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Learn from the greats for FREE at https://www.artofdrumming.com
A great sounding drum kit is always more fun to play. But tuning drums can be difficult and is often thought of as something complicated. Here are some simple tips that will help you to get a great sounding kit.
If you want to go further into detail, there are several courses about drum tuning waiting for you at https://artofdrumming.com.
00:00 Intro
00:47 Snare Tuning
02:14 Snare Demo
02:52 Bass Drum Tuning
03:32 Bass Drum Demo
03:46 Tom Tuning
04:25 Whole Drum Kit Demo
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Prof. Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible

Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible. Scott Johnson (a.k.a. Prof. Sound): Now 45 resing in Indianapolis, IN USA, played since 13. Raised in the Chicago, IL USA area, …

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Source: drumweb.com

Date Published: 5/4/2022

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The Drum Tuning Bible PDF | Steve Such Drums

The Drum Tuning Bible is by J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999. DrummingSteve Such February 20, 2017 …

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Source: www.stevesuchdrums.com

Date Published: 6/1/2021

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Prof.Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible v3 – Circular Science

For the Snare drum and Bass/Kick drum, you must go to the sections for the Snare Drum and Kick Drum. This version of the Drum Tuning Bible is the 3rd iteration.

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Source: circularscience.com

Date Published: 8/24/2021

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Drum Tuning Bible: | MOAM.INFO

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. … A sound or tuning that works for a small venue will not work as well for a large …

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Date Published: 5/28/2021

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Drum tuning bible – Yumpu

1. Working with the resonant se facing you, place the drum up on its stand or hold by the rim. · 2. Turn the drum over, batter se towards you …

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Prof Sound’s drum tuning bible – PDFSLIDE.NET

Drum Tuning Bible Prof.Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible v3 Home Pocket DTB Woods Construction Tuning & Seating Kick Snare Drum Snare Tuning Snare Unit Buzzing …

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Drum Tuning Bible | Drummerworld Forum

Ah yes, some clarity in the murky world of drum tuning. … website went dark (I suspect the original Prof Sound may have passed away, …

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Prof Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible! moved! – HomeRecording.com

I just found out that Prof Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible has moved. The new link is: http://home.earthlink.net/~prof.sound/

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Prof. Sounds’ Drum Tuning Bible – Field Drums (a/k/a Field of Drums)

Prof. Sounds’ Drum Tuning Bible. If you haven’t seen this yet, you’re in for a treat. J. Scott Johnson of Indianapolis (aka Professor Sound) has assembled a …

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Prof. Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible – JamesLindenschmidt.com

Prof. Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible. Link. Author JWLPosted on May 17, 2004 Categories Uncategorized. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. You must be logged in to post …

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주제와 관련된 더 많은 사진을 참조하십시오 The Basics Of Drum Tuning. 댓글에서 더 많은 관련 이미지를 보거나 필요한 경우 더 많은 관련 기사를 볼 수 있습니다.

The Basics Of Drum Tuning
The Basics Of Drum Tuning

주제에 대한 기사 평가 prof sound’s drum tuning bible

  • Author: ArtOfDrumming
  • Views: 조회수 19,143회
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  • Date Published: 2021. 1. 5.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4p6fqIljaqE

What frequency should I tune my drums to?

We suggest trying a top head Tune Frequency between 220Hz and 340Hz for a snare drum. Try tuning the bottom head 1,33 to 1,5 times higher (but not higher than 400Hz). Tuning the bass drum is basically the same as tuning toms, with the same top/bottom tuning relationships.

What note should each drum be tuned to?

When considering the kit as a whole, the pitches of each drum should compliment one another. You can even consider tuning the kit to a musical scale: Our snare drum tuned to a C (dominant) could be accompanied by a kick tuned to an F (tonic) and toms tuned to other notes of the F major scale.

What drum heads are good for worship?

4 Best Drum Heads for Church of 2022
  • Evans EC2 Tompack, Clear, Standard (12-inch, 13-inch, 16-inch) …
  • Remo Fyberskin Powerstroke 3 18-Inch Drum Head – Ambassador Weight. …
  • Attack Royal2 Series 16” Medium Coated S Film 2-Ply Drum Head. …
  • Aquarian Ice White Reflector Superkick Bass Drum head 22”

Is there a drum tuning app?

Drumtune PRO is by far, the best drum tuning application around. Drumtune PRO is an iOS/Android application that features precise pitch detection.

Why do drummers put their wallet on the snare?

Description. The Drum Wallet flips on and off your drums to instantly add control and fatten up the sound. These are great for both snare drums and toms. The Drum Wallet is quick and easy to use, and has the perfect amount of weight to add warmth, fatness, and remove overtones, without choking the drum.

Which are the two ways of tuning a drum?

With two-headed drums, there are only three ways to ensure that the top and bottom heads are tuned relative to each other:
  • The two heads can be tuned to the same pitch.
  • The top head can be tuned tighter than the bottom.
  • The top head can be tuned looser than the bottom.

Why do you put a pillow in a bass drum?

The bass drum will eventually sound dead and flat – not what you want. The trick is to put a small amount of muffling in there. Try placing one pillow or blanket resting on the bottom of the drum. This way you get bit more control of the air flow, as well as the resonance on the drum head without killing the sound.

Should resonant heads be tighter?

Batter tighter than reso, batter and reso the same, batter looser than reso. All three are widely used and all three are perfectly acceptable. Thre is no right way or wrong way provided that the heads are in tune with themselves and the correlation between batter and reso produces the desired sound.

Prof. Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible

Scott Johnson (a.k.a. Prof. Sound): Now 45 residing in Indianapolis, IN USA, played since 13. Raised in the Chicago, IL USA area, owned/operated first studio at 17. Focus was on Rock, Progressive Rock and Country music. Had brief personal involvement with Jazz great Louis Bellson. Moved to Nashville TN at about 20 years of age. Designed and managed the manufacturing of recording studio electronics for Harrison systems, premier company for music, film and production studios electronics.

Designed and built wiring systems for touring sound companies as well as speakers and monitors. Worked with and in a variety of recording studios along with a number of top country writers that have multiple platinum and gold hits to their credit. Engineered and did live/studio drumming until 29 at which time left music started a company which is today recognized as one of the most technologically advanced recycler’s of electronics and plastic in the world. In ’98 start playing again (no live work) and is currently recording and building a new project/drum studio specifically for drum tracks and own enjoyment with a focus on Light Jazz and Country.

Motivation behind the Drum Tuning Bible

The musical ability of someone playing drums is not synonymous with an ability to technically understand it. You don’t have to play at all to know how to tune a drum. Because you are musically proficient, does not mean you can or know how to explain how to make a drum sound the way you want it. I felt I could explain it in a way, which was understandable, and with the detail missing from other articles and the typical responses on the subject.

I don’t know everything, but having been in the market for a new set and experiencing misinformation at all levels, I felt I could help transmit accurate knowledge on the art and science of the technical side of the drum, head selection and tuning issues. The DT Bible is my attempt to make it readily available, all in one place to everyone for the price it should be, FREE!

Forward

Admittedly, the guide that follows is geared more toward the player who is professional or inspires to be professional and wants to know how to achieve control over the drum and drum set sound generated. I feel whether you’re a beginner or have played 20 years or more, you’ll gain something from it. This is not the type of guide, which states, “Put 2 turns on one side and then a few more on the other side”. This goes into great detail in an attempt to teach those who really want to understand what their entire drum set can do and may have been lost for years wondering why or how certain things work. It requires time, patience, thinking and work.

If you’re looking for a shortcut to great sound, you just may find it in the knowledge you gain from this article, once you apply it. Finally, if you read the entire “bible”, it should also aid you in choosing a drum set to fulfill your dreams.

These are some of the issues covered within various sections of the bible:

Difference between heads, when to use what.

How to make drums resonant, fat, punchy, open, less/more ring.

How microphones affect the choice of heads.

The fundamental note of a drum versus pitch and timbre.

The difference material and construction make in the tuning and overall drum sound.

Example head setups and results.

Snare buzz or sympathetic vibration issues.

Snare replacement, tension and choice issues.

How to get more articulation, volume, crack, sensitivity and warmth from a snare drum.

Example of tuning sequences and tuning to notes.

Kick drum muffling and choice of heads.

Hoops or Rims.

Bearing Edges.

Truths of Drums

1. The interval between drums is more important than many realize and size is the key to get even resonance and the incremental notes between drums. Diameter has a greater impact on tuning that does depth. See “Shell Depth versus Diameter”

2. The tiniest of movements on the tuning lug “can” make huge differences and raise pitch drastically, more so with a rigid hoop, such as cast. Moreover, tweaks of the lugs on the resonant side are more prone to raising pitch than are ones on the batter side.

3. A sound or tuning, which works for a small venue will not work as well for a large venue. You have to consider what component of your sound will carry through to the audience. For example head selection for microphones will likely be different than without. A highly resonant kit may be your sound tech’s worst nightmare. While the drummer can be inspired by this tone, a large venue or recording may result in a very muddy sound due to the overtones and lingering decay of the drum mixed with all the other instruments or acoustics.

In large venues under close micing techniques, its typical for drummers to use 2-ply heads because the sound is more muffled or controlled. You get a shorter burst of energy, which by virtue of the hall or venue, reverberates or becomes delayed to the audience. Much the same as large venues require a more selective or simplistic placement of notes and fills because the audience does not hear the detail.

4. Get to know the utilization of microphones well if you’re going to use them, even slight alterations in placement make a huge difference. For example, placing a mic near the outside edge of a drum can bring out the high-pitched overtones. But move it in just a ½” and those diminish dramatically.

5. All drums sound different at 0, 15, 50, 150 foot or differing distances. So what sounds good to the drummer while playing may be terrible to the audience, in whatever forms the audience takes. Its important to go out and listen to what your kit sounds like while the other instruments are playing. Move around and make head selections and tunings accordingly. A higher pitch enables the drum to carry more, lower pitches less so.

6. The sound heard from a CD at home is not what a drum really sounds like but on few occasions. What you hear is usually an altered version recorded according to what the producer and the artist wants it to sound like through alterations and to fit the recording at hand. Sometimes you just cannot duplicate your drum gods sound without the electronics.

7. This tuning method works for ALL DRUMS.

8. Less expensive does not mean inferior, in some cases, it may be far superior to achieve the desired end-result. For example a birch shell or beech shell with flanged hoops, while less expensive than a maple shell with cast hoops, may provide the feel and penetrating sound you need on a snare drum.

9. The air hole or vent in the shell is to allow the shell to breath when two heads are used and atmospheric changes occur, thereby helping to eliminate moisture build-up. This is a typical problem moving from cold to hot environments much the same as glass windows can sweat in your house. The vents have little effect on tone.

10. Yes, you should stretch heads (within reason) on all drums; it’s called “seating” and is the most important and often most overlooked step in getting quality sound and consistency out of a drum.

Continue to Part 2: Fundamentals of Tuning

Steve Such Drums — SS DRUMS →

The Drum Tuning Bible

This is perhaps the GREATEST, most comprehensive tuning guide I have EVER seen!

I refer to it anytime I’m having trouble tuning a particular drum.

tuning your drum kit

– – – How to tune a drum kit – – –

A well tuned drum kit sounds so much better!

. . . . but tuning drums is not easy and time consuming. Below you find a complete manual f or tuning your drums. This manual is based on using the great app “Drum-Tuner” that’s available for iPhone, iPod and iPad (cost you less then a pair of drum sticks). But even if you don’t have Drum-Tuner, this is a great manual.

Complete Drum Tuning manual

This manual provides general information on drum tuning and a step by step guide to improving your drum tuning using the Drum-Tuner app.

Start by removing all the tension rods and subsequently remove the hoop and head.

When you use the same head, clean both the head and the bearing edge. You only have to clean the bearing edge when using a new head.

The next steps are all based on tuning a new drum head. You can skip ‘seating your head’ when using your existing head, although there is never any harm in doing this again.

Place the head on the drum. The head should move or spin freely on the shell. Turn the head logo to where you want it to be. Place the rim on the head and make sure the tension rod holes are in line with the lugs.

Place the rods in the holes and finger tighten the tension rods in the tensioning cross pattern, until they touch the rim.

Start turning each rod 1/4 turn, using a cross pattern.

Continue to make the turns in small increments in this same pattern until you hear a resonant tone and all wrinkles have disappeared. This will take several cycles of the pattern.

Now you’re ready to seat the head.

tension cross pattern

Seating the Head

You will need to seat the head before you can start the tuning process.

Pre-stretch the head by pressing the centre of the head with the palm of your hand. Seating the head means you won’t need to re-tune quite so often. Don’t worry about the cracking and popping you will hear. Repeat this a couple of times. Sometimes some wrinkles may appear. In that case you will need to retighten the head in the cross pattern until the wrinkles disappear.

Now loosen all tension rods a little in the cross pattern.

Now you can start tuning your drum.

Tuning the drum

You can start the tuning process once the head is seated. Tuning the drum means getting the same pitch all around the drum head – in the frequency you want – and to achieve a clean tone with as few annoying overtones as possible.

A drum produces several frequencies. The two most important ones are the lug frequency and the overall or fundamental pitch. The lug pitch is used for tuning your drums when you are comparing the head tone near each lug.

The fundamental frequency is lower and roughly 0.55x the lug pitch, depending on the tom depth and the heads you are using. A lower or higher tuned bottom head will increase or decrease this factor.

Start with the smallest tom if you have two or three toms. If you have a lot of toms, it’s best to start in the middle and work from there. This will avoid ending too high or low.

This is where the most difficult part of tuning a drum starts and where the Drum-Tuner app comes in to help you.

The Drum-Tuner gives you the Measured Frequency when you tap the drums, the loudest frequency at any given moment. You can also read a Filtered Frequency. The unique Filtered Frequency function gives you the frequency (pitch) that’s near the Tune Frequency you have entered (lug frequency). So the Filtered Frequencies near all lugs need to be the same as the Tune Frequency – then you have a perfectly tuned drum.

So first you have to decide in which pitch/frequency you want to tune your drum. If you know the frequency you want, tap on the display and key it in or use the dial. If you don’t know the frequency you want, use the overview at the bottom of this manual and start from there. From this starting point you can decide to keep it like this, or tune the drum higher or lower and develop your own personal drum sound. It takes time to develop your own sound, but you can store the frequencies for each head, so it will be easier next time.

If you like the pitch of your drum as it is, push the green button to set the Filtered Frequency to become the “Tune Frequency” (when you see the Filtered Frequency in the display).

Place your tom on a carpet, blanket or drum stool and place your device near the drum, a little bit higher than the drum head surface, with the mic pointing at the drum.

Make sure the correct lug frequency is entered as Tune Frequency.

1. Now measure the frequency near all lugs. Tap the head one inch from the lug and first correct the lugs with the biggest differences.

2. Then tap (not too loudly) and tune the head lug-by-lug in a cross pattern. Repeat this until each step gives you a result of less than 2.0Hz from the desired Tune Frequency.

3. Fine tuning: tune the drum lug by lug by turning the drum, so each lug is next to the mic of your device when you measure it. Tuning one tension rod can influence the frequency of other lugs, so you may have to go around several times. You don’t have to use the cross pattern in this case. Tune until the Tune Frequency and the Filtered Frequency near all lugs are (almost) the same.

If you’re having problems with reading the frequency; put your fingertip on the middle of the head to reduce overtones (sometimes some moongel in the centre of the head will do fine too).

Save the Tune Frequency by entering the name (e.g. tom 1 – top) and go to the second tune screen for tuning the next head.

Keep the Tune Frequency by entering the name (e.g. tom 1 batter) and go to the second tune screen.

Two-headed drums

1 Bottom heads same frequency

Tuning the top and bottom heads to the same pitch gives more tone and longer sustain or resonance. 2 Bottom head higher frequency

Tuning the bottom head tighter than the batter head produces a pitch bend and a shorter sustain and resonance. 3 Bottom head lower frequency

Tuning the bottom head lower also gives you a pitch bend (more noticeable than with a higher tunes resonant head) and less sustain.

Of course you can also play without a bottom head or use a 682Drums XBM-bottom head (air-permeable bottom head). We suggest always using a single ply head when using a resonant head.

The overall frequency of the tom will change when the bottom pitch is lower or higher than the top head. So if you want to tune your bottom head higher, you need to tune your top head lower to get the same overall tom frequency and vice versa. The top and bottom head will always give the same fundamental tone, even when they are tuned differently.

Snare drum

Tuning the batter head of a snare drum is identical to any other drum. However, the batter head is normally always tuned higher than a tom and so is the resonant head.

The resonant head of a snare drum is much thinner than a batter head which is the key to a good snare sound. Always tune the snare resonant head without the snares on it.

We suggest trying a top head Tune Frequency between 220Hz and 340Hz for a snare drum. Try tuning the bottom head 1,33 to 1,5 times higher (but not higher than 400Hz).

Bass Drum

Tuning the bass drum is basically the same as tuning toms, with the same top/bottom tuning relationships. However, most drummers use some sort of muffling (pillow, blanket), but you can also use self-muffled drum heads like Remo’s Powerstrokes (and still use additional muffling if so required). Muffling and holes in the resonant head naturally have a major impact on the final sound.

General

The wood that’s used, the depth and the bearing edge will all influence how your drums will sound.

In general a cheap drum kit will never sound great. However, if it’s well tuned you can still be left surprised. And a great quality drum kit that’s not properly tuned will never sound great either.

There are drummers who want to tune to an exact note. Please note that all drum shells have their own unique tonal quality. Make sure you don’t tune outside of the tom’s tuning range. Try to find out the tuning range of each tom and your drums will always sound better if you stay within this range.

If you start with your highest tom and tune it too low, then the pitch may be too low when you get to your largest tom. It may be helpful to start in the middle if you have a lot of toms.

Your drums will sound different when you move away from them. Ask someone else to play it (or at least hit it) and listen from a distance. This is how your audience will hear your drum sound in an un-mic’d situation.

If you want to eliminate overtones you can muffle them with 682Drums muffling rings, moongel or use drum heads like Evans EC2 or Remo pinstripes or Powerstrokes. If you love overtones, keep it as it is.

The most important rule for tuning a drum is: there are no rules! Be creative and create your own sound.

How To Tune a Drum Kit

Conclusion

I like to experiment with the sounds of my drums and it’s good practice to search out sounds you haven’t heard before. Experimentation lets you find new timbres that will change your sound and ultimately the way you play. After all it’s no fun if we all sound the same.

However, if you are tuning your kit for a specific purpose it’s worth doing some research in to the genre you like to play. What do your favourite drummers do? Listen to songs in the same style. Do your research and get an an idea of the drum sound you are aiming for.

Your playing environment will also affect your sound, the acoustics of different rooms will change the sound of your kit. So in a brighter sounding room you may want to tune the kit down to make it darker and vice versa.

Finally you should consider the musicians you’re playing with. Tune your kit to compliment the rest of the band, trust me it’ll make a world of difference.

Ever wondered how to make drums sound quieter? Read our ‘7 Ways To Make Drums Quieter‘ guide!

Did you enjoy reading this article? Leave a comment below and share your thoughts!

Interested in finding out more about music gear and expanding your knowledge? Click here to view all of our Learn articles.

Drum Tuning Bible:

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

Page 1 of 20

Table of Conents: TABLE OF CONENTS: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 1 FORWARD:………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 3 TYPICAL ANSWERD QUESTIONS: ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 3 TRUTH’S OF DRUMS:………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 3 HOOPS/RIMS: ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 4 FUNDAMENTALS OF TUNING: ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 4 CONSTRUCTION GUIDELINES, ALL DRUMS: ………………………………………………………………………… 5 TUNING AND SEATING THE HEADS, ALL DRUMS …………………………………………………………………. 5 LEARNING HOW, RESONANT SIDE TUNING – THE BEGINNING:……………………………………………………………. 6 BATTER SIDE TUNING: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 7 TIME TO ZONE: …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 7 RESULTS – WHAT THEY MEAN: …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 7 TOMS: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 8 TOM, DRUMHEADS – BATTER SIDE:……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 8 TOMS, DRUMHEADS – RESONANT SIDE: …………………………………………………………………………………………. 8 TOMS, GENERAL HEAD GUIDELINES:…………………………………………………………………………………………….. 8 TOMS, SOME SELECTIONS AND CHARACTERISTIC SOUNDS………………………………………………………………….. 9 TOMS, TUNING PROCEDURE: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 9 KICK DRUM:………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 10 KICK DRUM, DRUMHEADS – BATTER SIDE: …………………………………………………………………………………… 10 KICK DRUM, DRUMHEADS – RESONANT SIDE: ……………………………………………………………………………….. 10 HOLES IN YOUR HEAD OR NOT? …………………………………………………………………………………………………. 10 PADS AND/OR PILLOWS: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 10 SOUNDS, KICK DRUM CHARACTERISTIC PAIRING:………………………………………………………………………….. 11 KICK DRUM, TUNING PROCEDURE AND TRICKS: ……………………………………………………………………………. 11 SNARE DRUM: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 12 SNARE, CONSTRUCTION BRIEF …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 12 SNARE, DRUMHEADS – BATTER SIDE: ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 12 SNARE, DRUMHEADS – RESONANT SIDE: ………………………………………………………………………………………. 13 SNARE UNIT, GENERAL GUIDELINES: ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 13 SNARE DRUM, INSPECTION AND HOW TO ISSUES:…………………………………………………………………………… 14 SNARE DRUM, TUNING METHOD 1 (FAT AND WET): ………………………………………………………………………. 14 SNARE DRUM, TUNING METHOD 2 (POP, ARTICULATE, NOT CHOKED, PREFERRED BY MANY STUDIO DRUMMERS):………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 15 SNARE DRUM, TUNING METHOD 3 (HIGHLY RESONANT, BRINGS THE MOST OUT OF THE SHELL): …………….. 15 SNARE DRUM, GENERAL TUNING GUIDELINES:……………………………………………………………………………… 15 SNARE UNIT, INSTALLATION OF: ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 15 SNARE UNIT, SOUND AND THE 5 STAGES OF:………………………………………………………………………………… 16 SNARE DRUM, TIPS AND TRICKS: ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 16 SNARE UNIT, BUZZ ISSUES OR SYMPATHETIC VIBRATIONS:……………………………………………………………… 16

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

Page 2 of 20

TUNING SEQUENCES, SUGGESTED: …………………………………………………………………………………….. 17 INTERVAL AND DRUM SIZING: ……………………………………………………………………………………………. 17 MUSICAL NOTES FOR TUNING, SUGGESTED:……………………………………………………………………… 18 MICROPHONE USE, IN BRIEF – HOW THEY CAN EFFECT THE SOUND: …………………………….. 18 KICK MIC TRICKS: …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 19 SNARE MIC TRICKS:…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 19 CONCLUSION ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 19 LINKS OF INTEREST: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 19 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 20

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

Page 3 of 20

Forward: Others online have written tutorial guides who explain in simpler terms how to get a sound out of your drum. This is not intended to be such an article. It is my position that it means nothing when you get advice such as “put 2 turns on one side and then a few more on the other side”. It does not describe or teach how to achieve tone and control, but admittedly, there are those for whom such advice is all that’s required. For others, who really want to understand all their drum can do and may have been lost for years wondering, understand it requires thinking and work. If you’re looking for a shortcut to great sound, you’ll find it in the knowledge you gain from this article, once you apply it. Finally, if you read the entire “bible”, it should aid you in choosing a drumset to fulfill your dreams.

Typical answerd questions: 1.

Difference between heads, when to use what.

2.

How to make it resonant, fat, punchy, open, less/more ring.

3.

How mic’s effect the choice of heads.

4.

What’s the fundamental note of a drum vs. it’s pitch and timbre.

5.

What difference does the wood and construction make in the tuning.

6.

Drum interval sizing.

7.

Example head setups and results.

8.

Snare buzz issues.

9.

Snare replacement, tension and choice issues.

10. How to get more articulation, volume, crack, sensitivity and warmth from a snare drum? 11. What difference does a cast, wood, steel hoop make? 12. Example notes to tune to? 13. Kick drum muffling.

Truth’s of Drums: 1.

The interval between drums is more important than many realize and size is the key to evenly resonant incremental notes between drums.

2.

The tiniest of movements on the tuning lug “can” make huge differences and raise pitch drastically.

3.

A sound or tuning that works for a small venue will not work as well for a large venue.

4.

Head selection for microphones will likely be different than without. Get to know the utilization of microphones well if you’re going to use them, even slight alterations in placement make a huge difference.

5.

The sound heard from a CD at home is not what a drum really sounds like but on few occasions. What you hear is usually an altered version recorded according to what the producer and the artist want it to sound like through alterations.

6.

All drums sound different at 0, 5, 15, 50 foot or differing distances. So what sounds good to the drummer while playing may be terrible to the audience, in whatever form the audience takes.

7.

This tuning method works for ALL DRUMS.

8.

Less expensive does not mean inferior.

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999 9.

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The air hole or vent in the shell is to allow the shell to breath when two heads are used and atmospheric changes occur, thereby helping to eliminate moisture build-up. This is a typical problem moving from cold to hot environments much the same as glass windows can sweat in your house. The vents have little effect on tone.

10. Yes, you should stretch heads on all drums, it’s called “seating”.

Hoops/Rims: 1.

Die Cast Hoops: Thicker and stronger then triple flanged stamped hoops with an ability to allow more even tuning of the head and as a result, the head is usually more responsive throughout the tuning range with less varied overtones. As such, may create a slightly drier sound on thin shell, small sized drums due the weight of the rim causing the drum to vibrate less freely.

2.

Triple Flanged or “stamped” hoops come in a variety of metals, which effect the tone of the drum. The thinner they are the more difficult they’ll be to tune with. Many drummers prefer these on toms because of the ability to tune “fatter” or “warmer” than with cast. Aluminum makes for a higher pitched tone than does steel and as a result is used on snares quite a bit for a great “crack”.

3.

Wood Hoops have the virtue of being either rigid or flexible, depending upon the manufacturer’s thickness of the hoop. As a result, they can take on the tuning characteristics of a cast hoop if rigid or a flanged hoops if thin in construction. However, the rimshot sound is considerably different and acts like an extension of the shell so the drum is usually both more resonant and brighter.

4.

Less lugs means fatter tuning and more complex overtones. The longer the interval between lugs the less likely you are to get the head tuned evenly between lugs.

5.

A hoop of “rigid” nature results in a head, which can be tuned more evenly between lugs and will accentuate the imperfection in your drum if out of round or bad bearing edges.

Fundamentals of Tuning: 1.

The batter head controls attack and ring while the resonant head produces “resonance” and aids in sustain, it has a major effect in the overtones and enhances the timbre of the drum.

2.

When the drum is hit, the ear hears mostly the attack and the fundamental pitch of the drum, overtones are washed out at a distance.

3.

A drum placed upon a soft surface, such as carpet, and tapped very lightly allows you to hear the point of clarity in a drum and isolate the overtones and point of resonance.

4.

The most inherent sound created from any given head will be heard by placing a head of identical specifications on the resonance side.

5.

As you tune the drum with one side either higher or lower, you go through “zones” producing one of either clear pitch, phase cancellation, no sound or a Doppler effect. “Doppler” is where the drum when hit, descends in pitch from the point of initial attack to a lower pitch. This also becomes more pronounced when the head is of a different specification (weight/thickness) and the batter head is higher/lower in pitch than the bottom head.

6.

If the drum is tuned wrong or “seated” incorrectly the first time a head is mounted, you will likely ruin the head beyond its use or it will never sound its best.

7.

Generally, you do not use anything other than single ply on the bottom, but there are exceptions.

8.

Coated heads will be warmer than clear, ebony is in between the coated and clear and produces a less of a high frequency resonance (“darker” tone). Coated is probably required if doing brushwork.

9.

Even if you know how to tune, you may not be able to achieve the pitch/resonance desired due to drum sizing and shell weight. Any given shell has a fundamental pitch associated with it and you cannot change

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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that. Head selection can only make the most of the natural character in the drum. Your job when tuning, is to find that “fundamental” shell pitch and enhance or detract all the inherent sounds of that particular drum, it’s character. 10. Timbre and note/pitch are not the same. Timbre refers to the overall character of the drum vs. the fundamental note, which is the point at which the drum is likely to be most “open” or “resonant” in tone quality. Know that pitch can be raised or lowered in reference to say a note on the piano, but the shell resonance doesn’t really change. So a 12” drum may produce a note of G up to say a D-sharp (“pitch”), but it may really stand out around an A-flat (“fundamental” note of shell). The fact that one drum is “brighter” vs. “warm” is the Timbre. 11. Most Important step in tuning is seating the head. When the head is first mounted, the objective is to get the head to seat itself in the hoop and form that all-important bond between the bearing edge of the drum and the head itself; this is called seating the head (explained below). If the head is pulled tighter on side, it is no longer centered and will not vibrate correctly.

Construction Guidelines, All Drums: To pick the right head to achieve desired sound, you should consider the inherent character of your drum. Here are some simple rules to know: 1.

The rougher the interior, the less resonant the drum.

2.

Thinner shells are more resonant.

3.

Sharp bearing edges means more overtone and resonance

4.

If the drum is void of obstructions inside, that is, no reinforcing hoop adhered to the inside, the drum will be more open and vibrate more freely. Conversely, if the drum has reinforcing hoops inside, it will have a shorter decay/sustain and a more mid-ranged presence or attack than unobstructed shells. The reinforcing or counter-hoop stifles the ability for the drum to resonate, thus decreasing the low-end response to a small degree. Still the unobstructed shell is usually brighter or with more high frequencies.

5.

A “better” sound is what you want the drum to sound like and despite the marketing propaganda, less expensive does not mean an inferior sound. Low cost drums are usually a “punchy” type sound due to wood grades used..

6.

Mainstream Material, Wood: Maple compared to African Mahogany: Mahogany will have an approximate 20% increase in low frequency resonance over the Maple drum, mid and high frequencies will be the same from a reproduction point of view. Maple compared to Birch: Birch will have about a 10% loss in reproduction of low end compared to Maple and about a 20% increase in the high end, with the mid range remaining about the same, so the Birch kit will definitely be a “harder” and “brighter” sounding kit. Beech is in between Maple and Birch. All other Maple colored woods used in laminated shells are basically there for either structural integrity or looks and do not have the desired qualities of the above. Mahogany has earned an undeserved bad reputation due to the use of inferior grades on low cost drums for appearance reasons.

Tuning and Seating the Heads, All Drums This procedure works on all drums, toms, snare and kick. Below, after this Tuning and Seating the Heads section, are specifics related to each drum. That is, a section for toms, kick and snare that gives specifics about the tuning tricks and head selection. To get to know how this procedure works, I recommend you start with typically a 12” drum. Do not get “learning how to tune” confused with the “tuning of the set”. When tuning a whole set, you may want to begin differently and that is covered below under “Tuning Sequences, Suggested:”, but furst you need to understand how to get the most out of your drum. That is the focus.

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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Learning How, Resonant Side Tuning – The beginning: 1. Pick the heads you wish to use from the section for the Toms, Kick or Snare Drum. 2.

Read that section completely, then return to this section and apply any specifics you wish from the respective Tom, Kick or Snare Drum section.

3.

Remove both old heads completely, it’s important for this procedure to work. Once you know the relative tuning capability of the drum, you will not always have to remove both reads. Remember, the objective is to find the true capability and tuning range of each drum.

4.

With heads off, thump on the shell with your hand or butt end of a stick and trace down any abnormal vibrations. If the lugs buzz, you can remove them and see if stuffing cotton into the lug retainer helps stop the buzz. You can also look at putting some thin sheet rubber and placing it between the lug casing and the shell.

5.

Set the drum on a carpeted surface, batter side down and either put the bottom head on or proceed as follows.

6.

It’s important to tighten all rods just to the point where contact is made with the washer or rim. If your lugs move freely, you can use your fingers here or in the case where the lug is manufactured where there is resistance in the turning of the lug beyond a few turns, you’ll have to use a key. In any event, once contact is made with the washer/rim, back-off 1/4 turn.

7.

Next, take two keys 180 degrees apart and tighten in half turn increments together until you’ve put 3 complete turns on all rods of the drum. We are now “Seating” the head, the musical note is not important.

8.

Lift the drum up a few inches and hit the head once and see if it is a distortion free sound. If not give each lug another 1/2 turn and repeat until the drum is distortion free. Do not be afraid to really tighten the head above a normal playing pitch, it is essential that the head produce a clear undistorted tone before proceeding.

9.

Next, with the drum back down on the carpet, tap with the drum key, lightly, about 1 to 1.5” from the edge, in the same place at each lug. LISTEN to the resonance of the tap and even out the lugs so the head will be “in tune with itself”, the order is not very important here. DO NOT EVER TUNE DOWN TO A NOTE, TUNE UP. By this I mean, if a lug is too high detune below what you are trying to achieve and then bring it back up to pitch.

10. If your heads are not made by REMO, go to the next step. If you are using glued heads such as the REMO heads, remember the current pitch the head is currently at. Now push down with light force directly in the center of the head to crack the glue joint. You aren’t trying to push the head through the drum, so ease up. We’re talking about maybe a ¼” depression here. Then tune back up to that pitch you so willingly remembered and even out the head so it’s in tune with itself again. 11. Next, either let the drum sit 12 hours or take a hair dryer and warm (not real hot) the perimeter of the skin. Go around maybe 2 or 3 times with the dryer on high about 2-3” off the surface. It should take maybe 8 seconds to go around a 12” drum one time with an average hair dryer. This sets the skin/hoop/collar and finishes the “seating” process. Note this makes a difference, try one with and one without and you will agree. 12. Once set and cool, with the drum still on the floor, loosen as you tightened with 2 keys in ¼ turn increments just to the point of no resonance. 13. Place the drum up in/on its stand or hold by the rim. Begin tightening evenly and successively on each lug in 1/4 turn increments. Go around once, even out by tapping and then strike once in the center. Don’t be afraid to use 1/8 or 1/16 turns either. We’re looking for the point where you tune just until you get a low and clear tone. STOP AT THIS POINT. For the head you selected, this is the lowest pitch this drum will ever go. If you haven’t got a clear tone, go back to step 5 and tighten it up higher and reseat the head. If you’ve gone around several times and the head is moving up in pitch but the tone is distorted, something is wrong. Either it’s a bad head, bearing edges or the head didn’t seat. I’d leave the head under tension for 24

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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hours and try again. I have found that the problem goes away many times overnight, I don’t know why. If you can’t wait, try another head or try taking the pitch way up and use the heat again before you tune it back down. In any event, if you achieved to lowest clear note, STOP! I suggest you not tune any higher than this lowest note at this time. Batter Side Tuning: 1. Pick the heads you wish to use from the section for the Toms, Kick or Snare Drum. 2.

Read that section completely, then return to this section and apply any specifics you wish from the respective Tom, Kick or Snare Drum section. Remove the drum from its stand and set it (now the resonant head) down against a carpet to void the drum of the newly installed resonant head from what else, resonating.

3.

Seat the Head: Install the top head in the same fashion as you did the resonant head and seat the head. Remember to push on glued heads.

4.

Detuning procedure: Loosen as you tightened with 2 keys just to the point of no resonance.

5.

Find the lowest note: Place the drum up in/on its stand or hold by the rim and tighten evenly and successively on each lug in 1/4 turn increments. Go around once, even out by tapping and then strike once in the center until you get a low and clear tone. STOP AT THIS POINT. For the head you selected, this is the lowest pitch this drum will ever go.

6.

Hold the drum by the rim and hit it, ideally, it should sound the same once back on the holder. If it doesn’t, try extending the position of the tom out a little more on the holder. If this doesn’t help, you might be a good candidate for something like the aftermarket R.I.M.M.’s mounting system if it sounded better by holding in your hand.

Time to Zone: It’s time to proceed up through the tuning zones to get the most out of the drum. Focusing on the batter or top head, proceed and tune, never go in larger increments than 1/4 turns on the way up, 1/8 turn per lug preferred. Always stop and hit between a full round of lug tightening and make sure the heads in tune with itself. You will go through phases where the drum sounds good then sounds bad for a couple of turns and then suddenly the sound opens up again. You can usually do this for 2 zones and then the top head will go dead and have a high overtone/ring. While pitch may continue to change, the drum continues to have no real life to it. At this point you’ve gone too far with the top head, back off 1/4 to 1/2 turn (again make sure you tune up to the pitch not down). 1.

If you want a pitch higher than this “high” pitch you achieved, go to the bottom head and tighten each lug 1/8 to 1/4 turn each lug. After this you can increase the pitch of the top head again for another 1-2 steps. When tuning in this manner, you’ll experience the “Doppler” effect at certain phases in the tuning meaning the drum when struck will have a descending pitch. This tells the drummer/tuner that the effective pitch for that drum has yet to be achieved, but some like this sound and stop here. As you move up out of that phase of the zone, you’ll reach a point where the drum evens out, the Doppler is gone and the drum becomes open and even in sound. This is the point where both heads are or are close to being identical in pitch.

2.

Beyond this point, the drum will go dead again and you have to repeat with the 1/16, 1/8 or 1/4 turns on the bottom or resonant head to effectively raise the pitch of the drum and move up again to another zone and repeat the procedure.

Results – What They Mean: 1. Somewhere in the tuning there is a point where each drum will sound most resonant – when everything is related. At this point, that’s the fundamental frequency of the shell, the sweet spot. Each drum will have one of these. If two different sized drums are close in this fundamental pitch, you’ll likely better understand the importance of the increment sizing from one drum to another. You’ll likely have to

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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compromise and change the tuning of both drums +/- in pitch as a result to make them the same in character. 2.

Learn to tune to intentionally make the most resonant drum less resonant thereby eliminating muffling devices such as “moon gel”. That is, detune or raise pitch slightly on both heads. For example you might lower the batter and raise the resonant (or visa versus) by equal amounts causing a phase shift and the drum may go either deader or more open depending upon where you are in the zone. People often refer to this procedure as “loosen one lug”. Although I find it is better to move all the lugs by a certain amount. This way you don’t run the risk of destroying the head.

3.

Taking the resonant head and tuning to the lowest note, and then detuning a slight amount (1/16 to 1/8 of a turn) creates a “fat, loose or dark” drum sound. The batter head is then used to alter the pitch. Note that the pitch for a “fat” tuning can be somewhat limited.

4.

For more “punch or attack”, the resonant head is raised in pitch by a small degree (1-3 notes) over the pitch the batter head is at.

5.

To create an “open, resonant” sound, both heads should be of equal pitch. Use of a clear head will result in a more “open” tone.

Toms: Tom, Drumheads – Batter side: 1. Single ply unmuffled medium weight such as REMO Ambassador and Fiberskyn FA, Aquarian Satin Texture Coated and the Evans G1 series. 2.

Single ply muffled or Heavy Weight such as the REMO Emperor, Powerstroke, FiberSkyn F1 and the Aquarian Studio X series. The sound here goes more mellow compared to single ply with overtones becoming less prevalent on the initial attack and less or minimal sustain.

3.

2 ply muffled or wear resistant heads like REMO Pinstripe, Aquarian Performance II or Double Thins and the classic Evans G2, or anything with a “Powerdot” on it, these produce a very short initial attack coupled with a very short sustain.

4.

Heavily muffled with an oil barrier such as the Evans hydraulic. These heads are the most inherently “boxy” or “dull” of any. Almost void of any inherent sustain on their own.

Toms, Drumheads – Resonant side: Note, you can obviously use any head but it is usually preferred to use a single ply head. 1.

Thin resonant heads: Heads like REMO Diplomat batter, FiberSkyn 3 FT/FD, Aquarian High Frequency and Evan’s Genera Resonant or Glass Resonant heads.

2.

Medium weigh heads: Heads such as REMO Ambassador, Ambassador Ebony and FiberSkyn FA, Aquarian Classic Clear or Satin Texture Coated and the Evans G1 series. These will have less sustain than the thinner counterparts such as the REMO Diplomat or Evans Glass or Genera Resonant. Knowing the inherent sound of each head and how to combine the heads and tune makes the batter head all that much more adequate when trying to achieve a sound.

Toms, General Head Guidelines: 1. To get the volume and as much sustain back as possible when using muffled, two ply or hydraulic heads, use thin heads on the resonant side. 2.

For a warmer sound use texture coated versions of the above and warmer still, move into the single ply medium weight heads such as the Ambassador, Evan’s or Aquarian Coated heads.

3.

Use a muffled head on the resonant side to kill sustain and overtones yet retain the stick response and attack of a single ply head on the batter.

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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4.

The sound of the ebony series of heads is between clear and coated. It is usually described as “darker”, which to my ear means not quite as prevalent in high pitched overtones as a clear head, but more prevalent in overtones than texture coated.

5.

The more coating without muffling the warmer the sound will get.

Toms, Some selections and characteristic sounds. 1. Medium weight, single ply such as REMO Ambassador, Aquarian or EVANS G1 coated top/same on bottom. Very resonant, high ring can be very prominent, very good sustain, excellent stick response. Clear on top even more open. This is what a large portion of jazz, country and light rock guys use. Tuning can control ring easily. Popular recording choice. Coated provides a nice sibilance to the stick attack while clear provides predominate midrange attack. 2.

