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the drumming style and setup of one of the most underrated non-living legends

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Ive brought it up before but this time I wanted to start a thread about how Dennis Wilson played and how his drums were set up/ first of all one of the only drummers that was allegedly left handed that played a right handed setup "open-handed", AND what was the deal with his cymbals? In the early years he had the hats and one very large cymbal by it- was it just a ride or a crash/ride and same with later on in the 70s and til his demise- there were TWO cymbals, was one a crash, one a ride or were they both crash/rides? They were both set up high rather than the crash higher than the ride...

Posted on 11 years ago
#1
Posts: 2010 Threads: 19
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The use of just one or two relatively large cymbals as both a crash and a ride was pretty common at that time. Look at most of the jazz guys from back then and you'll usually see a pair of 20" cymbals or a 20 and a 22 in use both for riding time and crashing.

Mel Taylor of the Ventures had just one cymbal (looks to be a 20") that he used for both so maybe Dennis was just followed the trend.

A 20" A. Zildjian Medium Ride in the 1800-2200 gram range will usually work quite nicely as a single "crash/ride" for this sort of a setup.

Posted on 11 years ago
#2
Posts: 2753 Threads: 132
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I'm profoundly left handed. I set up my first drums lefty style. I was uncomfortable with that configuration. After a few weeks, I switched over to playing with lefty feet and righty hands. That lasted for the one gig in the picture. Then, I tried a typical righty configuration. I gravitated toward not playing cross-handed on hihats. I also set up mirror image ride and crash cymbals on both sides of the drums. If my right hand got tired, I'd switch to lefty ride. I had no idea what open-handed playing was until I did it for many years. I stil play with righty feet and either lefty or right hands. I call myself the slowest bass drum foot in the West. I use a very similar set up to Dennis for the drums, but more cymbals than he used.

No matter how far you push the envelope, it is still stationery.
Posted on 11 years ago
#3
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