| For those of you who may derive some perverse satisfaction in
knowing about lug nuts, lock washers and cam screws, not to mention
drum diameters, heads,
cymbals and
weighted sticks you might be mildly ecstatic when you read this laundry list.
For the uninitiated, the drum set is a highly complex series of interconnected
pieces of wood, metal, and plastic levers, chains, pulleys, springs, sprockets,
and dynamic tension dynamos all conspiring together to go BANG! These seemingly
unrelated and inanimate objects that taken individually appear to belong to
some kind of surrealistic erector set actually require great care and sensitivity
in their practical application.
Over the years I have used a wide variety of acoustic and electronic
equipment. Some kits have been huge monsters (as the band will
undoubtedly confirm), some medium gauge and some absolutely tiny
(no, really) depending on the gig, type of music, live or studio
and more importantly, who the hell is going to be carrying around
all this stuff. For now I will try to keep this list to what I
have been using most currently.
On recent Tull tours and records I have primarily been using Premier
Artist Series maple drums although occasionally as the situation
dictates I may use my birch Genista’s or maple Signia Series,
which some of you may remember as my 25th Anniversary “Thick
as a Brick” set. These sets comprise, with some minor variations:
18x24 Bass Drum, 16x18 and 16x16 Floor Toms, 12x14, 10x12 and
8x10 Rack Toms, 5x14 Wood Hooped Snare Drum or 7x14 Wood Snare
with die cast hoops, usually fitted with a 42 Strand snare on the
bottom.
Head-wise I have been using Remo coated Ambassadors for all of
the toms on the batter side and coated Emperor heads for the snare.
All Bottom tom heads get clear Ambassadors. The Bass Drum batter
head is usually a Remo Powerstroke 3 with a small muting EQ pillow
up against the batter head side. All Hardware and my concert Glockenspiel
are by Premier.
Cymbals are all Paiste in either the Signature or Sound Formula
lines that vary in weight and size according to live or studio
situations. My live setup comprises a 20” medium heavy ride,
20” flat ride, 18”, 17”, 16” full crashes,
10” and 8” splashes, 18”, 16”, 12” thin
chinas and 1pair 14” heavy hi-hats and 1 pair 13” heavy
hi-hats. I also use 2 tuned Wuhan temple bells mounted over my
14” hi-hats and hanging RhythmTech tambourine. My double
bass drum pedal, hi-hat and remote hi-hat are all from the Drum
Workshop 5000 series. Sticks are either 2S or 5B Signature Series
by Pro-Mark. Additional striking implements include Pro-Mark Multi-Rods,
Mallets and Brushes. I wrap my sticks in a gauze like tape made
by Stick Handler, which enables me to keep a fairly loose grip
on the sticks even when I am sweating profusely in concert conditions.
It is very similar to what tennis players and golfers use to wrap
the handles of their rackets or clubs. Interestingly, this one
small accessory makes an enormous difference in my ability to play
long shows. Because the gauze absorbs the sweat it allows you to
maintain a relaxed, loose grip. You can therefore retain the control
that would otherwise be lost when unconsciously gripping the sticks
tighter, because of wet hands.
Other useful accessories that accompany me everywhere are my Roland
Dr. Beat Metronome for counting off tempos and a small, yet powerful
device known as a Beat Bug by L.T. Luglock. This real time metronome
has a small sensor that fits on my snare drum and is connected
to a LED readout which clocks the real tempo I am playing at any
given moment. This is a particularly useful instrument to gauge
the relative tempos of sections of music which are not necessarily
intended to be played at one tempo from beginning to end. For example
in “Budapest” the beginning starts off at one tempo
and when we get to the instrumental bridge it deliberately moves
up four clock points from 96 to 100 beats per minute to give that
section the added lift needed. Then it drops back to the original
tempo for the last verse. It’s also useful for when the occasional
sample appears to know beforehand that I am in the right tempo
range in order that the sample does not sound too fast or too slow.
I have been asked if this inhibits my playing. I don’t feel
that it does because it is only meant to be used as a general barometer
for tempo management. I am not watching it every beat or even every
bar, if I did I’m sure it would be neurosis inducing. Obviously
there are small fluctuations in tempo and feel night to night that
have to be adjusted to, my own and everyone else’s, and it
only is meant to be used as an objective means of measuring all
of our onstage tempos. In that regard it serves a very useful purpose
because we can all feel things a little differently every day according
to how much or how little sleep we got the night before, what we
had for lunch or how much coffee we’ve had that day.
I have been using the Shure in ear monitoring system for the last
two years and after a small period of adjustment found that I really
preferred this way of monitoring the band. The old way of having
large monitors certainly produced a lot more onstage volume that
the front of house sound engineer had to deal with in order to
get a decent sound. I think this makes his job easier, results
in a quieter stage sound for us and a better out front mix for
the audience. The whole kit is miked up with a variety of Shure
microphones outside and inside the drums, utilizing the MAY EA
system.
Everything is protected nicely by and travels in very light, road-worthy
cases made by the good people at Hardcase UK. I think this is quite
enough information!
Hope to be seeing you on the road……………Bye for
now!
Doane |