudly as long as I am using the same technique. If I use a pick it will sound like a guitar played with a pick whether it is soft or loud. If I use my fingers the same will hold true and the basic tonality will not change throughout the spectrum of that particular instrument. I may have a harder time in capturing it but it will ultimately be very similar in its tonality.

The same is true with any drum. WHERE you hit it has much more to do with tonailty than how hard you hit it. At least to a microphone.

anonymous Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:23

Playing my acoustic guitar softly yeilds the same tone as playing it loudly as long as I am using the same technique. If I use a pick it will sound like a guitar played with a pick whether it is soft of loud. If I use my fingers the same will jold true and the basic tonality will not change throughout the spectrum of that particular instrument. I mat have a harder time in capturing it but it will unlitmately be very similar in its tonality.

The same is true with any drum.

Then why do so many recording engineers want drummers to hit the drums really hard? But even my personal experience has shown that acoustic instruments sound thin mic'd when the person is playing the instrument lightly. I haven't suffered THAT much hearing damage. The difference might not be absolute night and day, but there is an audible difference when mic'd. And how is it that great drummers who bash drums got amazing recorded tone regardless of how low budget a record may have been?

Davedog Thu, 04/09/2009 - 14:07

I want them to hit em hard so when I set the levels we have no surprises and no need for any other devices in the signal chain. If I can pad and set my input levels to match a hard strike at tracking then I dont have as much manipulations at mix.

What other engineers want the drummers to hit em hard for is up to them....and since I wasnt there I cannot account for their reasons......nor can you.

Your point is well taken but there are holes the theory. Asking a question about someone elses experiences to prove your point is in itself pointless. I wasnt there for whatever referrence you are pointing to and neither were you. It is a dead end to argue something and use someone elses experience to justify it.

We all do this in different ways As long as it works for you then thats all it has to do.

BobRogers Thu, 04/09/2009 - 15:39

Dan - You are in the tough position of trying to argue what mathematicians call a "universal" proposition - that the only way to get good tone is to play hard - that no one ever got good tone by playing soft. To refute you all anyone has to do is exhibit one recording where a drummer got great tone playing soft. Like, say, most of Elvin Jones, a lot of Hal Blaine, every 18 year old kid accepted in classical percussion to a major conservatory. Of course, you can just put yourself on autopilot and say that anything that isn't he-man speed punk played with tree trunks has bad tone, but you have to do it forever.

On all of the amateur mathematical physics being tossed around here...it is generally a bad idea to use mathematical physics to "prove" an empirical proposition about music. Dave has described the results of the linear theory well. But while the linear theory is quite accurate and fits a lot of measurements extremely well, it is an approximation and you can't "prove" a physical claim by citing it. Of course, analogies to highly nonlinear phenomena like water surface waves and tube amps are completely irrelevant.

anonymous Thu, 04/09/2009 - 16:03

To refute you all anyone has to do is exhibit one recording where a drummer got great tone playing soft. Like, say, most of Elvin Jones, a lot of Hal Blaine, every 18 year old kid accepted in classical percussion to a major conservatory. Of course, you can just put yourself on autopilot and say that anything that isn't he-man speed punk played with tree trunks has bad tone, but you have to do it forever.

Now we're getting into the argument of "what is good tone, anyway?" I have personally never heard a traditional jazz drummer who had tone I would personally conisder appealing (as traditional jazz players play rather softly), but then again, that's just me. I like fat, big, smacky drum sounds, which is only possible when hitting very hard properly. But I do like what you said:

anything that isn't he-man speed punk played with tree trunks has bad tone

:lol: 8)

And I was an English major; I don't really try to make mathematical, physics, scientific, etc... points -- I just try to find comparisons that might make sense (or not). :wink: But hey, take my opinions for what they're worth.

MadMax Thu, 04/09/2009 - 19:09

This is on the verge of going silly OT folks.....

When I listen to a drum, an acoustic guitar, acoustic bass, piano, mandolin, hell, even a banjo... ok... maybe the banjo is a stretch... but when I listen to one of those instruments play very quietly from distance X. I may not perceive all of the overtones existing when I am at distance X/2... nor will I hear as much at distance X*2 as I did at distance X. The amount of energy is generally accepted to be absorbed in an inverse proportion to the square of the distance.

That's an empirical given.

But it is also an empirical given that the overtones are there...

When you play an instrument louder, there is more energy to excite the air and the perception may be that these overtones are now suddenly there, but they aren't newly generated. They are simply now perceived.

If you want to discuss the impact noise of pick against string, stick against head or whether a banjo burns fast enough, then sure.... we got a pint of discussion, as those are different than the actual tone of the decay of an individual instrument.

To echo DD, I too prefer to know that I'm not gonna dump a clip on a track if the guy whackin' the kit clams, gets excited, or whatever. After that, I mainly get a bug up my arse if he plays inconsistently... which is NOT the same as loud... ok, it SHOULDN'T be... but quite often is.

Again, there's a HUGE, distinct, difference between playing confidently and consistently and just wailin' the hell out of a kit.

anonymous Fri, 06/05/2009 - 10:07

Good info here. As far as the hard/soft debate, I am not a dummy about the physics, but ignoring that, and just from my 25 years experience playing drums I can definitiely say that there is a difference in the sound, the tone. You can take it to the extreme with a very light hit and see exactly what I mean. I suspect it has to do with quite a few things such as amount of resonant head excitement, shell excitement, and also head deflection when hit hard. Maybe its my imagination but on a quick hard flam or very fast hard hitting roll, the pitch goes up slightly on the attack.

Due mainly to board input restrictions on what we have, I have been struggling with mic selection/placement though. I use a cheap, but very hot condensor as my one overhead along with a kick and snare close mic, but we have a lot of problems getting everything and with feedback from my wedge, etc. Any good recommendations for that single overhead to pick up all the cymbals equally, and the toms? Hypercardoid placed back a bit?

sheet Sat, 06/06/2009 - 10:35

moonbaby wrote: Ah, the ever-elusive live drum sound...And yet another old fart chiming in.
The trick to a good drum sound is:
Good drums+properly-tuned drums+a good drummer. And that last one will supercede the others. I work with a drummer who can get a great sound out of a kit that hasn't seen a tuning key in an eon.
As far as those mics you listed are concerned, the D112 is the last kick mic I'd use. They are very sensitive to their relative placement, and make it super-easy to get that "bouncing basketball" tone when you don't want it. In fact, the ONLY time I'll use that mic is when the drummer provides it and knows exactly where it should be placed. And even then, I know a place where I'd like to put it...!
I don't know how many of the dbx266's you are using, but I'd limit their use (pun intended) to 1 channel on the snare, the other on the kick. Set them so that they are only "nipping" at the peaks with a 3-4 dB GR on the meter. The 266 is not known for its' headroom or gating action, I'd minimize its' use here.
Finally, there's this train of thought with a lot of drummers that the more the mics you have on the kit, the bigger the sound. Nothing could be further from the truth. Try using (3) mics:
Snare
Kick
And a single overhead.
You might be surprised at what that rig can do.

Amen! I get moster drums all the time with no samples or triggers on a great sounding, properly equiped PA.

Why mic from overhead? You are not likely going to be able to minimize leakage, maintain the 3:1 rule, and maximize gain before feedback with a cheap mic overhead.

After reading the responses here, I think the only person that could help would be an A-list monitor engineer from your area. You seem to be boxed in technically. You may never get the sounds you hear in your head, just because of the limitations of your kit, the room, your gear, etc. Any sound can ne obtained. It is a matter of how much you are willing to pay for it.

audioangel Wed, 06/10/2009 - 12:33

The other day I went to do a gig and the band hadn't brought all the mic stands. I really needed to mic the drums because it was a large venue. I borrowed the trumpeters trumpet case and balanced the kick mic on there with a bit of gaffa, gaffa'd another mic to one fo the cymbal stands to pick up the snare/hihat and stuck one on a ropey old stand without an arm the otherside over the toms - sounded great! - I'm not sure how though!

anonymous Tue, 09/15/2009 - 11:14

Here's my 2 cents;
- I use a D112 on the kick and it's always sounded great.. you have to place it inside the kick in the middle but just off-center so it's not pointing right at the beater... also make sure you have the right end pointing the right way - it's easy to mix up as both sides have a grill! (sounds like I've done this before doesn't it :( . it still worked even backwards Lol.
- snare : SM57 on a clip-on
- 2 cardiod condenser overheads either in X-Y configuration or pointing nose-to nose but seperated a distance apart.

