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l
Big sound from a small head.
Very good price-sound (quality) ratio. I'm using it on a small Millenium steel snare drum. It has a clear (matte) coating, so and this nice alu ring in the center of the head, so you don't need much additional dampening. Personally I don't like weird overtones, if you hate them too, this is the right snare head for you. It has a nice tuning range too, so you can use it for any kind of music. Just beat it, like Jackson said.
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Sfortunatamente si è verificato un errore, La preghiamo di riprovare più tardi.
TL
Kill that ringing snare right
Every factory snare these days, that hasn't been re-edged by hand, produces unwanted overtones. Not sustain (that you might want), but a nasty sharp after effect, no matter how you tune it. I'm a big big Aquarian fan, but in some cases, especially with snare drums, I go Evans.
Pros:
They typically have a dryer sound, perfect for post punk/prog rock/metal, or even drum & bass. The "Edge Control" does exactly what it says. The reverse dot shortens the decay even more, and also adds to the life of the head. It can be tuned quite low as well. I'm using one currently on a 10" x 5.5" Mapex Walnut Shell.
Cons: None for me, but others might complain that it's too quick.
Final thoughts: Prince would have loved this snare head.
Pros:
They typically have a dryer sound, perfect for post punk/prog rock/metal, or even drum & bass. The "Edge Control" does exactly what it says. The reverse dot shortens the decay even more, and also adds to the life of the head. It can be tuned quite low as well. I'm using one currently on a 10" x 5.5" Mapex Walnut Shell.
Cons: None for me, but others might complain that it's too quick.
Final thoughts: Prince would have loved this snare head.
1
0
Segnala un abuso