Cheap Drums vs Expensive drums

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The Drum Thing

The Drum Thing

Жыл бұрын

The Drum Stream: www.floatplane.com/channel/Th...
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@paulofduty2005
@paulofduty2005 Жыл бұрын
You know you’re not a drummer when you can’t tell the difference between a $2,300 pearl kit and a $150 set of Jin Baos
@Jaunty_Jeff
@Jaunty_Jeff Жыл бұрын
yepp
@panqueque445
@panqueque445 Жыл бұрын
When he did the comparison at the end I thought he'd reveal he was playing the same set both times. Literally sounded the same to me lmao
@deviationblue
@deviationblue Жыл бұрын
@@panqueque445 it's amazing just how much good, well-tuned heads and good cymbals can make a dirt cheap kit sound. His talent and expertise make a set of Jin Baos sound like Pearl References!
@marcogenovesi8570
@marcogenovesi8570 Жыл бұрын
he tuned them well, and also youtube crushes audio stream
@swimteamizzle1114
@swimteamizzle1114 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, I think that was sort of his point
@Bambozler
@Bambozler Жыл бұрын
As a bassist i can't understand anything this man says but goddam i can just watch this for hours
@reddevil944
@reddevil944 Жыл бұрын
As a bassist, I can't understand most things people say
@Bambozler
@Bambozler Жыл бұрын
@@reddevil944 so true
@AllHailTheNoise
@AllHailTheNoise Жыл бұрын
​@@reddevil944 me
@davewestner
@davewestner Жыл бұрын
He did say, "vibe" a couple of times. I reckon bass players recognize that word.
@REELWORKS12923
@REELWORKS12923 Жыл бұрын
I’m a drummer and I don’t get half of it and I could still watch him for hours
@sleekskyline120
@sleekskyline120 Жыл бұрын
What I learned is that a true professional can make anything sound awesome
@KareemFloat
@KareemFloat Жыл бұрын
nah. st.anger snares. nuff said.
@FunkyDrumm3r
@FunkyDrumm3r Жыл бұрын
also true
@motionzdigital
@motionzdigital Жыл бұрын
@@KareemFloat Give Lars some credit. The drumming is 'okay', but the mixing was god awful.
@nickwallette6201
@nickwallette6201 Жыл бұрын
@@KareemFloat Well, a professional can make anything sound awful as well. :-)
@richardjames3356
@richardjames3356 Жыл бұрын
Case in point: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jJTOp4F_ndFrbZY
@Kummahndough
@Kummahndough Жыл бұрын
4:16 is the embodiment of "I paid for the whole drum head, I'm gonna use the whole drum head"
@thekfool3522
@thekfool3522 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid (self taught) and didn’t know any better once the batter head was beat to death I just flipped the drum over and beat up the other side… man I cringe when I think about that today ha ha 🤦‍♂️
@garrettmckinney7565
@garrettmckinney7565 Жыл бұрын
@@thekfool3522 i used to do that too, glad i learned sooner rather than later
@Gk2003m
@Gk2003m 2 ай бұрын
Actually, the whole head IS useful. These folks who insist you can only hit dead center have never played hand percussion. There are so many tones available in a single drum
@Boardwoards
@Boardwoards 2 ай бұрын
@@Gk2003m real shit
@ghostsmoke11
@ghostsmoke11 Жыл бұрын
I've played drums a number of years and I can say your tuning ability is top notch; to make that abomination of a kit sound remotely like a Pearl Reference is a feat, well done.
@fartpooboxohyeah8611
@fartpooboxohyeah8611 Жыл бұрын
Nah, been playing for 40 years, owned all types of kits at all price ranges. They all sound good.. and pretty much the same.. with good heads and after you learn how to tune.
@joetroutt7425
@joetroutt7425 Жыл бұрын
I'm almost convinced the sound you were hearing was a plug in. They sounded exact. And what I mean by exact is that the tuning was not even in the slightest different. Even the snare sounds the same. Cheap snares sound like trash no matter how well you tune them.
@jalakere
@jalakere Жыл бұрын
@@joetroutt7425 He used the same snare for both kits, and it's not an expensive one. As long as the shell is round and the hardware isn't noisy you can get great sound out of it with nice heads, a quality set of wires and tuning skills
@doofs
@doofs Жыл бұрын
any tips for tuning?? I've been playing for 12 years, I feel like I should know how to tune now but I kinda don't know what I'm doing. Like, other than the alternating my rods like a star and having the resos looser and the batter's higher (i like tighter rebound), I don't know what I'm doing. I've tried looking at tutorials for tips and tricks, most I've ever gotten is "just do it more" Anyway, so do you guys have any practical tips for tuning? How can I look for overtones and are tuning gizmos worth the investment?
@joetroutt7425
@joetroutt7425 Жыл бұрын
@@doofs I have an idea. Go to a music store. Preferably a drum shop and play on some drums that sound really good to you and record the sound of each drum individually and try to tune your drums to that tune. Another thing you can do is (it will take two ppl unless you take the tom off and set it on the floor) mute the bottom head and record the sound of the top head and do the same with the bottom. Just mute the top. It will take time to develop an ear for a great tune. It took me years to learn how to tune my drums but now I've got a pretty good ear for what sounds good and other ppl tell me the same thing. When I let other ppl play my drums I like to sit back and enjoy the sound of them and maybe think of what could use tweaking.
