RitmoBoricua wrote:Who knows next time I am really going old school and order me some Elephant Hide for my tumbadora and some Zebra skin for my Quinto, yeah that's the ticket to obtain that old school african sound.
... a kpanlogo, an ancestor of the conga ...
leedy2 wrote:niallgregory wrote:Im very happy to take advice from people with experience , after all its the only way we learn new things and how to get better at what we do . Think its something that everyone on internet forums should be capable of tbh . You need to read other peoples opinions and maybe take them on board with your own , this way we can continue to debate and share knowledge with this great forum . Not sure if english is your first language ? maybe thats why things come across strange some times .
niallgregorynothing else to say,enjoy the experience you are getting here. If I read every thing that people put on here I go nuts many don't know of what they talk about or better put ,do not bring it across to under stand them.that why I respone in manner that I do.
Thomas Altmann wrote:@Mike: Just a little remark at the side: Kpanlogo is a relatively young style (rhythm/dance/drum). I cannot be an ancestor of the conga drum, although Africa has a galore of drums of a similar phenomenology, to which your statement might apply - in the broadest sense. /quote]
Alright, no prob, I am not really an expert on African drums at all nor of the Cuban folkloric predecessors of the present-day tumbadora.bongosnotbombs wrote:I've used goat on my Meinl Woodcraft bongos. They sound incredible for the macho, not so good for the hembra. (...)
Anyways, in my experience the goat skins don't last as long, maybe 1 year tops. I actually put a dent in the macho skin from my thumb doing the manoteo on it. Two others split on me, one while tuning. I use cow and mule now, but the goat was a nice sound, sharper.
Mike wrote:Nice Woodcraft bongó by the way.
leedy2 wrote:amaxs81
buckoh
niallgregory
Ok guys
This is a very good topic and I don't want you to fell offended by what I say or by way I put it but in the 30's,40's there were drummers ,timbales players, conga and bongo players. All drummers of that era on there drum had to use calf heads there was no plactic heads there was no Remo heads. Heads were on all drums calf on top some had pig skins on bottom specially tom tomsof drum set's.You had back then rock groups same as today the differance bettween calf head's and plastic is ,that plastic you do not have to tune the come pretuned.Today 2 out of 100 do know how to tune a set of timbales with calf skin the rest do not know of it . In the fiftys when revolution started of big band's drummer broke more heads due to that they were working more ,more night clubs. The heads issue was saved by Remo D. Belli another drummer with same problem every body had head's braking and tunning problem.And today it's a big business yet in many recordings today many of the drummer's and some older timbales playes use calf heads as preferance . why? it does not ring .In night clubs you don't see as much and reason is people smoking ,weather condition A/C , excecive heating all of this affects calf skins not projection.If you put calf skin on a timbales the cascara sound changes this is what make it dry not plastic heads any timbales with plastic even the best Leedy will ring .Not to offen you or others when you are experimenting whit sound it a different ball game when you want to sit and really play proper these skins are very important to sound same on another issue cowbells . Have you every heard a band's that timbales and bongo player's cowbell's sound like a bunch of tin cans with no veriation that the same with drums tunning and improper playing. In today music world it not about what you are play but people should consentrate in it more playing proper develop technics proper tumbos and skins make a differnce you will here proper tones horse skins other skin that are not made for this will just create head aces in long run damage you drum and hurt you hands .
Thickness of a goat skin 6-8 sheets is pretty good for a bongos
MIke did a great job and I bet he has a great sound from thet goat skin.
leedy2 wrote:amaxs81
All depends on what kind of timbales you have if it an LP you must buy premounted heads you can get from a compay name stern tanning they have mounted heads for 14/15's If you have a vintage timbale that you can rap on rim it a bit different not same as mounting a cong or bongo head so if not sure ask I will be happy to help you.There so when buying skin must be flat and for a 13 need 20'' 14 needs 22 and so on for rapping on rims so keep that in mined
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests