Continued from Snarewire:
Ron said...
I've never considered switching out strainers...I was thinking rather of how parallel action designs such as Premier or Sonor... or extended wire designs such as Radio King or Leedy Broadway... affect response.
At least into the 60s, Gretsch offered a choice of 16 or 20 strand wire sets. Even the dreaded 42 strand set was available, as it still is.
In re head choice, when one is dealing with pre-1960 drums, which would have originally come with calf, unless one commits to the expense and inconvenience... to some... of calf, no matter what the choice, from so many possibilities, it will produce a response more or less different from calf.
I'm certainly not motivated to switch out the factory mounted coated Amb batter or Amb reso on my Phonics reissue... I can't imagine improving that drum... but it's the only (virtually) new snare drum I've acquired in 45 years.
In re resos, going from Dip to Amb to Emp produces a dramatic difference in timbre. A thicker reso produces a darker tone and reduces the sharpness of snare response.
I have Emp resos on my two 4" snares and a Dip reso on my 8" Premier.
All of my other drums have Amb resos.
This gets back to the idea of going for the ideal sound in one's head, even though each drum still remains unique.
Than there are the issues of ambient acoustics, musical context, how the snare blends with the set... all these can and should influence one's choices...
MARCH 7, 2010 10:47 AM
Salty said...
I have often wondered how parallel strainers really affect a snare differently. Less than I would have hoped, I think, and apparently most manufacturers think it is greater expense than it is worth.
Your reso choices certainly bear up the impulse to make all snares pursue the single ideal sound!
My latest 8 deep Sonor Desinger snare came with Puresound wires mounted, and I really like those compared to the Sonor wires mounted on the 6.5 deep Designer snare.
Calf is a luxury. I used to be the sort of person who would own tube type stereos, vinyl disks rather than CDs, and so forth, but at some point I switched, because who has time to be fooling with tubes, taking them in for testing, trying to find a supply of no longer produced ones, and who can be bothered to clean vinyl, and flip it over in the middle of a work?
Calf has got to be a labor of love, one entirely worth the time, mind you, but I don't want to discover how nice a calf head might sound. No, I don't !