Remo Powerstroke 3, FiberSkyn FA or Emperor, Aquarian Studio X; Coated or Clear on top with REMO Diplomat Batter Clear or EVANS Genera Resonant Clear bottom. Very resonant, almost void of high ring but very good sustain excellent stick response. A classic light jazz studio sound without mics. For a little warmer sound, use a medium weight coated head on the bottom or Ebony series. Used with some lower end bass heavy mic’s in close mic situations, the sound can be almost too round due to “proximity effect (see “Microphone Use, In Brief – How they can effect the sound:” below).

3.

Emperor, FiberSkyn F1 or Aquarian Double Thin on top with a medium weight single ply on the bottom. Good combination that sort of bridges the gap between medium hitters and hard hitters without much of a sacrifice in sound and stick response. Warm sound yet can be resonant with some high pitch character.

4.

Pinstripe, Aquarian Performance II or EVANS G2 top and a thin single ply like REMO Diplomat or EVANS Genera Resonant Clear bottom. Less resonant than above, much more stick attack sound, some light to no high ring but very good sustain and attack with good stick response. For a fatter/wetter sound, try keeping the bottom head at or slightly below it’s lowest fundamental note. This combination or the one below is a very good selection for fat sounding drums. Again, for a little warmer sound, use a medium weight coated head on the bottom such as an Ambassador or equivalent. Another good recording choice for a more isolated sound.

5.

REMO Ambassador, Aquarian or EVANS G1 coated top and a 2-ply head on the bottom such as EVANS G2. Longer fundamental note than the above combination and almost completely void of high ring with short sustain and excellent stick response.

6.

Evan’s G2 or any other 2-ply muffled head on top and bottom, close to the dead sound of late 60’s early 70’s, a very short tone and not real great stick response. Tuned high in pitch, overtones can come back with a vengeance.

7.

Hydraulic heads top/bottom, like throwing a towel over the drum, “boxy” sounding, thud. Using a highly resonant head such as the Evan’s Glass or Genera Resonant adds back some life. Some report this works good in high pitched tuning situations although I have no personal experience with drums tuned this way. I have however, used them in the low tuning ranges and the sound is as I have described.

Toms, Tuning Procedure: Follow that listed above under “Tuning and Seating the Heads, All Drums”. Specifically you should proceed in this order: 1.

Learning How, Resonant Side Tuning – The beginning:

2.

Batter Side Tuning:

3.

Time to Zone:

4.

Then follow-up with Results – What They Mean:

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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Kick Drum: Kick Drum, Drumheads – Batter side: 1. Single Ply – No muffling: Any head on par with the likes of Remo Ambassador, Ebony series, FiberSkyn 3 FA, Aquarian Classic, Aquarian Signature Series Jack DeJohnette, Evans EQ1, EQ4, etc. 2.

Muffled head, 1-ply: Any head on par with the likes of Remo Ambassador, Ebony series, FiberSkyn 3 FA, Aquarian Classic, Aquarian Signature Series Carmine or Vinny Appice, Studio X, Impact I, SuperKick I, Evans EQ1, EQ4, etc.

3.

Muffled head, 2-ply: Any head on par with the likes of Remo Pinstripe, Evan’s EQ2,EQ3 or hydraulic, Aquarian SuperKick II

Kick Drum, Drumheads – Resonant side: 1. Single Ply – No muffling: Any head on par with the likes of Remo Ambassador, Ebony series, FiberSkyn 3 FA, Aquarian Classic, Ported Bass Drum Head, Evans EQ1, UNO 58 1000, etc. 2.

Single Ply – With muffling: Any head on par with the likes of Remo PowerStroke 3, Aquarian Regulator, Evans EQ2, EQ3, etc.

Note that most of these come with a choice of either a 4.5”, 5”, 7” or no hole. Holes in Your Head or Not? 1. Any hole larger than 7” is like having no head at all on the drum. 2.

A 7” hole creates the feel of a one-headed kick drum, feeds more beater attack direct to an audience and provides some of the tone of the resonant head. Further, it’s easy to position a mic and change internal muffling devices, if used.

3.

A 4.5” or 5” hole, offset, allows some relief for rebound control of the kick beater, contains more of the drums resonance so that the resonant head is more pronounced in the tuning of the drum. At 4.5”, is difficult to get large mic’s positioned (but can be done) and/or internal muffling altered.

4.

No hole, very resonant, creates more bounce or rebound from the kick beater. Hard to get the “slap” of the beater and resonance of the drum both miced with one mic. What’s inside in the way of muffling, stays. The resonant head is very predominant in the overall sound.

Pads and/or Pillows: 1. One pad or pillow, or anything that cover a calculated 15-20% coverage against Batter head only: Beater attack accentuated, tone and sustain linger. 2.

One pad or pillow, 15-20% coverage against Resonant head only: Beater attack lessened, tone and sustain develop short burst of energy followed by some bright overtones.

3.

One pad or pillow, 15-20% coverage against Batter head and Resonant: Beater attack accentuated, overall volume diminished a bit, tone and sustain become focused, overtones diminished.

4.

One pad or pillow, 25-30% coverage against Batter head and 15-20% coverage of Resonant: Beater attack becomes much sharper and accentuated, overall volume does not diminished much more than the above, tone and sustain become even more focused, overtones all but gone. When used with a single ply muffled batter head, easy to get very sharp sound. Good choice for mic use.

5.

One pad or pillow, 25-30% coverage against Batter and Resonant: A very focused sound, which becomes ideal for close micing of a kick drum. Beater attack becomes as sharp as it gets, overall volume does not diminished much more than the above, tone and sustain become short bursts of energy that when listened to without a mic, seem lifeless. A distinct “punch” sound.

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Sounds, Kick Drum Characteristic Pairing: Note all tone and muffling characteristics from the following heads can be altered by the use of pillows/pads above. 1.

Single ply unmuffled Batter and Resonant: Open tone, bouncy feeling, highly resonant, ringy,

2.

Single ply muffled Batter, Single ply unmuffled Resonant: Attack of the beater pops out, open tone, highly resonant, overtones diminished a bit on the initial attack but linger on the sustain

3.

Single ply muffled Batter and Resonant: Attack of the beater is heard more, a dense but not quite a focused sound, overtones controlled but still there. Typical combination is the REMO PowerStroke 3 batter and resonant, or for a bit more low end try Evans EQ4 Batter paired with REMO PowerStroke 3, Evans EQ2 or Aquarian Regulator Resonant.

4.

Single ply muffled Batter and 2-ply muffled Resonant: Attack of the beater pops out, wide focused sound, overtones controlled. Typical combination is the REMO PowerStroke 3 batter with Pinstripe, Evans EQ3 or Aquarian SuperKick II Resonant.

5.

2- ply muffled Batter and 2-ply muffled Resonant: Very focused and punchy attack, narrow focused sound, overtones very controlled (may need no pillows/pads). Typical combination on both the batter and resonant would be REMO Pinstripe, or Evans EQ3 or Aquarian SuperKick II.

Kick Drum, Tuning Procedure and Tricks: 1. The same tuning procedure works on the kick drum as well. Simply follow the procedure listed above under ”Tuning and Seating the Heads, All Drums” and take into account the following points as well. 2.

A Typical tuning method is to have the batter head control the attack portion of the sound and the resonant head to control the “sustain” portion of the sound.

3.

For more punch, tune the resonant side up in pitch 1-2 notes from the batter. Tune entire drum up in pitch.

4.

For a “plastic” sound, use single ply batter heads tuned just to a point of the lowest note and detune ½ turn on each lug. A hard felt beater without a patch works well. If you go to wood or plastic beaters, use the patch.

5.

A fat kick drum is achieved the same way a “fat” tom sound is achieved. Taking the resonant head and tuning to the lowest note, and then detuning a slight amount (1/16 to 1/8 of a turn) creates a “fat, loose or dark” drum sound. The batter head is then used to alter the pitch. Note that the pitch for a “fat” tuning can be somewhat limited.

6.

For a short “open” burst of resonant tone, followed by a muted overtone, try using one of the EQ pads placed loosely against either head so that when the beater strikes the head, the upper portion of the pad (the “hinged” section) floats away from the head yet returns quickly. You can effect the duration of the sound by the positioning of the pad. This also works when using 2 pads where one remains firm against the head while the other on top or against the other head provided the “hinged” sound.

7.

Don’t have a pillow or pad? Try using strips of felt or cotton sheet material of varying inches in width placed near the center of the drumhead, these get held on by the head, stretch them tight. As a guide try 4.5” on a 20”; 5” on a 22”; 5.5” on a 24”. Used on 1 head, this is the equivalent of 25-30% coverage or like two EQ pads per head. Also, a towel rolled up and taped to the inside bottom of one or both heads works. An old feather pillow or folded blanket works equally well. Be creative! Anything that “lightly” touches the head will work, if done in the same percentage of cover given above in “Pads and/or Pillows:”. For that “hinged” sound, try a towel or cloth taped to the head on just the upper edge so that it floats on and off the head with the beater strike.

8.

Get the drum up off the floor as much as your pedal and spurs will allow for more resonance.

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Snare Drum: Tuning the snare is not different than with any drum, it’s just complicated or enhanced by the shell choice and snare wires. Lets start with what the shell tone is because from this you better understand the enhancements and limitations inherent in the drum shell tone prior to head choice. Snare, Construction Brief 1. Brass: A very sharp edge to the sound and very rich with mellow overtones. 2.

Steel: A step more towards bright with a very pronounced ring, allot of body and longer decay than brass.

3.

Aluminum: Clear, open sounds with bright, crisp overtones and is capable of incredibly loud rimshots.

4.

Bronze: A close cousin to brass with the overall character of woods, can be loud, a good all around drum.

5.

Copper: A close cousin to the Aluminum drum only slightly warmer.

6.

Anything Hammered: Same overall characteristics as the parent material, only slightly less resonance to varying degrees.

7.

Metal Thickness: The 1mm shells are not as low to mid range resonant as thicker shells such as 3mm plus.

8.

Metal Cast Drums: Very Loud and Resonant due to special cymbal alloys used in the casting process.

9.

Wood drums, see “Construction Guidelines” above in the “Tom” section, they apply here too.

