R
Rickson Gracie
New member
Seriously, I was listening to "no quarter" and am amazed at the drum sound.
Whats the secret?
Whats the secret?
Farview said:First, you need a shovel and an air freshener...
That was only one of the albums. Most of them he was using a maple kit. It just goes to prove that the equipment and recording technique had very little to do with it.drummerdude666 said:you get nice big power toms made from acyralite then but remo power dots on adn tune HIGH! even tune teh kick HIGH. thats all you need. then with some good mics and your sorted.
again the drum tech is jeff ocheltree.
Farview said:That was only one of the albums. Most of them he was using a maple kit. It just goes to prove that the equipment and recording technique had very little to do with it.
The sound that everyone knows and loves doesn't have anything to do with the kit. 2 of the songs that were mentioned were No Quarter and When the Leavey Breaks. They were not played on the same kit, in the same place, or recorded the same way. They don't sound all that much alike (recording wise). But they both sound like him.drummerdude666 said:yes sorry thats true, thats the kit most people know as the bonham sound. thats why i used that.
but yeh that was only one. (although im pretty sure the sound everyone knows and loves is gained by using that kit)
Farview said:If you put a boombox in front of John Bonham in a basement it would sound like John Bonham. It would not sound like the 'No Quarter' but neither does 'When the Leavey Breaks'.
Against modern recordings, Zepplin albums sound a little screechy ( I haven't heard the remasters) and the drums are boxy sounding. The feel is what everyone wants. The sound is really not that good and would not work on anything that doesn't sound exactly like Zepplin.