Question:
Which Drum-kit brand it better?
dickbrain300
2009-11-02 23:25:06 UTC
Well I am planning to get a proper good drum-kit for the first time. I have been playing drums for 7-8 years now and I own this crappy little thing for $500. It is ok for practice, and I was just a beginner. But now things are getting more serious and I have been in 2 bands. Lol, I always used their electric one in practice and the problem always was that if we had a gig it would sound so much more awful then the practice because of my gay drum-kit!
My dream that I have always fantaised about is having a pearl. I have played on many at school and I liked all of them, they always seems to work the best. I like having a good snare drum and toms. Those drums have to sound good, I don't mind TOO much about the rest.
Then theres Yamaha, I have played on a few, all good too.
Then there was also Mapex, and I've never played on one but everyone says that they great.

Can't decide between the brands. Want people's opinions about them, which brand is the best?
Cheers
Four answers:
Chuck Norris
2009-11-03 09:24:16 UTC
I know that you will hate my answer but its truely about what sounds good to your ears. Mapex, Ludwig, Oc Drums, Pearl are all high end makers for kits so it would be to your advantage to go to guitar center or a similar place and get a feel for the drums. Notice the wood and how the rims are set. How the pedals feel if your going to keep those. And most importantly dont neglect the sound of your cymbals. Cymbals make up 80% of strong peaks reached in music
tahir
2016-10-16 13:34:55 UTC
Its no longer consistently the kit that creates the rock/metallic sound your searching for however the heads, tunings, and different information. of course you get a much bigger fatter sound with larger drum sizes. The kit your describing must be nice for a beginner and you will consistently upload issues directly to it. You on no account be attentive to in case you will become uninterested in drumming, so it wouldnt be a physically powerful theory to spend an incredible sort of money on something you need to no longer use.
?
2009-11-03 08:19:12 UTC
to answer your question, my personal favorite is tama. many great drummers have played on tama kits and they make a great sounding, durable, professional drumset. i play tama starclassic maples myself. i would sugest taking a look at the starclassic line. pearl are very nice, i had an export for my first set. yeah it was 500 bucks, but pearl is such a great brand even those sounded amazing! DW and gretsch also make very nice drums.



My advice, though, would be stick to what you know. you have heard a lot of pearl sets and know that you are a fan of the sound they make. so do that! dont sway towards something you arent used to only to be disappointed. pearl makes a great drum and you wont go wrong with those.
nearlyfond
2009-11-02 23:33:32 UTC
Ludwig

http://www.ludwig-drums.com/


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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