10. Small diameter means higher pitch. 11. Longer shell length means more power and shell resonance, longer decay. 12. Shallow depth means more articulate, less power due to decreased shell area. 13. Snare bed: A slight depression in the resonant side bearing edge to allow the snare to ride closer to the head. 14. Bearing edges of less than 45 degrees are not inferior, they simply make for a different sound, usually less resonant and darker in character the less the angle, 35 degree is popular on Birch Drums. Drums get brighter if the crown of the bearing edge is a tighter radius (sharper) than if the radius is flatter (may be desired on the toms and kick). Snare, Drumheads – Batter side: 1. Single ply Thin Weight such as REMO Diplomat, Renaissance, FiberSkyn FD (FD extra thin), Evan’s Genera Concert Snare, all are coated and are great for very articulate, extremely sensitive, bright, open overtones (FiberSkyn warmer), not very durable. Special mention – Evan’s Genera Concert Staccato Snare, a drier very articulate version of the “thin” group. 2.

Single ply unmuffled/unvented medium weight such as REMO Ambassador, Renaissance and FiberSkyn FA, Aquarian Satin Texture Coated and the Evans G1 series, UNO 58 1000. Uno 58 is brightest, FiberSkyn warmest. All purpose head, accentuated overtones, articulate, takes punishment from all but very heavy hitters. Aquarian coating most durable. Special mention – Evan’s PowerCenter, all the virtues of a single ply head but has a perforated 5” coated thin dot that will withstand high tunings and severe abuse without the dot coming off (only 14”).

3.

Single ply muffled or Heavy Weight such as the REMO Emperor, Renaissance, Powerstroke, FiberSkyn F1 and the Aquarian Studio X series, Evan’s Genera Batter. The sound here goes more mellow compared to single ply with overtones becoming less prevalent on the initial attack and less or minimal sustain. There is still an element of ring to the drum.

4.

Single ply muffled and very “Dry” or “Vented”. Evan’s has the most in the market for this category with the Genera Dry, Uno 58 1000 Dry, The sound has a sharper, quicker attack and is almost void of overtones. This head requires careful attention to tuning and generally will make the midrange tone of the shell material standout while limiting the low frequencies of the drum.

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5.

2 ply muffled or wear resistant heads like REMO Pinstripe, Aquarian Performance II or Double Thins and the classic Evans G2, or anything with a “Powerdot” on it, these produce a very short initial attack coupled with a very short sustain.

6.

Heavily muffled with an oil barrier such as the Evans hydraulic. These heads are the most inherently “boxy” or “dull” of any. Almost void of any inherent sustain on their own.

Snare, Drumheads – Resonant side: Note: Obviously you can use any head, but it is correct to use a “Snare Side” head. If you use any head other than a “Snare Side” Head, it will be the equivalent of using a “Heavy” weight or thicker head. 1.

Thin resonant heads: Heads like REMO Diplomat Snare Side and Evan’s Genera Hazy 200. These heads are great to increase snare response, sensitivity and crack while allowing ghost notes and rolls to become more articulate.

2.

Medium weigh heads: Heads such as REMO Ambassador, Renaissance, Aquarian Classic Clear Snare Side or Evan’s Hazy 300. These will have less sustain than the thinner counterparts such as the REMO Diplomat or Evans 200, the sound becomes more focused and not as bright and articulate. The Evan’s Genera 300 and Genera Glass 300 go drier in tone yet retain very good snare response while the Renaissance goes warmer.

3.

Heavy Weight resonant heads: REMO Emperor, Evan’s 500 Hazy are both very dry heads and not real articulate. Clear/glass versions of these heads are a bit drier yet. Aquarian Hi-Performance Snare Side is built to counteract wear yet give response characteristics of the medium weight heads.

Snare Unit, General Guidelines: 1. It is important to have the actual snare bed itself ride flat against the resonant head. If a drummer has used an inferior brand or replacement snare in the past, the place where the wires are held or soldered to the clip can be uneven or have sharp protrusions. This may have left the drummer feeling the thinner heads are not satisfactory because the poor condition of the snare itself actually caused the premature failure of the head. This is where the so called “Heavy Weight heads are usually employed. However, you might want to try the Aquarian Hi-Performance series here due to it’s unique construction, it gives protection where you “need” it yet retains some response of a medium weight Snare Side head. 2.

Snare count, length and material have to be considered. While you can retrofit another snare to change the drum, be sure it really is the correct length and attaches to the strainer throw-off correctly.

3.

Carbon steel is going to be brighter than stainless steel with cable, gut or a synthetic being much less bright.

4.

Less curl to the wire equals less volume and more articulate.

5.

Wider snare units will be louder and potentially so sensitive that you won’t be able to control the sympathetic vibration buzz. So if you bought the wide one and tighten the heck out of it to eliminate the buzz, you just as well stay with the original one.

6.

Snare units with a wider surface coupled with a second smaller set inside will provide a “fatter/wetter” sound.

7.

If you hit a drum hard, there is a point at which you do not increase the overall snare drum volume and in fact the drum will sound as though it has less “crack” than at moderate volumes. This is because you now hear more of the “tom” or “timbales” sound of the drum by virtue of the fact that you’re hitting only the batter side.

8.

The snare side is the excited side and it will only move so much when hit. So changing snares may or may not get you more volume or crack from the snare wire itself, depending upon how you hit.

9.

To keep the tone of the drum yet get a warmer less powering snare sound, reduce the snare count to 10 strands, carbon steel. For less metallic, stainless, etc.

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Snare Drum, Inspection and How to Issues: 1. Drum has an intermittent buzz during play: Remove heads and thump on the shell with your hand or butt end of a stick. If the lugs buzz, isolate the offending lug and first try to remove it or them and see if stuffing cotton into the lug retainer helps stop the buzz. You can also look at taking some thin sheet rubber and placing it between the lug casing and the shell, be careful you do not move the lug too far away from the shell, the lugs must align freely with the hoop. If you put the rubber in do it on all the lugs, not just the trouble lugs. If nothing buzzes without the heads, it is possible that the head itself is spent or seated wrong and this too can cause a buzz or distortion during play. The solution is to either replace the head or apply higher tension and try reseating the head. Look for loose bolts, etc. as well. 2.

How to check snares wire units: Lay the snares, unrestrained on a flat surface. See if all the wires look very uniform, make sure 1 or 2 of the strands are not over stretched or curving out (this can happen on new units as well). If they are in doubt, go buy or choose another snare wire unit, otherwise control over the “buzz” and “crack” of the drum may be very difficult. Check that portion of the unit where the wire of the snare couples with the clip and look for less than uniform joints. No sharp protrusions, lumps, etc. should be present. If you observe protrusions or unevenness, sometimes filing them off works, but don’t remove too much or your likely to cause the wires to pull off the clip.

3.

How to determine if a head is too old to use? Outside of an obvious split, make sure they’re not overly worn where the snare bed rides on the head (sometimes there’s a tiny hole or a milky color). Make sure the head is not warped or dished out from age or being over tensioned. If either of these conditions exist, replace the heads.

4.

How to check hoops? Place them on a kitchen counter or other very flat surface (not glass or plastic, these are inherently unleveled) and see if they sit flat. If the hoop is stamped or a triple flanged hoop, push down on them to straighten, fix or replace. If the hoop is cast or wood, you run the risk of breaking the hoop if you push hard enough to actually cause a movement. Your only solution other than live with it will be to replace it. Check for round by measuring in a “+” pattern with a simple ruler at 90 degrees apart across the hoop. If the measurement is not the same, they are out of round.

Snare Drum, Tuning Method 1 (Fat and Wet): The following suggests any choice of head from the single ply medium weight muffled category such as the Evan’s Genera Batter, REMO Powerstroke or Aquarian Studio X, all Texture Coated coupled with the Genera Hazy 200 Snare or REMO Diplomat Clear resonant side. Objective, a controlled ring, focused sound, very good resonance with excellent articulation and stick response. For more “open”, resonant big band type sound, go with either a REMO Ambassador coated, EVANS G1 coated or Aquarian Satin Texture Coated. Note: We are working for the drum sound without the snare wires installed. 1.

Start by placing the bottom or resonant head on the drum, we want to tune the bottom without the top to the lowest clear tone exactly the same as described above under “Learning How, Resonant Side Tuning The beginning” in the section “Tuning and Seating the Heads, All Drums”.

2.

Once you have achieved the lowest pitch for this drum on the resonant head, now the procedure changes just a bit. On the resonant head, bring each lug up one half of one turn to one full turn on each lug and even out again. This is a good starting point.

3.

On the batter head, continue to follow the tuning directions under “Batter Side Tuning” under the tom section, including installing and tuning the batter side as described under “Batter Side Tuning”.

4.

Once you have achieved the lowest pitch for this drum on the batter head, now listen for the pitch and feel of the drum. I suggest you tune this head fairly high or 3 to 5 notes higher than your highest tom.

5.

This gives excellent stick and brush response and even though the batter is now much higher in pitch than the resonant, it will still have that complex resonance produced by the resonant head being low. This overall feel or resonance of the pitch can be controlled by snare tension (discussed below).

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6.

If it’s too low in resonance after tuning the batter and applying the snares, you then crank the snare side up 1/4 to ½ turn per lug. Again, I suggest you do this after applying the snares. Once you get the desired resonance, stick response, etc. without the snare wires installed, its time to replace the snare bed.

7.

Jump to “General Snare Tuning Guidelines” and then to “Installing The Snares” section.

Snare Drum, Tuning Method 2 (Pop, Articulate, Not Choked, Preferred by many studio Drummers): Note: Proceed without snares installed 1.

Replace the heads exactly as described in Method 1.

2.

Rather than tuning the batter/top head higher in pitch, tune it identically in pitch to the resonant/snare side head.

3.

Now move just the bottom snare side head up in pitch about 3 notes higher than the batter head.

4.

Jump to “General Snare Tuning Guidelines” and then to “Installing The Snares” section.

Snare Drum, Tuning Method 3 (Highly Resonant, brings the most out of the shell): Note: Proceed without snares installed 1.

Replace the heads exactly as described in Method 1 and use single ply medium weight unmuffled texture coated heads on the batter and either Diplomat Clear or Evans Hazy 200 snare side. For warmer but more focused and a bit softer while resonant, use the Ambassador, Aquarian Classic, or Evan’s Hazy 300.

2.

Rather than tuning the batter/top head higher in pitch, tune it identically in pitch to the resonant/snare side head.

3.

Now move just the bottom snare side head up in pitch just ever so slightly and listen carfully to the tone of the zone you are in. Move tiny amounts and listen for that point of most resonance.

