This is a guest post Omar Alvarado who runs the great drumming website – The Paradiddler
When we think of the drum kit, we usually think that all the drums are of the same brand and type. This would be a good assumption! A drummer wants to make sure that their drums have the same ‘timbre’ throughout, that even though the sizes differ, the drums tonally match regardless which size is struck.
A similar case can be made for speakers. You could buy two different brands of speakers, similar in size, with identical specifications as far as watts per channel, impedance, sensitivity, etc. But when you set them up as a left and right speaker in a stereo setting, they sound different. Likewise if you mix and match brands of speakers in a surround sound environment, the sound difference can be quite pronounced between speakers. This has a lot to do with the design of the drivers within the cabinet, the placement of the drivers within the cabinet, the construction quality of the drivers and cabinet, and the like.
The same can be said about drums. If you have a 10” tom from brand A, say, Ludwig, and then another 10” tom from Tama, even if they have the same type of head and tuned similarly, they would tend to sound different. Sometimes even if they’re made of the same material, such as maple or birch, they may sound different due to the different manufacturing process of each, thickness of the shell, etc.
So due to the above, for good reasons, drummers tend to stay with one brand of drums for the whole kit. This doesn’t necessarily include specialty drums, however, such as mini timbales, roto toms, or Tama’s famous Octobans. These have special sound properties (usually higher pitched) that give more options and melodic possibilities for drummers who want that flexibility. However, there’s one particular drum in the set that, well, most drummers in the know would rather you ‘leave it alone’.
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