by Thomas Altmann » Mon Mar 03, 2008 3:46 pm
Hi Tuco,
this is one of the questions that are generally hard to answer because the choice of the drum sizes has an effect on the sound you will produce, and nobody knows how you actually want to sound, what your voice is, so to say, or what you hear in your mind. Also, what we don't know, is how big your hands are.
Those Isla drums look great, and they sound great, too. The lugs look a bit like they could tear your trousers, but I don't know.
Whatever your idea is, sound-wise, I would recommend you to consider that the music in which you are involved now may not always be the only music you want to play. In a situation where your principal drum has to carry the band (like in a traditional Salsa setting), a drum like the "Requinto" model has proven to be too small to be capable to make that. This size is nice for soloing, like in a Rumba or Comparsa ensemble, or perhaps if you have a drum set player in the band. Sometimes in Salsa bands, congueros play sizes like the "Conga" as their main drum. Anyway, who knows: Maybe you will be a future star innovator who has established a new conga sound!
If I were in your place, I would choose Quinto-Conga-Tumba as a triple set and put the Requinto aside for traditional Rumba sessions. If you buy the Requinto instead, you might end up using only the two larger drums one day, because the Requinto would sound too high to really fit in (at least for my taste).
The denominations of "Requinto-Quinto-Conga-Tumba" are referring to the different drum sizes only for marketing. That's why I used them in quotation marks.
All the best for your new start with these beautiful drums,
Thomas