@sodapone
@sodapone Жыл бұрын
The fact you were able to examine the 16's wear patterns and determine that somehow a complete drum novice got their hands on some of the best drum shells ever made only for them to end up being abandoned at Bendigo Cashies tells an utterly insane story that I wish I could get the full details on.
@AfferbeckBeats
@AfferbeckBeats Жыл бұрын
I think it was school kids a fancy private school, then some teacher thought they looked a bit ratty so they dropped them off at the local cashies
@lazzie7495
@lazzie7495 6 ай бұрын
The answer is pretty simple. Rich kid/s.
@LuluTheCorgi
@LuluTheCorgi 2 ай бұрын
Its trust fund kids this happens all the time They wanna try out some new hobby so they just buy whatever the most expensive thing is and then get bored off it after a couple months and buy something else They have so much money that reselling things is a waste of time so they just abandon whatever it is, extremely expensive instruments, expensive sporting equipment, backpacking/hiking/camping equipment Really anything that has a high barrier to entry
@RockandrollNegro
@RockandrollNegro Ай бұрын
I worked at Cash Converters in the US and you would be absolutely amazed at the type of high end products that people buy when they get that bIg pRoMoTiOn or tax return, then turn around and have to sell the shiny new toy when the money runs out. It happened during the pandemic when everyone got their enhanced unemployment and finally decided to get that nice Gretsch guitar or Pearl Reference set they always wanted, and now they're broke trying to survive under record high inflation.
@greb.
@greb. Жыл бұрын
In this video I learned that a master never blames his tools
@DimT670
@DimT670 Жыл бұрын
Ah said like a man who has never encountered a truly bad tool
@vexed_con
@vexed_con Жыл бұрын
@@DimT670my thought exactly. Consequences for using crappy drums is a lot less sever than flying a crappy plane or using a crappy car Jack
@greb.
@greb. Жыл бұрын
@@vexed_con well aware. I'm an industrial designer by trade, there are some awfully made things out there.
@Arcangel0723
@Arcangel0723 Жыл бұрын
@@vexed_con a master would just not use something that was actively harmful, as they have the experience to know that.
@bobsterss
@bobsterss Жыл бұрын
Makes me wonder what a drum made of Australian Buloke would sound like, given how obscenely hard that is.
@R.J._Lewis
@R.J._Lewis Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing about Lignum Vitae drums.
@leo._.vincent
@leo._.vincent Жыл бұрын
if its really hard it may become a pain in the butt to work with
@wingedfish1175
@wingedfish1175 Жыл бұрын
I have to hope there's diminishing returns
@MartKencuda
@MartKencuda Жыл бұрын
I'm assuming it would be less of a different from the preferences than the preferences were to the Jin Baos. I bet it wouldn't even be perceptible. I'm a guitarist so take that assumption with a grain of salt.
@rubikmonat6589
@rubikmonat6589 Жыл бұрын
Got me wondering about carbon fibre, terracotta and concrete now.
@Onio_Saiyan
@Onio_Saiyan Жыл бұрын
I'm not a drummer. I'm not even a musician. It's just interesting to learn about all these cool things.
@r0bw1l73
@r0bw1l73 Жыл бұрын
My youngest son is a year into lessons. Got him a used Ludwig Accent kit from the 90s with serious power toms (12,13,16). But I spent on good heads and cymbals and he has that kit banging.
@ricktritten8195
@ricktritten8195 Жыл бұрын
I’m a music teacher, and I love learning about all this stuff because we didn’t get it in percussion techniques! The hardness of the wood and how different rim shapes seem like such nitty gritty details (they are) but it’s the little things that make big differences in music! I also liked that you talked about how for the most part it’s the tuning that makes the biggest difference. Have you done a video on different heads? I would be interested in watching that
@slavish_superiority
@slavish_superiority Жыл бұрын
agree! I am the manufacturer of cheap Musical Instruments in China. In fact, the highest quality drums in the world and the cheapest drums are all made by the same group of people, such as Yamaha's top drumset model, hybrid maple custom and this cheap Jinbao drum. Low-cost hardware and wood, just to race to control the beginner's low end market, deindustrialization makes Westerners forget that a high level of technology comes from long years of job training and production experience, those nitty gritty details are just business...
@unknownmemoirs
@unknownmemoirs Жыл бұрын
Mate. If this man eats chicken nuggets off of the floor of his nugget car, I would still be interested in that.
@toomdog
@toomdog Жыл бұрын
Rick: If you are looking for more drum resources, check out SoundsLikeADrum on KZbin. They have certainly gone down some deep rabbit holes recently, but they have a very solid primer for different approaches to tuning and a lot of head comparisons. The biggest takeaway I’ve gotten from drumming is that to tune well, you have to spend a lot of time practicing. It really is an art.
@arnaudmenard5114
@arnaudmenard5114 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, materials tend to be a detail when it comes to music, but there is interesting stuff out there, like for drum heads, I've heard some folks used to take X-ray acetates and use them for making drum head! Or natural rawhide, was and still is a classic for drums...and if you talk hides you have to talk about the animals too, because deer hides are different from cow, are different from goffers, are different from goat! Or in stings...the first violin metallic strings where gut wrapped in silver wire! The reason is gut strings are low tension strings, and the metal wire add mass meaning better low end. Some modern very high end strings are silk core and silver wire wrap I personally really really want a set of bronze strings for my violin, but there is only one company making them, and they don't sell in Canada.
@mad_cat_1st
@mad_cat_1st Жыл бұрын
Remo Weather King heads are the best - bar none. For tuning I always crank up the resonant (bottom) head as tight as I can get it, and try to get the batter head to sound good at the least amount of tightness. You can always crank it up later as it wears. The final point - get rid of all of the baffling and mutes and play your drums wide open. I have no idea how Alex Van Halen can get his snare sound with a whole roll of duct tape on the batter head.
@YokiDokiPanic
@YokiDokiPanic Жыл бұрын
I'll probably never start drumming for real, but these videos have inspired me to just practice making beats on whatever I have laying around the house "Stomp" style. It's a lot of fun!
@BullockDS
@BullockDS Жыл бұрын
"You're just like STOMP, only you should be called... 'STOP'."
@TheRealMycanthrope
@TheRealMycanthrope Жыл бұрын
Haha, I used the hot water in a mall toilet sink the other day and the pipes started banging; was hard not to start accompanying it 😅
@YokiDokiPanic
@YokiDokiPanic Жыл бұрын
@@BullockDS Don't yuck my yum. I'm having a good time.
@YokiDokiPanic
@YokiDokiPanic Жыл бұрын
@@gitsurfer27 That's a good idea! Thanks! :D
@Moowe291
@Moowe291 Жыл бұрын
Do it! Drum! Everyone thinks they don't got time, and one thing I've learned is "There's a little time for literally everything." It's fun, consider it!
@manoflego123
@manoflego123 Жыл бұрын
I'll admit it, my untrained ears pretty much can't tell the difference (unlike the cymbals). But hearing your description of how different they sound to you only reinforces how dedicated to your craft you are!
@BirdmanDeuce26
@BirdmanDeuce26 Жыл бұрын
A non-trivial confounding variable is the recording process itself, I've discovered. Differences in acoustics between drum sets stand out most strongly in person, but like Wade says, it really just comes down to vibe, and even mediocre/outright junk sets, properly prepared and set up, can sound fairly acceptable with judicious recording technique and the skill of the drummer themselves
@gralha_
@gralha_ Жыл бұрын
The difference is noticeable on the toms, the reference ones have more resonance, more sustain, while the the jim baos are more muffled. But yeah, if I weren't paying attention probably would go unnoticed
@joetroutt7425
@joetroutt7425 Жыл бұрын
@@gralha_ I believe the harder the wood the more the sound reflects off of it rather than being absorbed by a softer wood in a cheaper kit. That is what makes tone resonate more.
@LieseFury
@LieseFury 9 ай бұрын
actually it just means drum people are full of shit
@Anthony-vj1nu
@Anthony-vj1nu Жыл бұрын
As a trumpet player I can say these two drum kits sound identical to each other, though I imagine my 1923 custom built Holton Jazz-hound and 1956 Holton Super Collegiate probably sound the same to a non-trumpeter too despite the laundry list of differences between the 2.
@W0R537Y0U
@W0R537Y0U Жыл бұрын
In woodshop, when wood ended up getting dented, we would get a piece of damp paper towel and a clothes iron, and run the pair over the dents. As long as the wood fiber wasn't damaged, it'd usually bounce back into shape. We didn't really use super hard woods, though, so it might not be as effective.
@joetroutt7425
@joetroutt7425 Жыл бұрын
Kind of hard to use a clothes iron inside a curved piece of wood.
@loganmiller3710
@loganmiller3710 Жыл бұрын
@@joetroutt7425 soldering iron works great on small areas
@88funkymonk
@88funkymonk Жыл бұрын
I wish this to be true, but, as you said, I'm also not sure it would work on hardwoods as the capillaries are denser
@DeAthWaGer
@DeAthWaGer Жыл бұрын
Ive saved many guitar necks with this! Best is a flat edge attachment on a soldering iron, cotton cloth, and a spray bottle to rehydrate the cloth. Learn it on scrap pieces of several types of wood first!!!
@wasabij
@wasabij 7 ай бұрын
​@@88funkymonkit works just fine. Damp cloth and a soldering iron will get those stick dents out.
@Charlies_ASMR
@Charlies_ASMR Жыл бұрын
I'm not even a drum fan but every time you say that it's boring time I get excited because I'm here for the weird technical bits or history.
@galactic-hamster7043
@galactic-hamster7043 Жыл бұрын
Ok as a middle school percussionist from a very small and under budget backwater cesspool that passed for a school, I can probably say that was a high school or elementary school drum set- it was probably funded by a teacher a hot minute ago who knew what they could get and have all the kids they taughr sound good on, and hence the all-over-the-place amateur thrashing. I know my school drumsets, heads, sticks and cymbals were the exact same way and the treatment only got more violent the more people try to play, esp. coming over from other instruments. Still a hell of a find and man, even though my bamd director can suck me sideways (she's the reason I have horrible instrument performance anxiety that I'm still working over) goddamn do your videos wanna make me get back into fucking around on a set. Like, you're bringing up bone memories I don't even recall making, and your energy is doing me so many favors here I love it 💜
@j-davis7290
@j-davis7290 Жыл бұрын
My favorite thing about this is that a kit's sound can change so violently with just a small change in the drum heads and everyone still gets all caught up on the nuance of shell quality
@AfferbeckBeats
@AfferbeckBeats Жыл бұрын
Same as guitars where people go over the top using all kinds of different expensive woods and veneers and whatnot, then put it all through the same distorted electronics and it all sounds the same anyway
@pedrosilvamusician
@pedrosilvamusician Жыл бұрын
​@@AfferbeckBeats for guitars the differences are there but are so minuscule you wont even bother. No one can tell just by listening that a guitar was made of alder instead of basswood. I would say its just looks more than anything
@BirdmanDeuce26
@BirdmanDeuce26 Жыл бұрын
@@AfferbeckBeats yeah, wood type/quality only truly matters with acoustic guitars; the primary thing that matters the most for electrics is the construction quality of the pickups/electronics and the speaker in the amp
@swimteamizzle1114
@swimteamizzle1114 Жыл бұрын
"Save your money for nice cymbals and pedals" is an interesting and useful take!
@m_agamer2730
@m_agamer2730 Жыл бұрын
Am I the only one who can almost never tell the difference when people do comparisons like this?
@KaiseaWings
@KaiseaWings Жыл бұрын
No. I am tone deaf as anything xD Teaching myself guitar is an interesting experience. Certainly couldn't hear any difference between the drums which must make people sad.
@DamianMarx
@DamianMarx Жыл бұрын
with the cymbals, i know what to expect and i can tell a difference, with drums... i was waiting for a pause and the repetition of the beat, but then i realized that it already happened and it's indistinguishable (at least on youtube on my crappy iems)
@tnbspotter5360
@tnbspotter5360 Жыл бұрын
They sound very similar. I know nothing of drums.
@nickwallette6201
@nickwallette6201 Жыл бұрын
I play (with) drums. They sound very similar. As the video states, this is _possible,_ but it's absolutely a testament to his ability to tune a drum. I've been through this myself, upgrading from a Tama Whatever ($350 kit) to a set of Pearl VBX shells I chose piece-by-piece. I never got the Tama to sound very good. The Pearl kit sang right away. Same amateur tuning effort, better kit.
@BrianMcKee
@BrianMcKee Жыл бұрын
The Jin Bao toms absolutely sound more dead, no rich overtones or anything. I think it's kinda hard for the layman to hear the difference because of poor recording setup and youtube, etc... I think in real life it'd be way more obvious. But yah obviously you could get away with the Jin Bao, the drummer will always care more than the audience.
@RomeDrori
@RomeDrori Жыл бұрын
As a drummer who mainly uses an electric kit, the by far biggest reason I haven't gotten into acoustics is tuning, I have a nice electric one (and I payed through the nose for it, td50ksomething or others are pricey), and I can say that when I sit in an orchestra pit or go to record with a band there is something unique about acoustics, but then I remember the 4 hours I spent tuning them and firmly decide that I made a good choice in buying my rolands
@dushdj8947
@dushdj8947 Жыл бұрын
As someone who plays both, I personally find acoustics worth it since I can just get more definition and uniqueness to the playing. Ghost notes just don't work as good with electric kits, and you can never get certain unique sounds from electric that you can acoustic. Also, it isn't even a competition between acoustic cymbals and electric haha.
@dagothur2720
@dagothur2720 Жыл бұрын
Get a drum dial. it actually completely take away all the problems
@mbaroneva76
@mbaroneva76 Жыл бұрын
I got nothing against electric drums. They definitely have their place and some major productions are now using them. But that visceral connection to acoustics, especially cymbals keeps me coming back. I’ve heard and played some incredible expansion packs for the td50 and mimic modules. But I don’t think they’ll ever get that same feel.
@colinburroughs9871
@colinburroughs9871 Жыл бұрын
drum tunning is an overrated issue among drummers. It's always the player- always. Some of the jazz greats played kits that made no sense tunning wise, but they're great. Some people obsess over the tunning and can't diddle over 4, probably because it's something to worry about that isn't tangentially related to "can't really play". Anyway, the drums aren't a guitar. They go thump. Make sure the tumps have some relation from one tom to the next. That's about it.
@dagothur2720
@dagothur2720 Жыл бұрын
@@colinburroughs9871 this is a dumb take. Listen to the st anger snare drum sound and then tell me again that tuning doesn't matter
@twr0011
@twr0011 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for not watering down your videos with self promo and sponsorships. Thank you for you're genuinely amazing outros. And thank YOU for being you. Rock on mate!
@FreshFindsPod
@FreshFindsPod Жыл бұрын
After they were tuned up the Jin Baos actually sounded half way decent, but the sustain on the References is a thing of beauty.
@SloMoMonday
@SloMoMonday Жыл бұрын
It feels like drums are somthing that will take a lifetime to even notice the differences in the overall sound quality and even then, I could never pick out which sounds "objectively" better. Thank God we can all still put the Dark Rides up against the painted steel abomination and be sure that we have some sense of a good sound.
@bugatti9218
@bugatti9218 Жыл бұрын
Been drumming for over 9 years, Saved up and bought a Pearl Reference kit over summer. The sonic quality over my old 2002 pearl export kit was massive
@kchortu
@kchortu Жыл бұрын
Its always nice to put in the reps with other less good tools then when you get a nice version it lets your skill shine and it becomes a pleasurable experience to simply use.
@kchortu
@kchortu Жыл бұрын
You have explained almost every hobby/professional tool everywhere. From paintbrushes to kitchen knives. I and happy for you that you got a nice score from Cashies its good to get a win.
@key_leefield
@key_leefield Жыл бұрын
I love that he calls it boring time but it's the part I enjoy the most in the videos lol
@oRacleGosu
@oRacleGosu Жыл бұрын
I have a Pearl Reference kit(a black one.. boring. Gonna switch it to a cooler finish). Compared to a cheap kit it has a lot bigger tuning range, it stays in tune regardless of pounding. You can also control overtones. You don’t get weird overtones. Only the beautiful ones you might want, and they can be controlled. This is very important in a studio setting. You pay for having this sound ensured + getting top of the line everything. As a pro(who these are actually made for), you don’t want to compromize. Also, remember: you can’t hear the big differences without a proper recording and soundcards + headphones when tuned great. But subtle differences are what makes a great kit useful. Clear and controllable overtones that stay in tune. That being said: a mid+ kit made today is of great quality! It’s insane what you get for money these days regarding drums. Pearl Masters is a great example of a pro sounding kit for a great price(they come in different ranges these days with different prices). But you can go a lot further down in price and get great sounding kits on a budget too! Going on gigs with a super expensive kit can be stressful and just not needed a lot of the time. Cymbals are harder.. you can’t go cheap that easily. You can get a great set for metal etc which does not cost that much. But that is mostly because the tones needed are not always that complex in a mix. But great cymbals with complex overtones do cost money if you want something special. Cheap hardware is useless.
@render1802
@render1802 11 ай бұрын
To me, it's amazing how utterly consistent you and other master drummers are with your physical timing. Like, I have really good hand eye coordination for throwing a ball or drawing complex repeated strokes - but whenever I try to idly tap out the beat while I'm listening to music, it's like my hand/foot hiccups every dozen or so taps and is wildly off. Feels weird since I have excellent command of my movements in virtually every other scenario. Its so cool to see a master make something look effortless!
@BradsGonnaPlay
@BradsGonnaPlay Жыл бұрын
In my opinion as a touring/session drummer, this video reinforces my belief that the snare is the most important part of the drum kit.
@boostaddict_
@boostaddict_ Жыл бұрын
As a trombone player with a $3500 instrument, I feel your pain for that floor tom. It's repairable though. Wood glue and hours of hand sanding. My King 3B was kinda twisted when I got it, but I took it to someone to get it straightened out and have the lacquer stripped and redone.
@mikekelly7862
@mikekelly7862 Жыл бұрын
Daaamn; I picked up a used 3 piece reference shell pack in that exact same finish, for like $1500 CAD 10 years ago... I didn't know the kinds of prices these kits were fetching now. That's crazy... absolute hell of deal at the pawn shop! I think that reference kit is the only kit I'll ever really need. It's the ONLY floor tom I've ever owned that I've genuinely been able to consistently dial in at a wide range of tunings. And those 30 ply reference snares are absolute madness. Overengineered definitely, but the excess works; doesn't it! I realize this undermines the whole point of your video, but what a catch! Congrats!
@patpat1354
@patpat1354 Жыл бұрын
I never even heard drums live once in my entire 29 years of life, what am I doing here.
@lordoftherats8215
@lordoftherats8215 Жыл бұрын
As a banjo player and someone fascinated by their building it’s awesome how much overlap there is with drums
@skateecho
@skateecho Жыл бұрын
This is sooo interesting to me. I also love how you explain tuning drums and the wonderful selection of songs you threw out there. Love blur and zeppelin. Never listened to them back to back totally going to do that now! Love the music class. Don’t think id ever be very good at drums but you always make it so appealing!
@Uufda651
@Uufda651 Жыл бұрын
The ambiguity and judgement in tuning would drive me NUTS. Props to you, dude.
@DoctorHero
@DoctorHero Жыл бұрын
Fellow drummer here! This is pretty interesting to me because I’ve been looking to upgrade to a new shell pack for a while and I love that you describe the differences between low-end and high-end drums and you make it very concise and easy to understand! Keep doing what you’re doing, The Drum Thing is becoming one of my favorite channels
@poncho_20xx14
@poncho_20xx14 Жыл бұрын
My homie who drums in my little band just swapped out the practice rims we were using for his proper Birch Pearl set, and the difference was immense! It's amazing how the little things all add up to huge differences, and thanks to your channel I actually have some knowledge and reference as a layman when asking about stuff. Keep rocking from the American Midwest!
@jaredwssb
@jaredwssb Жыл бұрын
You can almost always remove dents from wood with steam, either with a handheld steamer or a damp cloth placed over the dent with an iron on top. It's an old woodworking technique, often used in repairing furniture, but it should work for the plywood in these too. Just avoid getting too much steam on the top layers of veneer, maybe test it on a cheaper kit first to make sure you won't risk delamination, but it's way easier and better for the piece than wood filler.
@DaYoda191
@DaYoda191 Жыл бұрын
Actually heard much more of a difference than I was expecting too. And those shells are gorgeous! As a drummer and a woodworker expensive drums are such a thing of beauty to me. I love beautiful instruments being made from beautiful wood. I have always wanted to try making my own snare drum and this video has me inspired. I want to try a steam bent solid wood drum instead of vaneer ply. Normally drums like that cost a fortune but I reckon I can do it for not a ton of money and get a good quality drum out of it!
@dirtrockground4543
@dirtrockground4543 Жыл бұрын
Let's take a moment to appreciate how well you managed to tune the Jin Baos. I had to put on my headphones to hear the difference between the two kits.
@JellyBean-ed2uq
@JellyBean-ed2uq Жыл бұрын
If you are not afraid, you can fix the bashes with a wet towel and a hot iron. Cover the mark with the towel and touch it with the iron directly to create steam. This method is frequently used to fix little bums and blemishes in wooden furniture, from 5k tables to gun stocks. The theory is that the fibers are there and not damaged, but compressed, so the steam brings them back up by swelling slightly. Be careful with the moisture, just be quick and let it dry sufficiently after you are done. Mark Novak has some great videos on it, I believe
@cybolynx
@cybolynx Жыл бұрын
As for repairing the one drum ... I would try a wet wrung out cloth and a iron ... Place the wrung out cloth on the dented wood .... Then apply a hot clothes iron on the affected area ... Check frequently ... It should help bring up the dimples.... Been repairing hardwood flooring that way for years now ... 😉 *Google or search KZbin for examples* ...
@JoshuaBishop93
@JoshuaBishop93 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been drumming and playing/teaching music for almost 2 decades. I’ve never been able to afford Pearls like that, best I’ve had is early 2000’s Pearl ELX. Not once in all this time has it occurred to me that super high ends kits use and blend different woods for each drum to achieve those banger sounds. You truly never stop learning
@StevePhoenix
@StevePhoenix Жыл бұрын
You did an absolutely incredible job tuning those Jin Baos so close to the References. It shows that a true professional can make anything sound good. That being said, as a sound engineer I thought you can only polish a turd this much. I like to EQ my toms tight and punchy and the Jin Baos would need a fair bit of corrective EQ to sound decent by my standards and even then they weren't resonant enough to sound pleasant and that's not something EQ can really fix. The References were almost there right out the gate, so they would be a joy to work with. In other words, the Jin Baos are hard to work with whether you are the drummer trying to tune them or the sound engineer trying to make them sound good and that's why it's worth getting a quality kit. It would be nice if we could hear the References against the Masters at some point. I reckon the differences will be very subtle.
@LaskyLabs
@LaskyLabs Жыл бұрын
Your test songs are always a vibe. More cowbell please.
@caolanmoore4027
@caolanmoore4027 Жыл бұрын
I was really concerned there that I was just like totally unable to hear a difference between the two, glad that was what I was meant to hear more or less
@brendanp5994
@brendanp5994 Жыл бұрын
broooooooo!!! I am thoroughly impressed at how well you were able to match the tuning between the two kits. I have never EVER seen two drum sets matched that well. Hats off to you, brother
@joetroutt7425
@joetroutt7425 Жыл бұрын
I really think it was a trick
@marcuszevenbergen4966
@marcuszevenbergen4966 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I would avoid doing any repairs with wood filler. It's more for cosmetic repair, not structural, and I worry about how it would hold up long term on a bearing edge. It would be better to re-cut the bearing edge (or pay someone who knows what they're doing), or to just leave it as is. But that's just one dingus drummer's opinion!
@EvilYeti98
@EvilYeti98 Жыл бұрын
I’m abt to leave school and I want to watch it but I have to drive home then go to church after that. I hope everyone is having a amazing day!
@matty_isthemotto
@matty_isthemotto Жыл бұрын
Wot
@rat1819
@rat1819 Жыл бұрын
i sure am having a great day, i hope you are too!
@EvilYeti98
@EvilYeti98 Жыл бұрын
@@rat1819 I am, god let me live another day!
@upsetkidpanda1869
@upsetkidpanda1869 Жыл бұрын
floor is just perfect! congratulations for your reference kit! i always wanted one!
@jcsk8
@jcsk8 Жыл бұрын
In the 90´s I had a cheap asian baswood drumkit that sounded better than ALL of Tama´s, Pearl´s or other drums that we shared in the stages. To the point that one drummer wanted to rent it thinking it was something special. In the end was just knowledge. I worked on smothing the bearing edges, instaled good heads and tuned with with passion for ever venue we´re playing. I rather prefer having a cheap kit like that, with a "better" snare (if needed) and good cymbals than an super expensive kit with so so cymbals. Hardware is a problem too. Had to change the snare drum stand and a good seat. But since the distorted guitars entered nobodyt ever noticed any bad sounds. Listen with your ears, guys. Cheers.
@ferretyluv
@ferretyluv 6 ай бұрын
I can SEE the differences you showed. But I can’t hear the difference.
@Sychius
@Sychius Жыл бұрын
Wow that was weird to see. I have the graphing calculator you showed as 'high end' at 0:05 xD
@JNouveau
@JNouveau Жыл бұрын
Livin' it fancy
@cDisturbed.
@cDisturbed. Жыл бұрын
You’re actually the funniest man I’ve ever watched. Love your channel 🤣
@dannyboy5514
@dannyboy5514 Жыл бұрын
Man these videos are so goddamn interesting! Keep ‘em coming I can’t get enough!
@nickwallette6201
@nickwallette6201 Жыл бұрын
I think the cowbell definitely sounds better on the reference kit.
@arrowintheknee9956
@arrowintheknee9956 8 ай бұрын
Yeah but it needs more cowbell!
@citywitt3202
@citywitt3202 Жыл бұрын
I am blind, a music producer, and a drummer. Though I say it myself, I have a darn good ear. I was waiting to hear you play the Perl kit then the comparison ended. I literally cannot hear the difference.
@_sandy_
@_sandy_ Жыл бұрын
very interesting comparison between the baos and the references- i expected them to sound much more different i had no interest in drums until i found you! thank you for sharing your wonderful passion and knowledge :D much love from a fellow aussie♥keep up the great content!
@jimbo7484
@jimbo7484 Жыл бұрын
I started laughing out loud when I realized just how well you were able to tune those Jinbao drums. Great vid,Thanks
@BadgerBishop
@BadgerBishop Жыл бұрын
Drum go boom boom, snek best part. I actually have no ability to hear the difference between these drum sets, but I am glad you find joy in these videos.
@Unnus
@Unnus Жыл бұрын
So happy you found a good deal. I went from a crappy lil kit to a DW kit I purchased from a backline company that went out of business, the kit was brand new though, they bought it right before the lockdowns. Sounds great!
@noyzza1107
@noyzza1107 Жыл бұрын
I just want to say, not boring at all , I have no idea about drums and difference between one or another, I learn from you videos plus is really funny.
@a.j.wilkes6352
@a.j.wilkes6352 Жыл бұрын
New to your channel, but enjoying your content Love the passion about drumming. Cheers from the U.S.A.
@TheRabbit84
@TheRabbit84 Жыл бұрын
My first kit is a Pearl Rhythm Traveler. It's a small kit, easy to transport, and I needed that. Looks like a toy. Everyone's first reaction to seeing it was laughter. They were always blown away at how good it sounds when playing it
@Merlincat007
@Merlincat007 Жыл бұрын
Nice! I've got a Dixon Little Roomer kick drum which is the same size at 20x8" and it sounds great! I love compact drums, especially those with wide heads but shallow bodies
@EllaBananas
@EllaBananas Жыл бұрын
Started playing around with some drumsticks I found lying around and have started learning how to use the bounce for little double and triple taps. Still no idea what I'm doing, but it had reminded me of my childhood drumkit and how I never really got a chance to learn.
@fugurilover
@fugurilover Жыл бұрын
i love your videos man
@besticouldget
@besticouldget Жыл бұрын
I love my Millennium 8'' tom cranked way up! Bought it new for 20€ and it sounds like a bongo. I love it!
@kylewagoner
@kylewagoner Жыл бұрын
Love the tone of those References though. Awesome job matching the tubing.
@PheonixRise666
@PheonixRise666 Жыл бұрын
I've played on a Jarrah ply Brady kit once. And heard that same kit numerous times, the tone in unbelievable. Nothing sounds like a Brady
@fantac_electronica
@fantac_electronica Жыл бұрын
I never thought I'd actually see another Jin Bao kit! There was one in the rehearsal room when i joined a band. Ended up slapping some better skins on it and it did the job for rehearsals for a little while, but when I think of how much of a pain it was to tune, I'm glad its gone
@jasonfreethy9153
@jasonfreethy9153 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a musician by any stretch, however I've always appreciated the drums and you mr pods deepens my my appreciation
@SMarcey
@SMarcey Жыл бұрын
Its astonishing how much more dynamic and articulate the References are against the Jim Baos. What a deal on em too. Great find
@wydua2049
@wydua2049 Жыл бұрын
next month i am scrapping this 3$ for a stream acces i hat streams but damn you're not only playing amazingly but also it gives of some vibe i can't describe but it makes me smile
@henryatkinson1479
@henryatkinson1479 Жыл бұрын
Not a drummer, but as someone who has done micing and live mixing for concerts with all manner of drum kits, and you can hear the difference in drum and tune pretty clearly in the monitors, very cool to see the reason for what I hear.
@MalagutiLM
@MalagutiLM Жыл бұрын
This is actually the best drum tone guide I’ve ever seen
@GOICOBA
@GOICOBA Жыл бұрын
Man how did you manage to get me interested in real drums and cymbals, you're awesome, brother
@Whitewingdevil
@Whitewingdevil Жыл бұрын
Mate, I subscribed to this channel to hear you gush about weird and obscure drum and music stuff that I know nothing about. Don't worry about boring me, I know what I signed on for! Plus it has weird connections to stuff I DO know about, like wood hardnesses and metallurgy, and it's fun learning how those things effect instruments musically :D
@KareemFloat
@KareemFloat Жыл бұрын
investing in pedals over shells. that's what iv been preaching for ages now. a nice set of direct drives, absolute chef's kiss.
@SteveT0000
@SteveT0000 Жыл бұрын
I’ll never forget the day I upgraded from my first ever drum kit, a Pearl Forum (poplar wood), to my Yamaha Absolute Customs (beech wood). Such a huuuuuge upgrade, as my tuning skills could not get the most out of the Forum but the Yamahas were very easy to dial in.
@Leo-fluffy
@Leo-fluffy Жыл бұрын
I trick I learned for getting dents out of wooden floors is a little bit of hot water will swell the wood back up then you want to let it dry for a couple weeks. I personally wouldn’t do it on an expensive drum kit but it could work.
@segarallychampionship702
@segarallychampionship702 Жыл бұрын
I was just listening to you talking about drums and when I heard "you can go now" I didn't think I could actually go now
@m144mantube
@m144mantube Жыл бұрын
Loving that cowbell groove tho! ❤
@b.p.879
@b.p.879 Жыл бұрын
When I went shopping for a new kit to use on the road, I went for a step down from my home kit, which is a 2003 Tama Starclassic Birch. I found a brand new 7 piece Superstar Classic maple kit, and after putting my favorite heads on and spending a couple weeks experimenting with tuning, I got them sounding amazing and they hold the tuning over several shows, with the 14 inch floor tom being the only "problem child", which usually has to be tuned before every show. Not bad for $750, though!
@derrick_builds
@derrick_builds Жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Keep them coming.
@InYourDreams-Andia
@InYourDreams-Andia Жыл бұрын
I had a Pearl Export 80s kit for the longest time, the bearing edges were reasonable and with good heads, they're great! Love the Pearl Free floating snares, I'll get one next, but, er.. I just switched to Mapex. Top line kits in any brand are really worth it, long time!
@akchief740
@akchief740 6 ай бұрын
Man you're so passionate about so many things. I wanna be like you
@sandwork
@sandwork Жыл бұрын
Love your sense of humor
@SOOKIE42069
@SOOKIE42069 Жыл бұрын
oh man those references you bought look like the Rockwood by Hohner kit i had in high school that i played with my orchestra sticks because my mom wouldn't "waste money" on redundant lighter sticks for the kit. That kit featured several cracked cymbals and stands I fished out of a music store dumpster and an OC double bass pedal that my uncle "got off a truck" lol. still rocked the fuck out of it.
@oysterhead5150
@oysterhead5150 Жыл бұрын
That s crazy how you got a crappy set sounding almost as good as a high end kit, then again everything was mic'd, I'd still take a high end Peral kit any day. Great video!
@mekyail
@mekyail Жыл бұрын
I have a kit very similar to the Jin Bao ones and yes the bearing edges are the main hassle but some sanding helped me fix it as much as I could and with new heads the kit sounds amazing, very close to what the pro kits sound like. It did take alot of experimentation. Tuning techniques were to be legit thrown down a window and done any way that worked. Since the pro or even the midrange kits in Pakistan are so expensive, I keep this kit as my main gig kit, and honestly it's now good enough to cut a proper drum sound that FOH sound engineers prefer too. The kit costed about 100$ in the current economy.
@chairgaming1997
@chairgaming1997 Жыл бұрын
Man your vids are so good that I find the "boring" time very fun and interesting
@avail2114
@avail2114 Жыл бұрын
I love my pearl export snare. Got it for 15 bucks at a music store in garbage condition. Cleaned it up and put good heads and some new hardware on it and I have a nice metal snare that goes with me wherever I need it
@Fabonj
@Fabonj Жыл бұрын
"Morty, we've gonna go get me Pearl References. We've gotta go to Bendigo to get me Pearl References!"
@jabxjab
@jabxjab 5 ай бұрын
Fuckin' awesome video bro. Absolutely loved it!!
@drumjedi5301
@drumjedi5301 Жыл бұрын
My take, with years of experience with high- and low- end kits from all different brands: High-end drums have better fit and finish, and are so much easier to make sound amazing, and overall DO sound and play better. However, a decently made mid-range kit, and even a good low-end kit can sound great if good heads are used and they're tuned well. If you can afford high end drums, by all means, do so. They're worth it, and you really do get what you pay for. If you can only afford low- or mid- range, replace the stock heads with good quality heads and learn how to tune them. You won't have the playing feel of the high-end stuff, nor the tuning range and depth of tone, but you absolutely can have a great sounding kit to make your music on.
@tombrenes2411
@tombrenes2411 Жыл бұрын
Finally I’ve been saying this since I had my first rogers kit for 150 US dollars Back in 88 I get those super cheap drums take them to a carpenter show them a few videos on bearing edges with top of the line heads and your golden
@johnboleyjr.1698
@johnboleyjr.1698 Жыл бұрын
I'm jealous about that Reference find. Absolute bangin' deal ya got there.
@ChristopherT1
@ChristopherT1 Жыл бұрын
No matter how the good kit is if you can’t match the right heads to the drums and know how the hell to tune you’re fuct. You can make a cardboard box sing with the right heads and tuning. Great job mate. New sub!!
@ArtisanTony
@ArtisanTony Жыл бұрын
I love that you are talking philosophy in your trade. You have become a true artisan :)
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