Hello guys, I'm new here. I'm looking for tips on head selection, tuning, and finding a matching 1970-71' Ludwig Black bowling ball swirl/oyster 24X14, or 26X14 bass drum.
Where to begin...
About 20 years ago, my dad finally gave me his beloved 1970-71, 4 piece ludwig kit:
https://ibin.co/w800/3IVuqsT394E8.jpg
I restored them myself over a few months, had the bearing edges professionally re-cut like the original bearing edges - double 45's.
I LOVE this kit, nothing plays or sounds quite like them, but I've always been a little unhappy about the bass drum feel and tone. Obviously 3 ply maple and poplar will project differently than a 6 ply all maple shell, but, I'm always trying to fight with the tuning, tension on the front and batter head, in order to replicate the FEEL of the newer drums on the market.
Example: the newer 22X18 sized drums, when they're good quality, like maple or kapur etc, have a beefier dense FEEL. It feels like there's a column of air resistance when the beater hits the batter head.
The feel is a BEEFY focused BOOF, where as my ludwig 14X22 kick has this kind of "BUMP" feel. It's always about trying to tune just above dead, but not quite dead, to try and get a feel that resembles the feel on the newer drums of today. When I do get close enough to the that feel, I notice that it's harder to play the beater off the head - the rebound isn't there because the heads are tuned so low in order to get that low fundamental note and BOOF feel.
In order to get a similar feel on my Ludwig like that of the newer kick drums, it's as if I have to tune the heads just above wrinkle, and usually use muffled batter heads, like the Remo Powersonic, and an Aquarian regulator.
I've tried tuning the drum the same way, but with a front head and no hole etc. I didn't like it, too much boing from the batter head, and it lost that muffled focused BOOF.
Does what I'm feeling on the newer, deeper bass drums have more to do with bearing edges, or that extra 4 inch depth? I almost sense that if I could get the bass drums bearing edges re-cut again, to a narrower round-over edge, I'd be able to get a more even feel across the head, with a soft spongy feel in the middle - the jiggle, but with even lug tuning at every lug.
SEGUE...
Have any of you noticed, that on some of the newer kits:
Mapex Saturn kits,
DW Design Series etc
— especially the mapex Saturn kit. It felt like I had to tune the bass drum heads with more tension, to get a good feel. Yet on some other drum brands, you have to tune with less tension.
No matter how I tuned the toms on the Saturn kit, they always felt like... DUM DUM, but they didnt' have the focussed WHOOOM or warmth like my ludwigs. They had all the DUM DUM, but no air, or WHOOF to them. And yet, when I finally did get the bass drum feel right, it was amazing. But as if the toms didn't belong with the kit.
Anyhow, I used that little segue to help give this some reference.
At times, it feels like the head tension on my bass drums isn't even, despite me knowing how to tune. They're fickle, and I know them well, but the bass drum lacks that focus and depth that the newer drums have. And I'm not quite sure why?
Here's a great example, and I've actually played this kit: [ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_268TE7gxHM"]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_268TE7gxHM[/ame]
Hear the impact of the beater on the head? LOTS of impact, but, there's a warmth or breath that's missing. It sounds like someone bashing the butt end of their fist against a big cardboard box. I love the impact, but it lacks a round-ness I suppose. It sounds kind of.. 1 dimensional? If that makes any sense.
ADDITION:
I just found this out yesterday by accident: http://remo.com/products/product/ambassador-coated-classic-fit/
This is sort of what I meant by the head tension issue I've always had with these older ludwigs. It's as if the head doesn't seat as evenly, even though I've had the bearing edges re-cut. And they don't offer this new "Classic Fit" in 22, 24, or 26 inch bass head sizes.
I wonder if having them cut like this would help - IF they can be cut this way after the fact: