Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
>I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important was
>the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
>factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing?
Not at all - but the SOUND was....
Granted, you have to look at your drums every time you play them. The
audience for the most part will NOT be able to appreciate the finish
on them. On the other hand, EVERYone will be able to hear the drums.
Shouldn't that really be the priority?
Bermuda
On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 19:06:13 GMT, MapexDrummer
<silen...@my-deja.com> wrote:
#I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important
was
#the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
#factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing?
If
#a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be
apt
#to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
#desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to
get
#a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have
for
#2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
#'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really
desire.
#I guess that if I'm gonna spend about $1500 on drums alone, then they
#better be pretty and appealing to MY eye...what do you all think?
#Thanks,
#Jonathan
#
#
#Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
#Before you buy.
Brian K. Trepanier
http://victorian.fortunecity.com/daddio/227
a new definition of heavy
http://www.mp3.com/HRP
For me it was, because my set had to fit in with the overall appearance of the
group and the stage set. I ended up with the compnay I wanted, Premier, but
with a different line because they didn't have my colour available in the
Genista line, so I had to settle for the XPKs (not an unwise choice, now I
think they sound better than the Genistas, at least in my ears). I simply
didn't have the time to order a custom finish and wait 12 to 14 weeks longer, I
had a tour to go on
Anyway, to answer your question, I would prioritize kit brand/model over
colour. But, I would try to pick a colour that would have staying power
too. I would try to pick something that I like, and also, would be able
to sell to someone else later.
Ray Ayotte
ayo...@home.com
- - -
Anthony Giampa, Impe...@aol.com *remove SpamSux to email*
Rookie Drummer, Surf Music Lover, Jazz Newbie, Addicted Drum Tinkerer
Website: http://www.geocities.com/area51/dunes/6895/index.html
On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 19:41:40 GMT, ber...@weirdal.com (Bermuda
Schwartz) wrote:
#On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 19:06:13 GMT, MapexDrummer
#<silen...@my-deja.com> wrote:
#
#>I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important
was
#>the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
#>factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing?
#
#Not at all - but the SOUND was....
#
#Granted, you have to look at your drums every time you play them. The
#audience for the most part will NOT be able to appreciate the finish
#on them. On the other hand, EVERYone will be able to hear the drums.
#
#Shouldn't that really be the priority?
#
#Bermuda
My top three available choices for the Saturns were:
Transparent Amber
Transparent Diamond Blue
Antique Ivory
I guess I'm gonna really have to SEE these in person in order to make a
final decision.
Thanks for your time,
Jonathan
In article <38E264B1...@home.com>,
> > I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important
was
> > the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
> > factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing?
Rick Ball
Thanks,
Jonathan
In article <38E27BF0...@home.com>,
I've chosen to use the new "Middle Aged Crisis Red" for all my
percussion instruments.
--
Jim Nevermann
[usual disclaimers]
After examining what Mapex is offering I see what you mean.
I put a little chart together:
Here are the colours for Mapex's "maple substrate" lines, Orion Classic
Birdseye (OCB), Orion Classic Tranditional (OCT) Saturn Pro (SP)and ProM
(PM).
colour: models available
Antique Ivory OCB OCT SP -
Cherry Red* OCB OCT SP PM
Transparent Emerald Green** OCB OCT - PM
Transparent Amber OCB OCT SP -
Transparent Black OCB OCT SP -
Transparent Diamond Blue** OCB - SP -
Transparent Violet OCB OCT - -
Wax Emerald Green** OCB - SP -
Wax Natural ` OCB OCT SP -
Wax Cherry Red OCB OCT - -
Gold Ice (new) - OCT SP -
Benchmark Gold (new) - - SP -
Flat Black - - SP -
Transparent Midnight Black - - - PM
Transparent Ocean Blue - - - PM
Purple Ice - - - PM
Blue Ice - - - PM
Waln Ice - - - PM
Benchmark Black - - - PM
Benchmark Gold - - - PM
Benchmark Red - - - PM
There must be a logical explanation for the way Mapex has offered their
finishes.
* Cherry Red is the only colour offered in all 4 maple substrate models.
There is a total of 21 colours.
My guess is that the ProM Series must painted in a different factory.
** That doesn't explain the Tr Emerald Green and Tr Diamond Blue and Wax
Emerald Green not being offered in the 3 top lines.
What about the other anomalies?
I wonder if Mapex would volunteer the explanation rather than leave us
here to surmise.
Could it be that the new ProM Series finishes are less costly to
produce?
Are the Mapex people planning some changes at the high end?
I saw many of these new colours at NAMM. Some looked very nice. Some did
not work for me.
OK Mapex, 'splain.
Ray Ayotte
ayo...@home.com
In article <38E299E4...@home.com>,
As far as the orginal post goes, here's my take. With apologies to the drum
makers on the board, if you're looking at high end maple kits, and you can't
find the color you want, find another maple kit that comes in that color. I
would bet heavily that you would be hard pressed to hear the difference (studio
or live) between a Mapex drum say a Pearl drum, given similar shell
characteristsics, and same heads ans tuning.
I honestly don't think there's much that truly distinctive in maple these days.
Yes, you can change the sound with hoops, bearing edges, mounting hardware,
etc, but all of that can be done easily and cheaply aftermarket.
My opinion: if you want maple, find the kit for the best price in the finish
you want, and buy it.
------------------------------------------------------
-Dan Radin
Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University
FAQ: http://www.rmmpfaq.club24.co.uk/toc.htm
Moderator: ThePercussionist.com Forums
http://www.thepercussionist.com/community/forums
Ray!
you work way too hard, my friend! Id just like to take this opportunity
to say thanks for all the advice you have been good enough to give
myself and other rmmp'ers over the years. good luck with your adventures
in the future, and i hope to see your name on some new drums soon!
Now, to the question...
When i bought my first set of drums, i was 14 years old, and not very
talented or knowledgeable in the field of drums and percussion. sooooo,
i kinda looked at what set looked cool :o) and what set my dear old dad
could afford.
Now, ive been playing a few hours a day for a few years, and would
consider myself at least a intermediate player, and im looking forward
to the purchace of a new set, sometime next year (hopefully :o)
when i walk into music stores, sure, something good looking may grab my
eye, but i insist on playing anything, anything at all, even a pair of
sticks, before i take it out of the store. You MUST put sound quality
over looks, in my opinion. Like was mentioned earlier, close your eyes
and play. Hear the drums, and dont think about how cool the set will
look to your buddies. Care about how the set will sound to your buddies.
And, you can refinish later, if you really hate the choice you have
made, for whatever reason.
Good luck,
Trev
--
MMM \|/ www __^__
(o o) @ @ (O-O) /(o o)\
ooO-(_)-Ooo---oOO-(_)-OOo---oOO--(_)--OOo---oOO==(_)==OOo
Trevor Shultz
ICQ 31470016
Whats with all the rhetorical questions?
Thanks for your suggestions. I really like the Saturn Pro line (The only
other thing I'm holding out on, is to view the new Premier 'Artist'
series, both maple and birch, when it becomes public. They have a
Saphire color that I'd DIE to have on my kit). I like Mapex's I.T.S.
mounts, because I don't like a lot of the other so called 'rims' they
are just to big and cumbersome. The price is right where I want to be,
and they sound VERY good to my ear for what I'm gonna be using them for.
I also like the fact that not a lot of people play Mapex. These are just
a few of my reasons for worrying so much about the color and not jumping
ship quite yet.
Jonathan
In article <20000329201013...@ng-de1.aol.com>,
MapexDrummer <silen...@my-deja.com> wrote:
: I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important was
: the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
: factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing? If
: a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be apt
: to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
: desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to get
: a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have for
: 2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
: 'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really desire.
: I guess that if I'm gonna spend about $1500 on drums alone, then they
: better be pretty and appealing to MY eye...what do you all think?
: Thanks,
: Jonathan
: Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
: Before you buy.
--
_______________________________________________________________________________
A smart man learns from his mistakes,
A wise man learns from the mistakes of others
A great many truths are said in jest
_______________________________________________________________________________
> a good light technician at a gig can take care of all your drum
>colors, even mood them for particular songs. Perhaps buy your drums
>with such an idea in mind...
If that's the desire, then choose white. My touring kit is white, and
therefore has dozens of different looks during the course of one show!
Bermuda
--
George Lawrence
Drumset artist, teacher, author
Nashville TN
http://www.drumguru.com)
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
"If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of
his children a drum." Chinese proverb
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
Better yet, get White Satin Flame! Dozens of looks, but always with a
wicked-cool-psychedelic look! :-)
Very true. However, I left out one important point: Production line drums! Yes,
a handmade, super quality kit can be a fine treat, but I stand by my sentiments
on production drums, which is what the original point of the thread was.
Getting into a fine handmade instrument is a far different topic, and a far
different price range!
>If it were true, I would stop now and never make another drum.
>An Italian friend tried to explain musical instrument building to me one
>day. And this applies to art and music and most artistic endeavours.
>A finely made and great sounding drum is like an excellent plate of
>spaghetti.
>No one has an exclusive on the ingredients.
>An excellent plate of spaghetti is a rare treat.
