One thing about acoustics live, you need a good set of mic's for them. With E's it's a matter of plugging them in and you are good to go. I went with e drums for 4 reasons. 1. Practice, no noise as with acoustics, 2. Live, no need to worry or problems with how they sound due to a bad sound man or no sound man. I control MY sound, and not leave it to some knob twirrler. I played a gig using a very expensive set of Yamaha acoustics. The sound guy was inexpierenced and the drums were really low in the mix. The guy that owned the acoustics didn't know he wasn't in the mix. His good sounding drums ment squat on that gig. He had 2 mics on the drums, and the sound man was afraid of feed back. He got fired after the gig but still, that didn't help during the gig. We shared his kit during the gig and it didn't modivate me much knowing the drums were buired due to that suituation. With e's at least the sound guy can have a good signal and just crank it. Even with a bad sound man you have a fighting chance. In small halls all I got with acoustics was, "play softer, too loud". Acoustics like to be played at a certain volume to make them punch out a bit (for rock). With my E's, I can have a very punchy sound, CD quality in stereo at any volume. My kick is always punchy, regardless of volume. Another thing, I always have a problem hearing an acoustic snare due to hearing damage so I tend to wack them really hard, esepically live. With my e's, I can aim my monitor at myself and get an earload of snare and hear clearly all my drums, regardless of how loud the band is. Even if the band has good controlled stage volume, I still like running my snare "hot". When playing E's, I can have an out front in your face kick, snare, toms without a lot of effort. For those gigs where the band does not have the drums through the PA, I am master of my sound with my trusty JBL EON-2 and Yamaha keyboard amp. I have sterophonic drums, CD quality that punch out. If I want to bring the drums up in the mix, my little slider on the DTX can put the drums in stunn mode and thump the listeners into a drum dancing frenzy. My next item will be ear buds. Acoustic abient over tones in a small hall make the drum sound a bit flat and mono. Every musician that I ever played behind loves the E's. I filled in for a guy last week and the band prefered the E's way over the acoustics. Lower stage volume, punchier, controlled, stereo, and plesent to the ear. Acoustics, though wonderfull for us, has drawbacks in smaller type gigs where acoustic drum volumes are poo pooed on. You simply cannot get the same punch with acoustics off stage as what's comming out of a speaker. You can get a lot more volume with the acoustics, but sometimes with smaller places it's not a plus. Since most of my gigs are now reglated to smaller venues, the E's work out better for me. 3. For recording the e's do it for me. Maybe for the final studio cut "going to Warner Brothers", I would use acoustic cymbals. When recorded, one would be hard pressed to say, "those are electric drums". Reason 4. consistancy and flexability. I can have a Nickleback snare drum, Rush snare drum, Loverboy thumping thick 80's sounding rock snare drum. A techno kit, retro kit, and modern sounding kit. I can record my playing and mix it into tunes and see how good it sizes up with the original version. Practice at 3am. Control my sound. Not worry about kick drum feed back because it's not miced. Have timbalies at a turn of a dial, sound effects, loop beats and solo on top of it and make people think I am better than what I really am. Can add more reverb on my side stick sound and thicken it up for those waltzses. For the money i feel i am getting a lot more then what acoustics have to offer. I am not new to drumming and been playing over half my life. If I want to practice drums home, I have to have E's. A pal of mine bought a two grand acoustic kit, and cannot play them in his apartment. So how much worth are edrums when weighing the benifits of not being able to practice? I love acoustics and wish I could get away using them all the time. But reality being what it is, the E's have more benifits for me. If I was playing full time again in big clubs with qualified souns men, I would play acoustics. Just some thoughts. " just because you spend $1500 on a E-drum set, you can't expect to get an equivalent $1500 A-drum, in terms of sound and feel."
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2004-06-30 by drumsonly2002
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