4.

Jump to “General Snare Tuning Guidelines” and then to “Installing The Snares” section.

Snare Drum, General Tuning Guidelines: 1. Work your way up through the tuning zones as you would a tom but rather than tuning the top head up in pitch, your tuning the bottom head up in pitch. 2.

Work in a typical “X” fashion as best you can or better yet, use 2 keys 180 degrees apart. The thin snare side heads are easy to knock out of whack if you pull one side tighter than the other, so move up in small ¼ turn increments for best results.

3.

Once you get the differential relationship be it for a “fat” or “pop” tuning, then you can move the entire drum up in pitch for a higher overall pitch. By this I mean that both heads must maintain the 2-3-note differential in tuning at all times. Minute changes in this relationship cause phase cancellations (or should) and as a result, usually by moving one head or the other minuscule amounts, you can cause the drum to kill allot of the overtones or accentuate them making the need for muffled heads less desirable.

4.

If you want a fat wet sound, keep the resonant head low pitched regardless of the pitch of the batter.

5.

If you want a more articulated, cutting sound, tune the bottom head up in pitch and keep the batter head lower in pitch than the resonant head.

6.

The tension of the snare bed also controls that punch you can feel in your stomach. If the head is too tight, the snare can’t seat itself as well into the snare beds.

Snare Unit, Installation of: 1. Place the snares a little off center towards the opposite side of the release side.

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2.

Tighten down the strings or strap paying close attention to the snare making sure its square to the hoop, not askew.

3.

With the retainer in the on position but with the tension control screwed down (as if loosening the snares), pull the strings or straps again square to the hoop to moderate tension.

4.

With the strainer now on, start to tighten while hitting the head, you’ll get to a sweet spot where the buzz of the snare and feel of the drum come together. If you tighten more, the drum becomes more articulate. The slightest adjustment here can make huge differences. I’m talking 1/16 of a turn or less on the tension adjustment for the strainer. If you are blessed with an adjustment on both side of the drum, move up equally, very important!

5.

Experiment, at some point in the process you’ll hear the bottom or that feeling in your stomach suddenly jump out at you if that’s what you want. Don’t over tighten, it really doesn’t add much other than choking off the tone of the drum and killing stick response.

6.

Even the slightest adjustments will make the tone/overtones come alive or die. See “The 5 Stages of Snare Sound” that follows.

Snare Unit, Sound and The 5 Stages of: Working from loose to tighter: 1.

Contact with buzz and sounding a little sloppy,

2.

Fewer buzzes and a little dry sounding. Almost like over tightening.

3.

Warmth starts to come out with a nice sort of “slap” of the snares,

4.

Becomes more articulate and the warmth goes away, and

5.

The garbage stage, extremely tight, choked, void of character, little to no response on the outside 3 inches of the batter head at low volumes, you’ve gone too far.

Snare Drum, Tips and Tricks: 1. The stand effects the sound. With the drum sitting in your stand, don’t have the stand basket tight against the hoop of the drum, this restrains the inherent sound of the drum, it keeps the hoop and shell from vibrating freely. 2.

As a drummer hits harder, the crack of the drum or volume of the snare does not rise but the pitch can change or the perception exists because more of the inherent tone of the batter head is now coming out. Therefore you might want to resort to micing the bottom if you cannot get that high end crack you otherwise hear in the room.

3.

If using a mic on both top and bottom, be conscious of phase problems associated with the bottom mic, you might have to wire the resonant mic “out of phase”. Remember the heads ideally are moving in phase with each other, therefore when the batter is moving away from the upper mic, its moving towards the lower mic causing a phase change making a electrical phase reversal needed.

Snare Unit, Buzz Issues or Sympathetic Vibrations: There are many instances where the sympathetic resonances of the snare drum snares are problematic. Usually the tuning of nearby drums or the bass guitar, etc causes these. The cause of the problem is that the tuning of the snare is at or close to the frequency of the sympathetic vibration, that is, they’re too close in pitch. Retuning the snare may be the last thing you want to do now that you’ve found this incredible sound. But as is everything in sound, there may have to be compromises. It can be quite complex to solve this problem because of the inherent overtones found in the snare. In doing some background research on this issue I found a site which I have linked below which explores this issue. But I will attempt to summarize what others have offered for solutions. The first two tips, which follow, I have personally found to work very well.

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1.

On the snare side of a ten-lug snare, detune both lugs on either side of the snare where it attaches to the shell until the head ripples. Then tune it back up until the ripple just disappears. This means you will have detuned 4 lugs. Now, compensate by over- tightening the remaining 6 lugs (3 on either side of the snares).

2.

Find the offending instruments and retune it. Usually it’s one of the toms and the tuning of the tom is usually not as critical in the mix. Others report that if the toms are tuned a 5th away from the snare and then from each other, this can eliminate the problem. But this is only partly a solution, as the snare drum itself is very rich in overtones (independent of tuning) and removing one overtone (by retuning) is likely to introduce a new one!

3.

A completely different approach put some very thin piece of paper or duct tape between the snare and the bottom head near the place where the snares attach to the retaining clip. You have to experiment a bit with thickness and placement, but it is possible to reduce the problem a lot.

4.

Different heads. Calfskin heads were rather insensitive to this phenomenon. It is thinkable that the use of calfskin-like heads (e.g. REMO Renaissance or FiberSkyn 3) may reduce the effect.

5.

Drape a towel or other heavy cloth from the bottom of the snare drum between the drum and the offending source if it is a nearby drum.

6.

Wire snares are the most problematic. Try using cable snares such as those made by Patterson or Hinger. Traditional gut snares are also less likely to buzz. However, the sound may likely change as a result.

Tuning Sequences, Suggested: You have to know the center of your universe for playing and/or which drum is most important in the way of sound. 1.

Lowest, fattest sound: Start with your biggest, meanest floor tom and do a fat tuning as described above under “Results – What They Mean:”. No point in starting with the smallest drum because when you get to the low end of the range on the larger drums, the incremental tuning ability of the drums involved may make tuning the large drums impossible for the required interval. In other words, the floor tom won’t go that low and you’ll end up with a mismatched interval, so start low and work up in pitch to the small drum(s).

2.

Punchy, top 40, rock, etc., your rack toms are what usually drives the sound. If you play 2 or 3 rack toms, pick the 2nd or 1st tom and get it where you want it, these are the center of your work. From here everything else will fall into place. Keep it melodic, play pairs of drums. If you move in 5 note intervals you’ll find all drums sound bigger, fuller, sympathetic tones are complementary. Move in 3 note increments, they’ll sound a little thinner and drier, you might want this especially for a close mic situation. Tip: Don’t make the kick drum too low in pitch, keep it in the same 5-note relationship to the lowest floor tom.

3.

Funk, the kick drives the groove: Start with the kick, snare and move on down from the snare sound again doing some grooves and a few top fills.

Interval and Drum Sizing: Here’s my thought’s on this subject, there are no rules other than the first 2. 1.

Diameter means more for pitch change than does shell depth.

2.

Shell depth equates to resonance and volume, it gives the drum its character. A 12×10 (as Diameter x Depth) gives you a shell surface area of 370 sq. in. as opposed to the 12×9 which has 333 sq. in. So depending upon how you look at it, the 10 depth has 11% increase in the ability to produce resonance (hence “power”), or the 9” has 10% less. The tone of the 10 depth is ever so slightly deeper, but it’s the volume that’s the drum can create is the real difference. Regardless of diameter, a one inch change in shell length, for a drum of identical diameter, translates into the same increase of 11% or decrease of 10%. So a

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12×8 will be 20% less in surface area than a 12×10. Simply put, the depth of the “punch” will be more evident on the 12×10 than the 12×8. 3.

I find if you have a 12” drum, its wise not to pair it with a 13” unless you have a 14” and really desire something in-between for pitch. The common belief is that even sized drums produce better tuning qualities. I don’t know why this is, I find they can all be tuned if tuned as the shell/diameter allows. If you try to make a 13” sound like a 14” while pairing it with a 12”, you’re setting yourself up for trouble.

4.

Its more melodic to skip 1 or 2 sizes in diameter in between drums (see “Musical Notes for Tuning, Suggested:” below) for example use a 13” or 14” with a 16” and you’re likely to be more satisfied than with a 15” with a 16” drum.

5.

Use a “Power Tom” as rack/mounted toms if the mounted toms are central to the sound you’re creating (i.e. Top 40), if you’re a “light” hitter or like big floor toms.

6.

Use Fundamentally Accurate Sized Toms (“FAST”) if playing small venues, when size is a concern or when you just want less “power”.

7.

Small drums tune “low” fairly well, large diameter drums don’t always tune “high” well.

8.

I find any combination of drums in the following sizes tune well and allow room to add: (Diam. x Depth) 8×8, 10×9, 12×10, 14×12, 16×14, 18×16, 20×16, 20×18, 22×16, 22×18, 24×18.

Musical Notes for Tuning, Suggested: Well I guess we get technical for the end. I’m going to make an attempt to describe this in very elementary terms to make it easy. Do you know what middle “C” is on a piano? No? Take any keyboard 61 note, 76 note or 88 note and walk up to it. Right in the middle there are always 2 black keys surrounded by 3 black keys on either side of the 2 black keys. Pick the left black key of the black 2 key pair. Slide your finger just to the left on to the white key sitting just to the left of the left black key. That’s it, middle “C”! Here’s why we found that key. Whether you know it or not, your typical 10” or 12” drum is usually tuned within 3 to 4 notes either side of that middle “C”. Your job is to find the note of your prized drum and tune the others around it in 3 or 5 note sequences. Why? Because if you go to the trouble of finding that note, you’ll also see that from a musical standpoint, playing 2 notes together directly next to each other on a keyboard sounds pretty bad, for the most part. But play any combination of notes by counting 3 or 5 notes apart and it becomes very melodic. Hence your drums will sound better and can also sound bigger due to complementary vibration from drums, which are sympathetic to the one being struck. For example, I know my drums will sound best tuned as follows: 10”x9” tom: D sharp 12”x10” tom: A sharp 14”x12” floor: F 16”x14” floor: C 22”x16” kick: Batter F (octave lower than floor); Resonant E Main snare 14”x6” YAMAHA Anton Fig: G above the 10”x9” D#, both heads the same How I know this is by working through all the same steps I’ve outlined in this “Bible”.