>Ray Ayotte
------------------------------------------------------
-Dan Radin
Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University
FAQ: http://www.rmmpfaq.club24.co.uk/toc.htm
I had the idea a few years ago of having an all white kit and getting
sheets of gel material (like you use for stage lighting) and cutting
them to fit perfectly around each drum with a place cut out for each lug
and so forth, put a couple of little pieces of velcro on each end to
hold them together on the back side of the drum.
You could have a differant color kit every night, you could also mix
em up and have each drum a different color.
Rick Ball
Why not just use pin spots? Same effect for the most part and a helluva lot
less work...
RP
but sound and feel is still King!
JWS
MapexDrummer wrote:
> I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important was
> the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
> factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing? If
> a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be apt
> to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
> desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to get
> a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have for
> 2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
> 'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really desire.
> I guess that if I'm gonna spend about $1500 on drums alone, then they
> better be pretty and appealing to MY eye...what do you all think?
> Thanks,
> Jonathan
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
--
Jeffrey
---------------------------------------------------------
Jeffrey Speegle | System Support Engineer
Silicon Graphics | Huntsville, Alabama 35806
256-864-3461 | spe...@sgi.com
---------------------------------------------------------
http://reality.sgi.com/speegle_huntsville
---------------------------------------------------------
I t ' s a l l j u s t z e r o s a n d o n e s !
---------------------------------------------------------
>> You could have a differant color kit every night, you could also mix
>> em up and have each drum a different color.
>
>Why not just use pin spots? Same effect for the most part and a helluva lot
>less work...
Unless you're the LD.....
But I guess if your choosing between a Lexus, Infiniti and a Mercedes, you're
pretty safe picking whichever you can find in purple :-)
FastLundy
PaulLundquist
I don't think the effect would be the same at all, the colors would
get all washed out from the other lights. but with the gel up against
the white shell they wouldn't. To me a white set of drums with colored
lights on them looks like that, a white set of drums with colored lights
shining on them.
Once you had one made for each drum it would be a breeze to make
others using the first as templates.
Rick Ball
----------
In article <8bu8e5$8hm$1...@nnrp1.deja.com>, MapexDrummer
-MIKE-
--
http://mikedrums.com
mi...@mikedrums.com or hit 'reply'
-MIKE-
--
http://mikedrums.com
mi...@mikedrums.com or hit 'reply'
> Color is important to me, but not the deciding factor.
> As most of you know, I have the SONOR Designer kit from hell
> on order. ;-) I wanted the kit in the same clear dark purple
> lacquer as they used on the HiLite series, and even offered SONOR
> an extra $2K to spray them in that finish....they declined my offer.
> So, I went with my 2nd choice, Stain Green, which is a very nice
> finish, just not exactly what I wanted. There are several companies
> that make purple stained drums, Spawn, Mapex, Slingerland, DW, etc...
> But! I had my heart set of SONOR Designers' and that was what I
> was going to purchase! If they had only offered Designers in one finish
> I would have still purchased them. The look of an instrument is important,
>
> but sound and feel is still King!
>
>
> JWS
>
>
>
> MapexDrummer wrote:
>
>> I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important was
>> the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
>> factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing? If
>> a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be apt
>> to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
>> desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to get
>> a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have for
>> 2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
>> 'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really desire.
>> I guess that if I'm gonna spend about $1500 on drums alone, then they
>> better be pretty and appealing to MY eye...what do you all think?
>> Thanks,
>> Jonathan
>>
>> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
>> Before you buy.
>
Hey, he works for YOU! Remember that. And you work for AL! Remember
*that,* too. (:oD
Anyway,
The auto body/custom guitar guy who is clear-coating my current snare
project, has this totally killer paint from BASF. It's a car paint , but he
has used it on some guitars and I think it would be the ultimate drum stage
finish.
The paint has metal flakes of all different colors in it. It changes color
at different angles. On a guitar, you have to turn and bend to see the
different colors. But a drum is round, so the effect is awesome. You see
this spectrum of color bending around the drum. It really is incredible.
Wri...@webtv.net wrote:
>
> >Why not just use pin spots? Same effect for the
> >most part and a helluva lot less work...
>
>
> If that's the desire, then choose white. My touring kit is white, and
> therefore has dozens of different looks during the course of one show!
>
> Bermuda
Funny, every time Ray thinks of an Ayotte kit, he see's red.
Oooooo !
Rick Ball
-MIKE-
Yeah, with a spoon !
Rick Ball
JWS
-MIKE- wrote:
> Holy cow, Jeff! There are custom auto-body guys who would do your whole kit
> for $2K and it would look killer!
>
> -MIKE-
>
> --
> http://mikedrums.com
> mi...@mikedrums.com or hit 'reply'
>
> >> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> >> Before you buy.
