And that`s what I meant, Drum kits were just take`n off in the Fifties. I`m not talking about tacked head, clip on, trap kits. I`m referring to double headed tunable rack toms mounted directly to the BD with FT`s on the side. You know, a modern day drum kit !i In the twenties and thirties most bands had an assorted trap kit with tacked heads, maybe a FT here and there. How many tunable rack mounted kits were there in the 38 Ludwig catalog ? The 41 catalog ? All you`ll find is tacked reso heads, with maybe some few exceptions here and there, hardly the norm.
It sounds like you are describing the "modern" drum set played by Gene Krupa with Benny Goodman from 1937! Take a look at the video. Modern style kits with tunable toms were not a rarity by then. Just look at any of the famous big bands of the era, including the photos below of the Glenn Miller band and the Tommy Dorsey band, both taken in 1941. There were no major drum set innovations in the '50s other than perhaps mylar heads. Even the use of ride cymbals was not new, starting in the mid-late 40's. There were always improvements being made to hardware of course, and shell sizes changed from period to period depending on use and the style of the period, but there was no radical changes to drum sets in the fifties. The most radical change in the '40s, other than introduction of the ride cymbal after the war was probably the use of the cymbal tilter! And by the way, lower end kits, including toms with tacked bottom heads, were still available and shown in catalogs in the 1950's. I started playing in the late '50s and saw a few of those kits around, but no one I ever knew played one.
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9J5Zt2Obko[/ame]
The Glenn Miller Band
[img]http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2815/10123504385_5e09efef60_c.jpg[/img]
glenn-miller-band-1941 by mwsilver, on Flickr
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra with Buddy Rich
[img]http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2874/10123872864_e44ee44b58_b.jpg[/img]
dorseyband1941 by mwsilver, on Flickr
Jo Jones with Count Basie in the early '40s
[img]http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3784/10124430796_37383e5726_o.jpg[/img]
6a00e008dca1f08834017eead95d17970d-500wi by mwsilver, on Flickr