We had an argument here before about tuning drums to specific pitches. The important thing is to get the drums to musical intervals that sound good. The kit is rarely tuned to a specific key for a specific song. Some guys will do it. Do they need to? Eh...it's all taste.
Here's something to think about: If DW stamps A on the inside of the drum, is it actually perfectly tuned to A? Does it vibrate at exactly 440hz? I doubt it! DW just listens to the shell and finds the note that it's closest to. The shell might be right on, or it could be a few cents higher or lower than the actual note. If you tune the drum to A is it going to ring solid with that A like a guitar string?
So, if the shell is A flat and you tune the drum to A flat, and the song you're jamming is in C major should you retune it to A so it fits the song? Should you retune the kit to get them all to fit in a major scale?
There are guys here who will say yes.
I tune my drums to where my ear tells me they sound good. It could be thirds or fourths. I don't know and to tell you the truth, I don't care. I might spend a day tuning them when it's 64 degrees outside and love them. The next day it's 75 degrees and I think they still sound fine because they've kept their interval. They're now lower, though. So do I get all anal and retune the kit while everybody waits?
Some guys will pick out the notes on a keyboard, write them down and then tune them exactly the same every time. You have to decide how anal you want to be and whether its worth it!
If a song calls for a set of Claves and the ones you have aren't in the songs key, are you going to run to the music store and root through the claves 'til you find a corresponding set? Chances are the ones you had in the first place will do just fine!
To me it is more inportant that the drum be tuned TO ITSELF, meaning that the pitches at the lugs are all the same, not that the drum is a specific pitch in a scale.
Just food for thought.
