Atomic Rooster wrote:
The more I play that kit, the more I'm leaning toward liking birch Designers over maple.
I suspect that birch functions well with an aggressive style, as it is easier to control; quicker decay and a scooped out middle keep it more percussive and less tonal, out of the way of the other instruments. Maple is more sensitive (at lower volumes, at any rate), and requires greater stick control, but has more jelly in the belly than birch. So in a live setting, maple can seem muddy, although isn't necessarily (muddy) in the mix. Birch, on the other hand, can seem thin at times, and there is no way to get it to spread out like maple. I'd love to try the birch Designers to see if that holds true for the breed.
Sonor made all its birch drums shallower than the comparable maple or beech sizes. Designer racks, for instance, could not be had in square sizes in birch, except for the smallest sizes. 22" bass drums only 16" deep rather than 18". And though you could get 16x16 birch floors, an 18x 16 deep was the deepest birch size. I've often wondered what that's about.