paganprogress said:
Really what it boils down is this--A nice expensive drum out of tune will not sound as good as a cheap drum in tune with itself.
This is absolutely correct - you can take any cheap set - put some good heads on them - with either mufflers or moon-gels and make them sound great.
You'll have to get new heads later anyway.
Actually - you should be able to tune bass and toms pretty well even with stock heads - but I always change the snare heads - it's worth the added investment.
It's important he learns how to tune drums not just hit them. Drums need to be in tune with themselvs.
This too is very true........ if the drums don't sound good - he isn't going to be anything but frustrated - if he can't make sounds that sound good to him he'll lose interest pretty quick.
Hardware is important but cheap hardware will work for now.
True.....
Don't buy the crappy cymbals though. When I started I had a whole host of frisbees. When I got my first real cymbal I was amazed. A good cymbal is musical,a frisbe is, well... a frisbee.
This is the same as tuning the drums........ if it sounds like crap he won't keep interested.
My nephew has been taking lessons for a year now - and his mother has been going crazy trying to get him to practice.
I told her to bring him to the house for an 8 hour session with me - and I let him know he was going to work his butt off.
The 1st thing I did when he showed up was tune his drums (and taught him how to in the process) dropped some moon-gels on them - and then threw away his cymbals and gave him some good Zildjian cymbals - older 60's and 70's brass........ just a 14" crash - 12" high hats and an 18" crash ride with a nice bell.
When he heard how his kit sounded when it was done (and after spending 8 hours getting used to some rudimentary beats on a full set) he lit up like a christmas tree.
His mom doesn't have to bug him to practice - he looks forward to it - and he opened a set for me at the fall festival we do in September - and although he has a way to go (he's only 11) he was rock solid - found the groove and kept it.
Hearing yourself sound good makes a world of difference.
If you can't buy good brass brand new out of the store - then look around for used brass..... you can get some pretty good deals......
Good luck.
Rod
Goos luck