L
landwanr
New member
Ok so I know that a person cannot skimp on cymbals when trying to get a good recorded sound. I have already spent my dough there and on good mics. I am a funk guitar player/songwriter with a home studio (got to love that unlimited studio time). I used to arrive at rehearsal every day an hour early just to play the drums and I figured that I am just about good enough to start cutting my own drum tracks for my solo project. I would like to invest as small an amount on drums as possible but still retain a good drum sound. I have some experience recording drums but most of the kits I have worked with are top end drums. I was thinking of getting a sonor force 2001 kit in the smaller sizes for around 600 dollars. 10, 12, 14, 20" kick. It is mahogany (7ply I think) and I do like the fact that it is unwrapped. From listening to it in the store I know that it could sound sweet. Here is the question: Can I get a nice sound from an even less expensive kit like a rockland 5000 (9 ply mahogany, 12 lug toms, 16 lug kick drum, wrapped shells). I am a little concerned about the tunability of a 16" floor tom with 12 lugs. Potential problem? Here are my tastes for a studio kit. Tight kick sound, good cymbals, responsive, dry snare, and I do not like the toms to ring for days. I figure cheaper toms will sound a bit like good toms with moon gels or zero rings on them. I also realize that I will need to put better heads on a cheaper kit. The $300 savings would be significant to me at this financial low point in my life. Sorry for the length of my question and thanks for any and all help.