phatsolid wrote:
And I would also recommend you bring a variety sticks, brushes, Blasticks, rods, whatever, so you can adjust volume that way if needed. Some of those church settings are incredibly boomy.
- D.
Hey, David, is that a response to the Gretsch, to playing in boomy rooms, or to both? Thanks for the suggestions!
This church is boomy, but I've played in that room before, so no surprises. Remarkably, I've been able to handle sticks in that environment, although the Gretsch are an unknown. I will take brushes, not so much against volume, but rather for texture.
I have stopped using rods altogether. I enjoyed them for a while, for the last few years I used big Signatures, in order to make the Sigs work more quickly, with more attack, and with less volume while retaining tone. I have since replaced the slower drums with quicker varieties, now use smaller drums and heads with more attack, learned finger and bounce strokes to control volume, and get more tone by using single ply heads and a more open tuning.
Rods are cool in a way, but I have not found that they work well with the tunings, heads, drums, or technique that I am now using: they sound thin. And most of all, they don't work with my thumb: because of their thick diameter, rods leveraged the middle joint of my left thumb and created a very unpleasant soreness, so I no longer invite them in.
But I am bringing several thicknesses of stick along. My favorites for fast and quiet work are a pair of Bopworks Storyville Jazz that I have had for about seven years; the tips are worn down to tiny, the weight considerably reduced, and they impart a brighter ping to the dark Bospherous Turks.