> >
: Better yet, get White Satin Flame! Dozens of looks, but always with a
: wicked-cool-psychedelic look! :-)
There is a local guy who has a white kit. I mean like *totally* white!
All the lugs, rims, hardware, etc. is power-coated white. Awesome
look! I wonder about powdercoated rims holding up, but I guess people
do this with decent results.
--
SPAM-GUARD! Remove "user.", if present, from address to email me.
Steve
Brian <b_...@hot.mail.com> wrote in message
news:38e25d85...@news.paralynx.com...
> a good light technician at a gig can take care of all your drum
> colors, even mood them for particular songs. Perhaps buy your drums
> with such an idea in mind...
>
> On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 19:06:13 GMT, MapexDrummer
> <silen...@my-deja.com> wrote:
>
> #I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important
> was
> #the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
> #factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing?
> If
> #a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be
> apt
> #to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
> #desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to
> get
> #a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have
> for
> #2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
> #'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really
> desire.
> #I guess that if I'm gonna spend about $1500 on drums alone, then they
> #better be pretty and appealing to MY eye...what do you all think?
> #Thanks,
> #Jonathan
> #
> #
> #Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> #Before you buy.
>
>
> Brian K. Trepanier
> http://victorian.fortunecity.com/daddio/227
> a new definition of heavy
> http://www.mp3.com/HRP
>
>
I've got 2 black powder coated 1.6mm rims on this snare I have, and they hold
up pretty good. It's only scratched on the hoop near where the tuning key have
scraped against the rim... plus underneath the metal washers under the tuning
part of the rod.
- - -
Anthony Giampa, Impe...@aol.com *remove SpamSux to email*
Rookie Drummer, Surf Music Lover, Jazz Newbie, Addicted Drum Tinkerer
Website: http://www.geocities.com/area51/dunes/6895/index.html
>>
>> Unless you're the LD.....
>
>Hey, he works for YOU! Remember that.
Exactly... what do *I* care if he works harder??
Hey Ray-
Not to pat myself on the back, but I make awesome spaghetti! I mean it's
WONDERFUL!
So how about you come to Missouri, and I make you some pasta, and then you can
build me some drums from your as-yet-to-be-determined new drum co. :)
Justin Bailey
- - - - - - - - - - - -
"The road of good intentions is paved with Hell." - Spencer Ante
: All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion instruments,
: and clothing are black or gray. This creates a bleak industrial
: landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
: environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
: the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
: own creators, I play song compositions that assert indigenous
: liberation.
But but but...
You're closing yourself off to the wonderful world of virtual analogue dandies
from companies like Access or Waldorf or Novation. I know that the bright
colors of these companies' gear (reds, oranges, blues, etc.) may take away
from the atmosphere of live performance or studio meditations, but cover them
up with black silk and sequence on the computer.
Still, mood is important. Sitting in a room full of flashing strobelights &
humming blacklights inspire some wild things sometimes... though I usually
just end up throwing up.
-djgyn
np: Aphex Twin - "Pulsewidth"
--
=======
"Transmissions From Scumsburg" << http://www.scumsburg.web.com >>
-(On hiatus for a semester... Thanks for the joys!)-
"GASR" << http://www.angelfire.com/ma2/gasr >>
-(Boston electro artists... site update coming soon!)-
"The answer to any question will be revealed when you stop asking
questions and wipe from your mind the concept of question."
- william seward burroughs -
You sound like a man with many irons in the fire! I only knew of you in
the past as a AIM activist. Never knew about the music thing.
Jim Bright Thunder
Todd Clark wrote:
> In article <38E27BF0...@home.com>,
> Ray Ayotte <ayo...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > Imagine how much simpler life would be for Pearl (e.g.) if,
> > like Ford, they could say "you can have any colour you want
> > as long as it's black".
> >
> All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion instruments,
> and clothing are black or gray. This creates a bleak industrial
> landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
> environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
> the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
> own creators, I play song compositions that assert indigenous
> liberation.
> >
Ten years ago, when I first got my Sonorlites in yellow lacquer, I thought
the color would be gross. But I get SO MANY compliments on them. And now I
see so many companies doing the same color. I wouldn't change them.
Ray,
DON'T go to MO, especially Springfield! :-)
--
Robert Schuh
"The Most Trolled Man On The Internet!"
Stevie, Trane, Jaco, Jimi and Bird are GODS!
Donate your organs. Save a life.
Proud Endorser of Spaun Drums
Todd Clark wrote:
> landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
> environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
> the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
guy, please tell me you're kidding.
Todd Clark wrote:
> All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion instruments,
> and clothing are black or gray. This creates a bleak industrial
> landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
> environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
> the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
> own creators, I play song compositions that assert indigenous
> liberation.
