by BMac » Wed Feb 13, 2008 2:01 pm
I couldn't help but jump in with a position I don't see others promoting expressly.
Slop shots count in tuning congas! Hell, their sound drifts around a bit while you play ... temperature, humidity, stage lights, etc ... I play outside a lot ... a rain drop or two ...
You're approaching things very, very, very, very technically if you're counting threads! That's ok if that's you're thing ... but a lot of even pro players approach tuning with much less formality.
I've got just a bit more mileage on my playing than how you describe yourself but I'm not pro. I was finally encouraged through discussions a year or two ago with several professional musicians to just relax about my tuning technique and it's been liberating.
I back ALL TENSION off of EVERY hook EVERY time I stop playing ... fully loosening all hooks. The drum gets a chance to relax and the skin even shrinks back a bit depending on the humidity. Also, some believe that leaving tension pulls the drum out of round. That belief corresponds well to some problems I was having that have gone away.
When I'm ready to play, I just take a minute or two to tune ... I just get 'er done now. I keep the threads greased so I can feel the torque and balance the torque as I go around the drum adding a 1/4 turn to each hook in a circular pattern. So I get the overall tone in range to where I want it ... depending on my mood or other drums nearby. Last step: I strike an open tone above each hook and find the lowest sounding region of the drum head. I add another 1/4 turn to the hook below lowest tone. Then maybe repeat my last step a time or two ... maybe applying 1/8 turns ... and after a couple of iterations of the last step ... it's funky munky time!
There's a sweet spot sound on a drum head ... but its a fat island sweet spot ... not a pin head ... its wide ... don't gotta count threads or get out the torque wrench!
But dude, really, your thread counting so reminds me of the way I am naturally inclined to approach drums and everything else!
Cheers!
BMac
Regarding:
I back ALL TENSION off of EVERY hook EVERY time I stop playing.
Ok, I lied ... I have several conga sets ... I keep my least treasured set with tension on them ... kicking around my living room ... to be ready to play at any moment. Its a cost-benefit analysis thing. So if my lesser drums get pulled out of round and the heads get stretched out ... so be it. I back all tension off my best congas every time though, and store them in bags, and sacrifice virgins to them ... when I can find virgins ... ok I lied again ... I can never find virgins ... come to think of, they're more trouble than they're worth anyway. Another issue is that leaving tension on the drums a day or two can really deliver their sound into such a sweet balance that just doesn't happen right away when tuning them ... but does happen after a couple hours of playing recently tuned drums. So what's a player to do? ... I keep a few sets around ... lower/middle/upper range/cost drums. But my favorites live in bags with no tension when they're not being played.
Edited By BMac on 1202913770