Microphone Use, In Brief – How they can effect the sound: Playing without a microphone versus with one is very different. This is not a tutorial on Mic use, simply a elementary understanding of one key factor. When “close micing” a drum, the type of microphone can and usually creates proximity effect. If you look at typical Mic’s associated with use on toms, you’ll see a drop-off on the frequency curve associated with most dynamic Mic’s. This drop-off can be compensated for through proximity effect. This is less pronounced on an electret condenser microphone. “Proximity effect” is a

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condition which, when the mic is in close proximity to the head, a bump in the low frequency range is created and therefore, accentuates the lower fundamental note of the drum. The pronounced increase of the low end offsets for the otherwise dead sound or lack of free field low-end frequency response. Hence, never buy based upon a Mic’s frequency curve or specifications alone. The Mic hears and accentuates what the ear cannot. Experiment because the proximity effect diminishes the further from the head you get (out of proximity). A good link to look at is the following: Guide to Microphones Definitions: http://www.audiotechnica.com/using/mphones/guide/index.html Kick Mic Tricks: 1. Movement of the Mic as little as ½” can make big changes. Closer to the resonant head and more “boom” from the drum. 2.

Closer to the pad/pillow to cut resonance and increase presence.

3.

Closer to the batter and mid range attack comes out, warmth disappears but deep low end remains. Careful not to get too close or clipping of electronic or destruction of mic can occur.

4.

Two heads no hole – 1 Mic: Place the microphone on the outside of the batter side, but not in an upward facing direction. Try reversing the phase of the Mic, it will sometimes give more punch.

5.

Too much snare bleed, try taping a cardboard funnel around the mic face to trim unwanted high frequencies or aim the mic down at the point of impact at 35 degrees.

6.

Two Heads no Hole – 2 Mic’s: A phase reversal of one or the other head is almost a must if using a mic aimed at both heads. Your sound is at the hands of engineer now because it’s like retuning the drum to blend the Mic sounds.

Snare Mic Tricks: 1. Control of leakage from HiHat: Use a Mic with a Hypercardioid pattern. As a result, you may have to Mic either from overhead of the kit or the hat itself, could be a plus depending upon philosophy. 2.

To capture the “snap/crack” of the drum, especially for “hard hitters”, Mic from the bottom and use in reverse polarity under the snare.

3.

Too many overtones: Don’t place a Mic aiming at the outer 2 inches of the head unless you really want to overtones to come through.

4.

Avoid having the mic too close in general, 2-3 inches up and out aimed at the center of the head allows the mic to capture a more natural sound.

5.

Not enough snare sound when using a Mic. When Mic’s are placed too close to the head, the Mic doesn’t hear as much of the “crack”, it hear more of a timbale sound. Hitting harder equals less crack when placed too close. You can also place the Mic directly centered over the rim of the drum up about 1 inch and aimed at the center of the head. This keeps the Mic from hearing the warmth of the head and picks up more shell resonance.

Conclusion I have not mentioned anything in here I have not tried myself. This is why you see no mention of ATTACK drumheads anywhere, I haven’t used them and as a result cannot comment on them. Not to say they are inferior or superior, I just don’t know. This is a result of many years and much money, I hope it helps in uncovering some of the mystery that surrounds drum tuning, construction and head selection.

Links of Interest: See this link for Snare Buzz Problems: http://www.xs4all.nl/~marcz/Problems.html See this link for microphone terms: http://www.audio-technica.com/using/mphones/guide/index.html

Drum Tuning Bible: By J. Scott Johnson, a.k.a. Prof. Sound – July 7, 1999

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See this link for Aquarian Drumheads: http://www.donwilsonmusic.com/aquarian/ See this link for REMO drums: http://www.remo.com/ See this link for Evan’s Drumheads: http://www.daddario.com/Evans.html Suggested Download, good visual for Kick drums Muffling: http://www.daddario.com/pdffolder/99Evans.pdf If you came by this article by a friend, the Internet is a good source to get questions answered. The following sites may be of interest and I pop in and out from time to time, as do those who I acknowledge below. Just post a question, and all will do their best to get concise answers back. DrumSet.com: http://web.gp-owners.com/drumboard/wwwboard.html Drumweb’s Message Board: http://www.drumweb.com/messages/dwmsgview.html Evan’s DrumTalk Message Board: http://www.daddario.com/drumtalk/DTalk_toc.htm

Acknowledgments: I’d like to thank the following “online friends” for their input and comments in preparing this document (Use of “online” names to protect the inocent): 1.

The ever present and abnormally helpful “Dr. Groove” for inspiration and aiding in the technical, tricks, low cost and practical side to answers.

2.

My man “Stan… ” for extremely helpful criticism and the eagle eyed excellence with respect to grammar, methods, choices and a few of the “tricks” published in several of the categories of this “bible”, including the method of publishing it.

3.

“DrumMan” for endless inspiration and opinions on various subjects, and pointing out a few areas for clarification.

4.

“Birdman” for inspiration and endless questions, which put me on the path to putting this all down on whatever media this bible, appears on.

5.

My friend “Martin from the UK” for insisting that I not abandon the project and “stick to my guns” on this subject.

And finally in the spirit of one honorable “James Sharp” who pushed me to display more in the way of a “sense of humor”, I’d like to thank the following web sites for posting this “bible” and promptly answering email: (The following is intentionally left blank)

Jul 7, 1999 … Finally, if you read the entire “bible”, it should aid you in choosing a ….. end bass heavy mic’s in close mic situations, the sound can be almost …

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Prof Sound’s drum tuning bible

Drum Tuning Bible

Prof.Sound’s Drum Tuning Bible v3

Home

Pocket DTB

Woods

Construction

Tuning & Seating

Kick

Snare Drum

Snare Tuning

Snare Unit

Buzzing

Concepts

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Buying Drums

Buying Cymbals

BIO

Acoustics

Contact

Author and Site Owner: Prof.Sound This material is granted free of use but may not be altered, published or represented as that attributable to the author or any other person, place or entity without authors prior written consent. All that is contained within and upon this website reflects my opinion and is not intended to promote or keep people from buying products. Start Here This site is refered to more often than any other source available for tuning drums. Why?

First, and most likely because its free! A close second would be because it works.

You DO NOT have to read this page. If you think you know the basic concepts of how a drum works, just go to the left and pick a section. the Tuning section is probably why you are here, but I will tell you that even the most seasoned drummer has found the “other” information very helpful, so I think you’ll be back to read this page at some point….at least I hope so?

One last point. The concepts on the Tuning page are essential. For the Snare drum and Bass/Kick drum, you must go to the sections for the Snare Drum and Kick Drum.

This version of the Drum Tuning Bible is the 3rd iteration. Time has shown that many want to know more than I tried to explain, which is considerable and maybe overload to some. SO..

With this 3rd iteration, it has unfortunately become lengthy to cover all levels of readers. With every iteration/revision, I try to incorporate more clarity based upon readers comments, which usually means more text. It took me some 30 years to figure out how to explain it where others could learn it in a few hours time.

If you have just fumbled through tuning over the years or are a beginner, it really makes sense to read it page to page top to bottom. It has been arranged to explain what to expect and why many things react the way they do. Because many have written and asked for it in book form, it is now available in limited text via a PDF document. In otherwords, at this time, the PDF file DOES NOT contain all that this site does because I simply cannot update all that as fast.

Whats New?

Within this version you will find a more detailed definition of what to listen for in tuning. Ive expanded upon the head selections, the role of microphones and the electronics. Youll also find the definition of some of the terms used to define sound characteristics so we can communicate better and is less difficult to get an idea across.

We will tackle the construction aspects of the drum in greater detail by exploring the issue of woods, metals, drum sizing, and how it all translates into sound and cost. And then I touch on what I consider to be a proper way to pick cymbals and drum sets.

In this age of E-commerce and a constant desire to pay the cheapest price rather than receive service, I admit it may be difficult for many on a budget to employ these concepts. But I ask you to view them with an open mind because even if you decide to buy over the Internet, the concept will help sort things out.

It seems the selections in local stores are getting less abundant and more geared towards the beginner and intermediate player rather than the medium to advanced player. This too is unfortunate, because it means you may actually have to put more time into your thoughts and selections in the form of travel if you really want to pick good products that reflect your personality.

What to Expect/Who Can Tune?

Ask any well respected producer what makes a great song and most will tell you a good drummer is an essential ingredient. Beginners should know that it is far more important to tune well and play steady than it is play as many notes as possible, and still sound bad. Well respected engineers will say that if the drummer can tune and play proficiently, recording a drum sound takes care of itself. So dont ever sell yourself short as an important ingredient in the scheme of things. Drummers need to know a lot about how sound works.

Drummers need to be able to hear the tonal differences in pitch and timbre to tune. Some people just cannot hear these changes. For those people, I recommend you spend a few dollars and buy whats called Ear Training software. This is available for your computer and will teach almost everyone how to hear

http://home.earthlink.net/~prof.sound/ (1 of 5)1/22/2005 4:10:56 PM

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Drum Tuning Bible

Hi guys,

I have been reading this and other forums for a few months now. After a lengthy illness and time away from drumming due to life getting in the way (or more to the point, near death getting in the way of living) and have finally taken my pearl reference and mapex black panther out of their luggage and started setting up after a seven year absence from playing. The tune bot has really caught my eye and after getting one iv also decided to try Evans skins for the first time. I’m replacing all skins with g2 coated on the batter and g1 coated on the reso. But iv received the gift of clear resos too. I have 8″ 10″ 12″ rag toms and a 14″ floor Tom. The snare is the gold hardware black wooden premium black panther series. I know the first reference drums were an issue for tuning for some people but I love them and mine have about 4 days playing on them before I went away from drumming for the last few years. Up until then I was a two hours a day kinda guy.

I’m just wondering if anyone can lead me towards info that might serve as a guide/templet to tuning pitches using the tune bot on a reference and black panther . Iv tuned them to ear and love the sound of the coated resos( I know this isn’t a norm) but it’s a lovely warm tone with a reduction on overtones and sustain. Which I like but I’m not married to, it was just for the hell of it. For fun and experimenting il be changing heads around to finally get to play with the drums.

Thanks in advance and it’s amazing to see how much drumming has changed while iv been ill. Any suggestions will be tried and messed around with as I love playing with tuning in general. I must about the snare is the issue I don’t know if it’s developed problems while the years rolled by but tuning it isn’t going as planned or maybe I’m just out of practice. I’d just love to hear what sounds those of you that have similar kits have developed as I’m in a rush to catch up and start getting back to a regular session on the chair

Thanks mike

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