Tim Brown
New member
I was sitting outside a few minutes ago thinking about some recording I was doing in 1986, and then it hit me - what is the most rigged thing you've ever done?
Drummers are notorious for rigging hardware pieces together - after all - it's sort of like a big erector set - a lot of different brands are all the same diameter, so it's easy to create some gigantic freaky hardware pieces.
I've even seen a drummer who made a Rack out of PVC pipe. It was funny, but you know what - the thing actually worked. (He didn't use rack clamps - the rack was in pieces or sections that were permanently glued together, and he had made cymbal arms using pieces of PVC and made a "cymbal post" by simply drilling through a Cap, and putting a bolt through it. He said he got the idea from Martin Chambers of the Pretenders who had an all white rack, and had powder coated the entire sonor 5 piece drumkit white.)
In the spring of 1986 my band (well what was left of it - the rhythm guitarist moved to Alabama, and the bass player - my younger brother - quit. That left the lead singer/keyboard player, the lead guitarist, and myself) was doing some songs for a local filmmaker. He was making a film about Vampires and wanted some Hard Rock songs for it - eventually he abandoned the project, but we were in a rush to get these songs demo-ed for him.
(I've still got the tape here somewhere and when I find it, I'm going to put at least put one of the songs online.)
We were recording them at my singer's house in their family room (all wood with a huge stone fireplace - the room sounded awesome for recording in - plus there was a giant stairwell just outside the doorway to the family room.
During the middle of the recording - my kick drum pedal's pedalboard snapped in half.
What was I to do?!?!
Think think think, how could we finish this recording in time?
Luckily, Glen's dad had a wood shop in the garage.
So I went out in the garage and made a heel-plate and pedalboard out of a piece of 3/4" cabinet grade plywood scrap he had there, and used a hinge (the same exact kind that is on a DW pedal) that he had laying around.
I played on that pedal for several months while I tried finding something to replace my old faithful, but now Frankenstein-ish, Slingerland Tempo King pedal.
That was when I first made the switch to chain drive pedals...I never did like the feel of them, having started with a leather strap, they just didn't feel right to me.
So, what kind of hardware rigging have you done?
Tim
Drummers are notorious for rigging hardware pieces together - after all - it's sort of like a big erector set - a lot of different brands are all the same diameter, so it's easy to create some gigantic freaky hardware pieces.
I've even seen a drummer who made a Rack out of PVC pipe. It was funny, but you know what - the thing actually worked. (He didn't use rack clamps - the rack was in pieces or sections that were permanently glued together, and he had made cymbal arms using pieces of PVC and made a "cymbal post" by simply drilling through a Cap, and putting a bolt through it. He said he got the idea from Martin Chambers of the Pretenders who had an all white rack, and had powder coated the entire sonor 5 piece drumkit white.)
In the spring of 1986 my band (well what was left of it - the rhythm guitarist moved to Alabama, and the bass player - my younger brother - quit. That left the lead singer/keyboard player, the lead guitarist, and myself) was doing some songs for a local filmmaker. He was making a film about Vampires and wanted some Hard Rock songs for it - eventually he abandoned the project, but we were in a rush to get these songs demo-ed for him.
(I've still got the tape here somewhere and when I find it, I'm going to put at least put one of the songs online.)
We were recording them at my singer's house in their family room (all wood with a huge stone fireplace - the room sounded awesome for recording in - plus there was a giant stairwell just outside the doorway to the family room.
During the middle of the recording - my kick drum pedal's pedalboard snapped in half.
What was I to do?!?!
Think think think, how could we finish this recording in time?
Luckily, Glen's dad had a wood shop in the garage.
So I went out in the garage and made a heel-plate and pedalboard out of a piece of 3/4" cabinet grade plywood scrap he had there, and used a hinge (the same exact kind that is on a DW pedal) that he had laying around.
I played on that pedal for several months while I tried finding something to replace my old faithful, but now Frankenstein-ish, Slingerland Tempo King pedal.
That was when I first made the switch to chain drive pedals...I never did like the feel of them, having started with a leather strap, they just didn't feel right to me.
So, what kind of hardware rigging have you done?
Tim
).... so the stand is made of square wood base with four 'adjustable' rubber feet on the bottom (came off amp-stand, which at one time were replaced with wheel-feet), plastic flag pole wall-mounting bracket/mechanism with adjustable angle, pipe-in-pipe type adjustable shower curtain pole (I don't know what they are called exactly...you know the ones with rubber ends, so you twist one pipe against the other and adjust the length that way...).... so I 've got that twisting plastic rode out from inside ...drilled bunch of holes through both pipes ...so I can adjust the length (telescopic style), then I use a bolt that goes through the hole and it has large plastic wing-nut (that part came from TORO mower) .... argh... I gotta make a pic of this poor thing... something to laugh at
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