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Message

Re: Problems and decisions

2003-11-03 by brown8700

Ed:
Discovered last night that the problem appears to be the tweeter in 
the amp. Still not certain as to what the outcome will be. Wifey-Poo 
loves the e-kit; band members love the a-kit. Stephen loves bits and 
pieces of both (but a combined kit is not in the offing).

I have rehearsal tomorrow evening and will use the a-kit and take it 
from there.

Stephen



--- In DTXpress@yahoogroups.com, "liberatusvirus" 
<liberatusvirus@y...> wrote:
> --- In DTXpress@yahoogroups.com, "brown8700" <brown8700@a...> wrote:
> > Anyway, so we could continue rehearsal, I pulled out the TAMA 
> > Starclassics. The guys in the band had never seen or heard them.
> > Guess what? They want me to continue to play the acoustics 
becuase 
> > the dynamics are so much better; and I have to agree.
> 
> Stephen,
> 
> By now, you must have figured out what was wrong with the amp 
> (crossover, soldering, loose wire, tweeter damage?). The fact that 
> you all agreed about the dynamics must mean that the difference was 
> obvious, and it's not really surprising, since the DTXpress can 
only 
> manage a discrete number of steps from softest to loudest 
(especially 
> with the Pintech meshes connected), compared to the infinitely 
> variable range of an acoustic kit. But there are other factors to 
> consider. First of all, a larger kit makes a larger psychological 
> impact. A lot of people, performers as well as audience members, 
> react skeptically about the often compact look of an e-kit, 
> especially in a musical setting that's supposed to be BIG, like 
rock. 
> It's easier to identify with traditional drums. Rock, however, is 
the 
> least likely style to suffer from a loss of dynamic range. (Maybe 
if 
> the other members hadn't seen the Tamas, they wouldn't 
have "noticed" 
> the difference in sound.) That's not to say that dynamic range is 
> totally absent in rock music--far from it--only that much of the 
> playing does not depend on it. Another consideration is that an 
> acoustic kit requires much more effort, expense, and finesse to 
come 
> across well live--multiple and appropriate mikes, presumably a lot 
of 
> inputs on the mixer, etc. The extent to which a live acoustic kit's 
> amplification/mixing/processing is compromised is the extent to 
which 
> it loses some of its advantage. All things considered, and 
> notwithstandng the obvious tradeoffs--in the studio as well as live-
-
> an e-kit offers more sonic and logistical versatility, as well more 
> ease of setup. Moreover, as good as the DTXpress is, it is not the 
> last word in electronic drumming; other modules and pads can 
> approximate the acoustic experience with more finesse, affecting 
the 
> balance even further. 
> 
> I'm just taking the opportunity to muse a little on the matter. 
> Obviously, you'll ultimately do what's best for you and your band. 
> But the band members won't always have the drummer's best interests 
> in mind--musical or otherwise--and what seems right from a certain 
> perspective, or in a certain context, won't necessarily be right in 
> every conceivable situation. It's not an open and shut case, and it 
> might not even require a single answer. But it is an interesting 
one 
> that raises a lot more questions than might meet eye on first 
glance.
> 
> Ed

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