Isaac wrote:Any instrument, regardless of the wood ( or fiberglass )
is a gift that allows us to be a conduit for music.
In the end that's what counts.
ISAAC
Isaac wrote:But to sound less "New Agey" -
I will quote an old saying
I once heard from an Advertising man -
"There's taste for the Masses,
.... and
Taste for the Asses"
Have a great weekend and play some music.
ISAAC
Isaac wrote:Any instrument, regardless of the wood ( or fiberglass )
is a gift that allows us to be a conduit for music.
In the end that's what counts. (...)
Have a great weekend and play some music.
ISAAC
percussionist wrote:hi i am a percussionist and i perform on afro percussion now for 22 years now its my kind of percussion instruments especially the fiberwoods series has a great sound and the elite series form afro are incredebility perfect for me would not perform on no other brand afro percussion for me numero uno![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Mike wrote:Roka wrote:I just found AFRO bongo and the label says "Made in Thailand"
Once again, that does NOT mean that they are bad bongos,
but it depends a bit on the manufacturing date, the model
and of course the skins!
So just tell us a bit more about them, please.
A while ago, I detected these Afros at ebay and got a tip NOT to buy them:
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=927&hilit=+afro+primero+bongos
Do yours look like these, Roka?
Isaac wrote:Afro Percussion was a small company originally from Belgium I believe.
They were bought by Pearl and continued with a very high quality.
Eventually they became more mass produced in Thailand. They were
quite strong and decent drums, but a bit heavy.
The marketing people at Pearl decided to
drop the Afro name. After slow sales, their marketing "geniuses" came to the conclusion
that Afro might be considered a racist brand name so they dropped it
... and they became the new Pearl Percussion
instead that we still see today. Maybe promotional workshops
may have been the answer. That was the genius of Martin Cohen & LP - to continuously
educate the players and thus bring in new players.
Pearl had previously tried to introduce their percussion, but had no
success, even though their products were good. Sometimes it's just
a perception problem, since Pearl had only been associated with drum sets.
There's no surprises with the Thailand made products - all the same wood
with a consistent sound. The only problem is the quality of the skins
as with most commercial made "brands". If one happens to find early
Afros, you're getting a much better product. At one time both
Orestes Vilato and Armando Peraza were endorsees, but dropped out
when the quality went down.
~ ISAAC
martin werkman wrote:here a picture from my afro,s,
greetings
martin werkman
http://www.myspace.com/martinwerkman
Mike wrote:Roka wrote:I just found AFRO bongo and the label says "Made in Thailand"
Once again, that does NOT mean that they are bad bongos,
but it depends a bit on the manufacturing date, the model
and of course the skins!
So just tell us a bit more about them, please.
A while ago, I detected these Afros at ebay and got a tip NOT to buy them:
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=927&hilit=+afro+primero+bongos
Do yours look like these, Roka?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests