
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
Right. The high end shells can be ordered to have their own "note". Many keller shells and DW kits come with the note stamped on the inside of the shell. For example, you can have a tom setup that naturally tunes to E, G, A, and D or something like that. I personally think that's taking things a little too far, but whatever floats your boat. To me, I don't care what the drum's natural pitch is. As long as it's tuned to sound good, it'll sound good.
Yeah...it can sound OK on some stuff, and we've tried that on a few recordings, getting the drums & song in tune...but then it sounds weird on other stuff....too melodic.
So maybe just getting a "generic" but sweet THUMP is probably the better way to go...though I guess if you have a monster kit with lots of toms, it can be cool having a more "musical" sound difference between all of them, which maybe is not as important with a 4-5 piece where you just need the whole kit to sound solid.
A few weeks ago my drummer and I tore down my large, double-kick setup, which was like a 12-piece...and decided to go real old-school and just record a 4-piece kit...just a floor tom and one mounted on the kick.
I actually liked it a lot, so maybe for a few recordings we'll keep it small.