by BMac » Wed Apr 16, 2008 1:02 pm
That "gift" skin from TA of VP looks like the skins I got for the same "gift" price. I have skins like that on six congas now. With all due respect to skin suppliers, and all due respect to drum makers, these forums contain a lot of content forgetful that the market belongs as much to the buyers as the sellers ... indeed I feel empowerment leaning toward me as a buyer. How makers and merchants in drums and accessories became "holy cows" is beyond me, but I think that sentiment may actually be coming more from the buyer side than from the sellers. There is no merchant without a buyer and no buyer without a merchant. With few exceptions, most merchants/makers I've encountered have behaved according to that concept. That said, those skins are the best I've come across. My hands just want to touch those skins. But hey, all my congas have fresh mounted steer skins and I have a few flat pieces left for replacements. Some of you have seen me grind against a skin supplier here on other message threads. If I'm at risk of "NO SKINS FOR YOU!" by reminding the market that business exchanges occur on two-way streets ... then so be it. I'm ready. In a worst case scenario, I'll walk into a music store and buy skins for cash from merchants that don't know I'm the insolent BMac. And no, I ain't grinding against TA of VP ... he hooked me up. I wish I had the cash laying around to buy some of his drums ... they are beautiful.
A friend placed a call yesterday to Earth Shaking Music in Atlanta. They reportedly have twenty of those same skins in stock. They call them "moo skins." To my knowledge, they come from TA of VP. Why/how the skins go from Texas to Hawaii to Atlanta is beyond my knowledge. But it seems TA has the line on the best steerhides and ESM in Atlanta gets them in lots from him and sells them to you for the price mentioned above as a "gift." My friend is only likely to deplete that stock of twenty by two skins in the next couple of days. The last time I was in Atlanta, I depleted their stock by six myself and only left them a few. So if they have twenty now, they are replacing their stock and selling those skins on an ongoing basis. So go get them "gift" skins boys, it's Christmas in spring time!
Simply (but never briefly) put, I don't think you gotta be anybody special to get good skins. You just gotta be in the know ... and that's easy to achieve with websites like this one. It's a great time to be a beer drinker in the United States. When I started drinking beer in the early eighties, Michelob was the good stuff. Times have changed. Microbreweries have returned and are flourishing. It's a time of renaissance for beer drinkers. I only recently (about two years ago) dove into the quality drum skins market. I feel like I've arrived just as the party is getting good. I don't know if times have changed for skin buyers like times have changed for beer drinkers, but good skins are available without special connections and secret deals and outrageous expenses.
One thing left on my mind is whether there is currently an obsession left with ugly skins. Are ugly skins cool? When I've questioned the quality of scarred, gouged, and non-uniform skins, players have chimed in things like "hey man, you don't get it ... it's the sound man." Well I've recently switched all my conga skins to visually beautiful samples, and I'll be darned if they don't sound as good as they look. If I'm picking through skins, and I see uniformly thick, translucent, visually pleasing skins, I'm choosing those and passing on the skins with scars, gouges, and thickness fluctuations. But no doubt, somebody's gonna keep drinking that Michelob.
Cheers
BMac
Last edited by
BMac on Wed Apr 16, 2008 8:12 pm, edited 4 times in total.