by Thomas Altmann » Thu Sep 14, 2006 2:12 pm
The Schalloch company is based in a little guitar & percussion store in my home town (Hamburg). The owners are friends of mine for years. When I wanted to buy me a new set of congas back in 1986, I was in doubt whether to chose Cuban congas or Skin-on-Skin. They showed me their prototype conga, body (hand-)manufactured in the Black Forest, and it would beat both the Sonoc and the Skin-on-Skin (for what I wanted to hear). I ordered a triple set of congas from them that I expanded to a set of four a couple of years later. They are custom-made of maple staves, Sonor crowns and Danish PJ sideplates, skins selected by myself. I am playing these drums to this day, and they have gone through, and proved in, any possible situation. Everybody loved them. I never since have had problems with lack of volume and injured hands. The sound character is what I would call balanced.
They don't have a "soul" or "alma" inside. I suggested they should put that iron ring in, but they didn't do it until Sergio Boré (from Brazil) repeated the advice. (Often in Germany, you have to have come from the Americas to be listened to.) At the same time they started using their own black hardware and beach or oak (!) bodies. They became the heaviest drums on the market.
At one point - I don't remember when - the Black Forest guys decided to end the cooperation with the Schalloch people, who are clearly business-oriented, and surely more than a living community of private woodworkers. So Schalloch started using more or less the same business as every other company, importing the bodies from Far East and mounting their own hardware and skins. Consequently, the drums started sounding like any other drum, like the LPs, Meinls or whatever, the only difference being that the skins were usually too thin. Today, even the skins look standard. The name plate looks the same, though.
On the quality level of the instruments on the photo, you usually take the least expensive out of the product range, and you can definitely play them, no question. If Schalloch is cheaper than other brands, even in America, it shows their competitiveness. Good for them. As far as I'm concerned, I am glad I have chosen their first prototype line for my concert class congas.
Just to share some info on this "virtually unknown" company that I happen to be acquainted with. Enjoy your new Schallochs.
Greetings,
Thomas