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
--
George Lawrence
Drumset artist, teacher, author
Nashville TN
http://www.drumguru.com)
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
"If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of
his children a drum." Chinese proverb
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
Moderator: ThePercussionist.com Forums
http://www.thepercussionist.com/community/forums
Thanks for keeping vaudeville alive, Ray. :-)
Do you know coming later in the year there'll be a new Mel Gibson
produced biopic for TV of the 3 Stooges? Nyuk, Nyuk, Nyuk!
Jay
May all your quarter note triplets start & end on 2 or 4.
This is deep stuff Todd, lighten up and try running through a field of
daisys every now and then!
Peace,
JaKe
Seattle
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <38E27BF0...@home.com>,
> Ray Ayotte <ayo...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > Imagine how much simpler life would be for Pearl (e.g.) if,
> > like Ford, they could say "you can have any colour you want
> > as long as it's black".
> >
> All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion instruments,
> and clothing are black or gray. This creates a bleak industrial
> landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
> environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
> the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
> own creators, I play song compositions that assert indigenous
> liberation.
> >
> Within this given motif, I still demand the best sound quality possible
> from my instruments. Fortunately, finding high-end electronic
> music/noise equipment in some shade of black is usually not all that
> difficult.
> >
> --
ynapse (the artist formerly
known as flesh) wrote in
message
<38E50648...@midsouth.rr
.com>...
>
>
>Todd Clark wrote:
>
>> landscape that
simultaneously symbolizes and
mourns both the
>> environmental and cultural
destruction of the Americas.
While turning
>> the sound of the
adversarial
military-industrial complex
back on its
>
> I've got a question for you drum kit owners out there. How important was
> the selection of the color of your drums? I mean....was drum color a
> factor in your decision in what drum company you ended up choosing? If
> a drum company didn't have a drum color that you liked, would you be apt
> to change your mind and go to another company to get the color you
> desired? This is what I'm battling with right now. I REALLY want to get
> a set of Mapex Saturn Pro's but NONE of the color options they have for
> 2000 are overly appealing to me. I mean....I feel like I would be
> 'settling' for a color rather than getting a color that I really desire.
...Get a neutral color like, black. And then make them sound good.
-doug
> just noticed that you are cross posting. Consider yourself cited.
Cross posting is both a usenet norm (for more than a decade)
and sanctioned by said community. That said, cited for what??
You cannot disallow cross posting nor can you site anyone for
doing so.
Recommended reading: "Don't sweat the Small Stuff"
-Mark
just noticed that you are cross posting. Consider yourself cited.
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <38E27BF0...@home.com>,
> Ray Ayotte <ayo...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > Imagine how much simpler life would be for Pearl (e.g.) if,
> > like Ford, they could say "you can have any colour you want
> > as long as it's black".
> >
> All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion instruments,
> and clothing are black or gray. This creates a bleak industrial
> landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and mourns both the
> environmental and cultural destruction of the Americas. While turning
> the sound of the adversarial military-industrial complex back on its
> own creators, I play song compositions that assert indigenous
> liberation.
> >
> Within this given motif, I still demand the best sound quality possible
> from my instruments. Fortunately, finding high-end electronic
> music/noise equipment in some shade of black is usually not all that
> difficult.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
--
On Thu, 30 Mar 2000 00:05:08 GMT, Ray Ayotte <ayo...@home.com> wrote:
>In my experience I found that less drummers disliked red than any other
>colour.
>Ray Ayotte
>ayo...@home.com
>Persons who like industrial acts such as Skinny
>Puppy, Ministry, and Nine Inch Nails, on one
>hand, and persons who like avant-garde acts
>such as Sun Ra, Philip Glass, and Frank
>Zappa, on the other. Then there are the
>persons who are interested in the application of
>Native American compositional theories to
>modern electronic instrumentation and the
>persons who are interested in seeing the
>Morrisonian performance poetry aspects taken
>to a more complex extreme than Jim was
>permitted to do in his short life. Then we get to
>the persons who come to hear the political and
>cultural message
Do you play to both of them at the same time ?
Rick Ball
On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 20:10:05 GMT, Ray Ayotte <ayo...@home.com> wrote:
>Mapex Saturn Pro is available in 10 colours of Lacquer Finishes.
>Is there a colour that comes close to what you want? Or this there a
>colour you have in mind that is not offered? Is there a colour on
>another brand of kit you would prefer?
>Here are the colours offered:
>Antique Ivory
>Cherry Red
drumguru wrote:
> Todd Clark wrote:
> >
> > In article <38E4E9DF...@home.com>,
> > drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > I take it you don't do country sessions?
> > >
> > You got that right. Cowboys and red necks are not exactly my favorite
> > people.
>
> You are showing your ignorance here. Most musicians who play on country
> music recording sessions are city dwellers like yourself and are pretty
> sophisticated, well rounded musicians who have never been near a cow or
> done a day's work in the sun. :-& (tongue in cheek smiley face).
>
> Is Dieter one of your audience?
drumguru wrote in message <38E80FEC...@home.com>...
> In article <38E4E9DF...@home.com>,
> drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > I take it you don't do country sessions?
> >
> You got that right. Cowboys and red necks are not exactly my favorite
> people.
> >
> to hear the political and cultural message...
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
Can we all say "leftist vegetarian freak?"
--
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <38E4E9DF...@home.com>,
> drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > I take it you don't do country sessions?
> >
> You got that right. Cowboys and red necks are not exactly my favorite
> people.
You are showing your ignorance here. Most musicians who play on country
music recording sessions are city dwellers like yourself and are pretty
sophisticated, well rounded musicians who have never been near a cow or
done a day's work in the sun. :-& (tongue in cheek smiley face).
Is Dieter one of your audience?
drumguru wrote:
>
> Todd Clark wrote:
> >
> > In article <38E4E9DF...@home.com>,
> > drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > I take it you don't do country sessions?
> > >
> > You got that right. Cowboys and red necks are not exactly my favorite
> > people.
>
> You are showing your ignorance here. Most musicians who play on country
> music recording sessions are city dwellers like yourself and are pretty
> sophisticated, well rounded musicians who have never been near a cow or
> done a day's work in the sun. :-& (tongue in cheek smiley face).
>
> Is Dieter one of your audience?
>
> George Lawrence
> Drumset artist, teacher, author
> Nashville TN
>
> http://www.drumguru.com)
> _________________________________________________
> лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+злд
> ппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппп
> "If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of
> his children a drum." Chinese proverb
> _________________________________________________
> лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+злд
> ппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппп
> Moderator: ThePercussionist.com Forums
> http://www.thepercussionist.com/community/forums
--
George Lawrence
Drumset artist, teacher, author
Nashville TN
http://www.drumguru.com)
_________________________________________________
лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+злд
ппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппп
"If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of
his children a drum." Chinese proverb
_________________________________________________
лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+лд+елд+злд+елд+злд+елд+злд
ппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппппп
Fortunately, other folks just play music...
Phhhttttt!
I wouldn't know. I'm usually looking at the women, not the men! :-)
Carl Bishop wrote:
>
> Yeah George,
> Country musicians aren't the problem...it's the country AUDIENCE that's my
> problem. Everytime I see a goon in a cowbow hat and I KNOW he has never
> been within 100 yards of a cow a day in his life, it just screams loser to
> me...much as anyone who dresses like they are from the ghetto when they live
> in the burbs...yeah it's just their style and all that but they look like
> goons. How practical is a bigass belt buckle, tight ass jeans, a huge
> stupid looking hat, and big ass boots? If you live on a farm, it's very
> practical, but the people who dress like this nowadays are just suburban
> jerk-offs who think the south's gonna do it again. I live in Memphis so I
> get a real nice mix of both of the above-mentioned types of choads. Luckily
> there's pretty cool blues and jazz crowds to offset that. Anyway, I'm off.
>
> drumguru wrote in message <38E80FEC...@home.com>...
> >
> >
drumguru wrote in message <38E8270D...@home.com>...
Carl Bishop wrote:
> Yeah George,
> Country musicians aren't the problem...it's the country AUDIENCE that's my
> problem. Everytime I see a goon in a cowbow hat and I KNOW he has never
> been within 100 yards of a cow a day in his life, it just screams loser to
> me...much as anyone who dresses like they are from the ghetto when they live
> in the burbs...yeah it's just their style and all that but they look like
> goons. How practical is a bigass belt buckle, tight ass jeans, a huge
> stupid looking hat, and big ass boots? If you live on a farm, it's very
> practical, but the people who dress like this nowadays are just suburban
> jerk-offs who think the south's gonna do it again. I live in Memphis so I
> get a real nice mix of both of the above-mentioned types of choads. Luckily
> there's pretty cool blues and jazz crowds to offset that. Anyway, I'm off.
>
It IS kinda interesting how people gravitate towards a certain social group and
adopt the "uniform" of that group. The cowboy look is one of the funnier ones
to me. Lots of guys who wouldn't know which end of the cow to milk dress up
like Roy Rogers and hit the town! And then you have the "biker" type.
