by umannyt » Thu Jan 10, 2008 9:49 pm
masterdj,
LP's Online Catalog says that the LP professional bongos have "handpicked natural rawhide heads", whereas the LP Matador bongos have "natural rawhide heads". I don't know if there's any real quality difference between the 2.
What I do understand is that both of them come from waterbuffalo skins. This isn't surprising 'cause, like the Rubber Wood (which LP markets as "Siam Oak" or "Asian Oak") which are used to make the shells of LP wood bongos (except the LP Valje model), waterbuffalo skins are indigenous (translation: cheaper production costs) to Thailand where most LP percussion products are now being manufactured.
I don't think I've ever heard anyone in CongaBoard or elsewhere hold waterbuffalo skin as being superior over mule, horse or cow skin. On the contrary, it's been the other way around.
I concur with the recommendation re: mule skin. I myself had to replace the delicate original horse skin on the "macho" side of my Gon Bops CA bongos with 1 of JCR's mule skin which I bought via Isaac Gutwilik. I discovered that the horse skin had split the following day after I neglected to detune it after a gig the night before. This was after only a few weeks of owning my bongos.
Btw, changing the skins of your bongos yourself isn't hard at all, as far as I'm concerned. It was even a fun and gratifying experience for me. And I don't have any reluctance at all about doing it again to any of my congas and bongas, if I have to.
Mule skins will do wonders to the sound of your Matador bongos, just as it has done to my Gon Bops. And twice already, I've dared myself to leave the tension on my bongos overnight, just for the heck of it. And it was still intact the following day. The mule skin is indeed as "stubborn as the mule" from where it came from (pun intended).
Best of luck,
Edited By umannyt on 1200002082