Miking is a separate issue (until one has to do it.) For better or worse, I have not had to mic my drums for several years now, and so I am closely attuned to the sound the drums make in a room - which two things are inseparable.
The Glyn Johns method is an interesting case in point. I have no pretensions to being a sound engineer (short of tuning my drums the way I like them), but I have tried imitating the GJ method in our studio and the effect was terrible. So possibly I imitated the mic positioning poorly, or I was not tuned as GJ imagined it, or the method really depends on the room. Who knows, but I don't love recording, I don't love tuning rooms, and I don't love tuning drums, so we will never know.
The big room sound that we get, supported by close miking for articulation works well enough.
Since I am playing small rooms, my thoughts are entirely focussed on the acoustic properties. We're playing a mix of Motown, blues, rockabilly, rock n roll, and country, played with a jazz sensibility and lots of dynamics. We are a guitar and drums duo w/singer, so I have to provide a lot of bass, and the room has to do a lot of the work to meld the sounds together. Since the room is working, the drums cannot "sing" endlessly. They need to open up at all dynamic levels, they need to create enough sustain and tone to span the beat, and they need to begin to close down before the room starts to create mud.
My Designers would be tough to play in that setting. The 18 bass is too restrained, and the 20 is balls-to-the-wall, and the toms don't die back any time before Christmas.
The teardrop bass is on at all dynamic levels, and it is very sensitive to beater pressure, both for volume and for applied damping. Its sound curve -my ideal as described above - is perfect for the music. It opens up to a very large, round sound and then closes rather quickly with a shudder (I can't describe that any better, but it is a wonderful sound). A great deal of though goes into my foot, since it controls the bass frequencies in the room.
The 13 rack is a small marvel. When struck lightly, it has everything I would expect and a very pleasant and cutting ring, but what is surprising is that the harder it's hit, a deeper, ballsier sound develops, so it goes from jazz to rock ability on demand.
And so forth. I don't want to bore you singing the praises of this kit, but since it does not have a 14 floor, I use my Designer 14. No one would know it's a different line, but I have to be far more careful with it than with the tears because it can so easily overcook the room. When called for, I ride it very lightly on its edges rather than use centered strikes, to avoid too much build up.
Francis, I don't know what a 308 Teardrop is.