Lots of people who chose the biker lifestyle do so because it's representative
of who they are as people. I don't know WHY people who ride Harleys like to
dress in black leather and look rough and grubby but more power to them. The
thing that gets me is when that look suddenly became chic among the "in" crowd
you began to see yuppies with tons of disposable cash buying Harleys and riding
on weekends. And they had to have the "uniform" to go with it. Too funny.
Another one that kills me is the college "frat boy" look. Duck heads with
the boxers showing, penny loafers, frat t-shirt, and a Solo cup full of beer
permanently attached to the hand. My experience is mainly in southern
colleges but I can say the best way to hide in Atlanta is to dress like this.
No one could EVER find you among the teeming millions of them! And don't even
get me started about the musician's uniform!!....
Pat
I'm sorry, man, but just your use of the very dated term "country and
western" shows how unfamiliar you are with the genre.
The musicians don't write the stuff, they just play it.
We're off topic here anyway.
"enemy's language"?
GL
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <38E80FEC...@home.com>,
> drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > You are showing your ignorance here. Most musicians who play on
> > country music recording sessions are city dwellers like yourself...
> >
> Actually, I currently live in a very rural area near the West Virginia
> border, although I have previously resided in Pittsburgh, Cleveland,
> New York, and San Francisco. Playing the music that my five (soon to be
> six) progeny and I do with our family band is really shocking around
> here.
> >
> > ... and are pretty sophisticated, well rounded musicians who have
> > never been near a cow or done a day's work in the sun.
> >
> I fully understand this since one of my former managers was a Nashville
> musician for most of the 1980's. But despite their disciplined talent
> as professional players, the vast majority of the musical byproduct
> that country and western musicians produce still greatly contributes to
> the maintenance of the colonial cowboy mentality that continues to
> oppress Native Americans.
> >
> I will have to admit to you that there have also been some country
> artists such as Johnny Cash, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Michael Martin Murphy,
> Floyd Red Crow Westerman, and Buddy Redbow who have also "reinvented
> the enemy's language" and turned the tables by recording country songs
> with radical native rights lyrics. But they are clearly the exception
> rather than the rule.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
--
George Lawrence
Drumset artist, teacher, author
Nashville TN
http://www.drumguru.com)
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
"If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of
his children a drum." Chinese proverb
_________________________________________________
«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤+¥«¤+§«¤
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
Pat,
The Gen Xers kill me with this too. The thing that is VERY amusing too are the ones
who think that they are musicians and they think the "look" somehow helps them.
Man, I have been playing music that is so much more out than ANYTHING that they
could even fathom, but I don't have to look like a throbbing member everywhere I
go! :-)
> In article <38E8395D...@yahoo.com>,
> Robert Schuh <rsc...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > Can we all say "leftist...
> >
> The limited Eurocentric concepts of "left" and "right" do not apply to
> traditional Native American politics.
> >
> > vegetarian...
> >
> Wrong again. My family still eats the pre-contact North American wild
> game animals including deer, bison, fish, clams, turkey, bear, duck,
> and turtle.
> >
> > freak?"
> >
> Go look in your own mirror.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
It is nice to see that you eat meat, but the fact that you think that your
far left leanings don't mean the same thing simply because you an American
Indian is ludicrous. As long as your blood flows red, you are the same.
Trying to be a separatist is no less offensive than the KKK. You have to
realize that no matter how hard you try to think of yourself as something
different, the more you are just like everyone else. Time to butch up.
That's true, American politics consist of right-wing (democrat) and
ultra-right-wing (republican), but we've heard that one before...
In that case you're missing out on the currently best synthesizers built.
(Access, NordLead, Waldorf). Commercial fascism is a tad unappropriate these
days, especially from a native American.
So you'd buy a second rate piece of crap just because it wasn't made in Europe
then, eh? I could use the same excuse and say I'll never touch a set of Sonors,
cause they're made in Germany, and the Germans killed my great-grandparents in
Auschwitz.
I'm sorry, but for me, and most people it's not where the gear comes from, it's
how good the quality is, and when it comes to mass-produced goods, the Americas
take the global back seat, eclipsed even by the Czech Republic...
JaKe
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <20000403115003...@ng-cd1.news.cs.com>,
> krista...@cs.com (Kristallin01) wrote in response to my original
> comment:
> >
> > > I only buy American-made gear anyway, so none of the above
> > > companies are relevant.
> >
> > In that case you're missing out on the currently best
> > synthesizers built. (Access, NordLead, Waldorf).
> > Commercial fascism is a tad unappropriate these days,
> > especially from a native American.