I've done it with 3 mics on occassion but I've got a big kit so I prefer the coverage of 4 mics. On a small kit you can probably get away with 3 mics.

I've also tried the all-clip-on route which is really convenient (no stands!), but it requires careful placement of the tom mics; basically one cardiod split over 2 small toms and another split on 2 lower toms. Sounds great and picks up the cymbals well - but - the cymbals can't be above the tom mics, otherwise you create a perfect feedback zone say between the underside of a cymbal and a floor tom directly underneath for example.

Oh yeah - re: the hard hitting debate.. you DO have to hit it with a good hard snap but you DO NOT have to bash the drums - yuck that just kills dynamics - if you play loud all the time you have no place to go = boring!
- hit 'em hard but within reason - you have to provide a strong signal or your sound guy will fall asleep:!). Let the sticks fly and use the bounce (same with the feet).

Davedog Tue, 09/15/2009 - 12:15

Its good to revise this thread from time to time simply because there are so many schools of thought at play here. And so much information.

Originally, the argument was tending towards overtones and the tonality available through the heaviness of the hit on the drums.

I liked Kevin's take on the shell deflection and the effect a heavy hit has on the pitch due to this. I think he may be right IF the drum head is tensioned such that a heavy strike in the RIGHT position actually does deflect the shell. This would cause a slight narrowing of the pitch but it would be only a millisecond in length and the ability of anyones hearing to really place this would be nil.

Of course a mic could tell you this.

I'm not so sure that the more modern head designs with a couple of layers of batter material as well as oil or whatever else they can come up with is going to allow enough energy to pull the shell into a distortion in order to complete this theory.

No, I'm not a drummer. Yes, I own drumsets. Yes I record a lot of drums. Yes I am a bass player and have to listen to these guys all the time......

Then theres stick techniques. Hitting the drum and leaving the stick on the head for a fraction longer results in one sound as opposed to hitting the drum sharpley and bouncing the stick off it. Stick strikes at angles have a sound all their own as do stick attacks with the rim also being hit at the same time. The angle in which you strike the drum is oh so important in recording. It can make a huge difference in tonality under the mics. Where on the drum head the stick strikes it is one of the best things a recording drummer can do to make the tracks even and tonal.

I worked with a drummer for quite a while that would wear the heads out in an almost perfect little square, maybe 2" at the most, in the DEAD CENTER of all his drums. There was never a question of how his toms were going to sound live or under the mics. He used gigantic sticks, but chose them for their weight and balance and could press roll with either hand alone. He always said that the big sticks gave him complete control whether it be simply brushing the top of the head lightly, or giving it a severe whack, he never lost control of the strike. His cymbal work was incredible, articulate as well as dynamic and he was as loud as he needed to be in any venue and never gave up the heavy sounding strike at any volume. It was all in the technique.

anonymous Wed, 09/16/2009 - 07:18

Yes - hitting the same spot or zone is important for consistency. I usually avoid hitting dead center though as you get more response if it's just off center; it varies with each drum size and shape/tuning etc. but there's always a 'sweet spot' where the tone is ideal. Consistency is good but you don't always want the hits to sound the same,otherwise you might as well just be triggering samples - and to me e-drums are deadly boring.

That's why acoustic drums are superior than the best e-drums out there.. as the Smashing Pumkin drummer said 'you can get thousands of sounds out of one drum; why would I want to handcuff myself with just one sound?'.. or something like that..

It's all about dynamics and expression - there's nothing I like better than laying in wait for big accents! Sorry I'm losing the thread.. which was getting great Live sound;

- one thing a lot of drummers forget about is hi-hat mics; the best one I used was a Senheisser that clipped onto the stand under the hats pointing up; no muss, no fuss and it sounded great.
- overall the trick is to find the minimal mic setup with max. results.