Seisporocho wrote:Facundo, that's interesting! Maybe you could tell me if mule skins are ok when dealing with alot of humidity? Regardless of humidity, how do they compare to good cowskin or water buffalo??...thanks
Congamyk, thanks for the reply.
Seisporocho
OLSONGO wrote:Pavlo you will need long lugs to reach the rim, by the looks of it you may have already used most of the lug.
First you wet the skin, when it is soft, place the hoop on top and with a string or rope rap it as illustrated,( this is because you have little hide to work with) next place on the drum and hold it with the lugs and cut the string, then tighten til the head is a bit above the rim, let it dry naturally, if its dirty clean with soap and put a bit of oil and place in the sun, there you have it; a renewed head. I did this with an LP head and I was surprised by the results.
Paz OLSONGO
Firebrand wrote:my preferences:
I've given up on real skins...i've had two gigs where the humidity or extreme cold changed the tuning of the drum SEVERELY...it made it impossible to play them. Ever since then...I tried LP Synthetics (which were Evans ones, really), and I hated the little triangle muting thing in the middle...it killed the ability of the drum to overtone when you did open crack hits. I tried Remo Fyberskins after taht...fell in love...tight, high pitch, great tone. Never will go with anything else.
I've played on Custom-made Mule skins from Colombia on friend's congas...I like the tightness and sound of those. My friend Victor Sterling (and respected conguero of Connecticut) uses Colombia-Mule skins on his congas. I prefer synthetic though
I can't completely vouch for Giovanni, but, I'd say that Giovanni prefers synthetics too. I've seen perform with synthetics a lot...although, you give Giovanni a damned card-board box and it will sound better than me on a real conga!
Stay away from the waterbuffalo skins...sound dead and flat, and you can't get anything approximating high-pitch on those. The Sonor Cubanos come with them, and they suck big time (my opinion, of course).
OLSONGO wrote:have you seen his drums ? full of scratches, chunks of wood missing, that is a sign of laisyness, not wanting to place the drums in bags for transport and no less using a wrench to tune them up and down. And from what I gather on this site , most of the congueros here are proud of their drums and take care of them, and concerned about the best heads to put on ; which i consider to be the natural skins. You don't see batas with fiber skins.
Isaac wrote:In terms of moisture absorbancy and having to keep re-tuning,
Mule is fact, the least porous and least absorbant of all the natural heads.
It's much denser & durable, which is why it takes so long
to break in and lasts longer. Cow and water bufallo will definitely
go out of tune so much faster.
However, if you're playing in an outdoor gig in Miami,
forget it, and go with synthetics, I like the tucked Nuskyns.
Some drums sound better with the fiberskyns. You can
have the natural set for the cooler season or for
the recording studio. It's good to have both options.
Since I moved from cow to mule, my tuning remains
more consistent for longer periods, but then I don't
live down south. It's hot enough up here in the summer too.
Isaac in New Jersey
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