> >
> I use the native conceptual definition of America, which includes all
> of North, Central, and South America, and nearby islands, not just what
> is today considered the United States by the conquering governments
> according to the little broken lines on their colonial maps. Although
> this system of geographical consumerism allows for the purchasing
> support of worthwhile products from throughout the western hemisphere,
> it still precludes my contributing to the further importation of
> Eurocentric goods whose devastating effects we have already witnessed
> for over five centuries.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> >
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <38E8B3CF...@home.com>,
> drumguru <drum...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > I'm sorry, man, but just your use of the very dated term "country
> > and western" shows how unfamiliar you are with the genre.
> >
> Fair enough. I probably am.
> >
> > The musicians don't write the stuff, they just play it.
> >
> And all those soldiers who bayonetted Indian babies were "just
> following orders", too, I suppose?
> >
> Both musically and philosophically speaking, if they don't believe in
> what they're playing, then they shouldn't be playing it.
> >
> > We're off topic here anyway.
> >
> > "enemy's language"?
> >
> I was quoting the title of an anthology of liberation writings by
> Native American women that was edited by Creek saxophonist and poet Joy
> Harjo.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Cultural Historian
> Somewhere Along The Monongahela River
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> >
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
--
Devastating.
BP
On Mon, 3 Apr 2000, Todd Clark wrote:
> Eurocentric goods whose devastating effects we have already witnessed
> for over five centuries.
> >
> --
> Todd Tamanend Clark
> Poet/Composer/Multi-Instrumentalist/Activist
> Pennsylvania American Indian Movement
> http://www.annihilist.com/cgi-bin/profiles.cgi?step=view_all
> http://www.guitargeek.com/layouts/display.php3?id=236
> >
> "Smash the control images; smash the control machine!"
> ---- William S. Burroughs
>
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Carnegie Mellon University, Class of 2000
Information and Decision Systems and
Human Computer Interaction
bp...@andrew.cmu.edu http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/bp33/
Tartan Ice Hockey Kiltie Drumline CMU Pipes and Drums
I'm stocking up on black stuff, Pat. (:-D
-MIKE-
--
mi...@mikedrums.com or just hit "reply"
http://mikedrums.com
Res Ipse Loquitor, let the good times roll.
John
* Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
Todd Clark wrote:
>
> In article <uLUF4.24248$U4.1...@news1.rdc1.az.home.com>,
> John or Jenn <las...@home.com> wrote:
> >
> > > Todd Clark writes:
> > >
> > > All of my synthesizers, guitars, amplifiers, percussion
> > > instruments, and clothing are black or gray. This creates a
> > > bleak industrial landscape that simultaneously symbolizes and
> > > mourns both the environmental and cultural destruction of the
> > > Americas. While turning the sound of the adversarial military-
> > > industrial complex back on its own creators, I play song
> > > compositions that assert indigenous liberation.
> >
> > Fortunately, other folks just play music...
> >
> Go tell it to Rage Against The Machine, Public Enemy, Consolidated,
> Patti Smith, The Fugs, MC5, Bob Dylan, Robbie Robertson, Neil Young,
> Buffy Sainte-Marie, Gil-Scott Heron, Woody Guthrie, Peter LaFarge, Joni
> Mitchell, John Lennon, Jefferson Airplane, Frank Zappa, Russell Means,
> or any of the hundreds of other activist songwriters.
> >
So you would do without a product that could potentially enrich your
life/music/whatever based on your racial bias... are you familiar with the term
"Deutsche wehrt Euch, kauft nicht bei Juden" (Germans, defend yourseves, don't
buy from Jews)? Your ideals may be noble, your execution is no different than
that of the national-socialist/fachist movements of the early 20th century.
>>
>> I could use the same excuse and say I'll never touch a set
>> of Sonors, cause they're made in Germany, and the Germans
>> killed my great-grandparents in Auschwitz.
>>
>That's up to you to determine the appropriate choices for your own
>social conscience.
Indeed it is, and although my relatives were killed in Auschwitz, most Jewish
people have moved on. As the wise men in every race said, there comes a time to
forgive, not forget, but forgive. Whatever happened back then was atrocious,
but that was well over 100 years ago, and frankly, 300 years of suffering can't
hold a candle to 2000 years of persecution
As you would have noticed if you had thoroughly read my post I was not talking
about drum manufacturers, most of whom you stated aren't mass producers and
don't have the capacity for it (I wouldn't call the production of 1-2000
guitars a year mass production), but in a general sense of MASS produced
articles. Most American-made household appliances don't make it onto the
European market because they can't pass safety standards and are poorly
manufactured. My point is, you'd rather use an inferior product in your
household just because it's American made. I've heard rednecks, the Aryan
Nation and the KKK use the same argument.
...and I just moved here, too... I guess that makes me a savage European
neo-conquerer then... I claim this land for the crown of England, oops, nope,
we won't make that mistake again!