Hookd on Phonics wrote:
Hi Gregory,
My first flatride was an 18" Avedis Zildjian back around '88. I loved it, but sold it years later for my first 22" Dry Heavy Ride. I found that I would tire of the sound and really wouldn't play it out without an additional conventional ride. I could use it for three or four songs a night.
I think I still have a Paiste 18" flatride, but I may have sold my 20". The Zildjian had a magical "glass-like" quality to it, while the Paistes seem to miss that now mythical mark for me. This seems strange, as Paiste is credited for having invented the Flatride!
Brian
PS: I think the summertime has a lot to do with the current "mellowness" of the forum. Thankfully, it seems a lot of us here have a life away from the keyboard.
I've been busy getting a bunch of drum stuff ready for sale to provide extra money for a trip to Northern California. We need to visit our son and his family before he heads off to Afghanistan with the USMC. They have twin four year old sons, an almost two year old daughter, and another daughter due right around when my son is leaving. They have moved the family up to Northern California with her mom, while my son prepares for deployment. So, we're heading out there at the end of this month.
BWS
Hey, Brian; first, thank your son for his service, and thank you and your family for the sacrifice that entails. He and all your family will be in my prayers, if you don't mind.
I bought a Paiste 18" 602 flat ride – probably in 84 or 85, looking for a ride with no wash or buildup. In the store it was perfect but couldn't be heard –at all– in a live rock band. I guess I had it for a while but never really used it.
I can remember clearly its tone, very clear and translucent, a lovely cymbal with absolutely no volume knob. You could hit it with a bat but couldn't get anything more out of it. That's characteristic and one of the values of the breed, but I'd guess it was truer of the 602 than any other Paiste.
The Bosphorus Masters Turk is, by comparison, very thin, very dark, with a pronounced wooden click from the stick as its primary characteristic.