Hey Tide,
Most make the mistake of putting the microphone entirely too close to the a drum while recording. The problem with this is that it is like putting your ear right next to the drum. Try doing this sometime. You will then get a feel for what the microphone is going through.
Pulling the mics back to anywhere from 6-8" from the drum will produce more natural sounding recordings. You will definately get more room sound as well as more of the overall sound of the drum.
I can never stress enough the tuning of the drum. Most drummers do not know how to tune a drum. Some of the local "experts" don't know how to tune drums. I can't counnt the number of drummers I have worked with who never touch their bottom heads, and who will just turn one lug on the top.
A few tips on tuning.
1 - Both heads should be almost the same exact pitch. To get more resonance, bring the bottom heads pitch down a bit. For less resonance, tune it up a bit. When I say a bit, I mean just a bit.
2 - While tuning, place your finger very lightly on the center of the head and then use a stick to tap about 1-2" from the rim at all the lugs. Tune so that all the spots by a lug are the same pitch.
3 - Thicker heads will have less resonance that you can actually hear. Their weight keeps the shell from doing it's job. Clear batter heads on top and bottom on toms usually give the best resonance. On a snare, clear batter on bottom, and coated batter on top.
Good luck.
Ed Rei
Echo Star Studio
www.echostarstudio.com
P.S. I have quite a few songs available for download on my site. In particular, if you want to hear the result of above tuning techniques, download something by The Heavy Brothers, or Love Lode (any of them except Changes and Fear as I did not record the drums on those two) Go to
www.echostarstudio.com/Download.html and click on the speaker next to the song that you want to download.