Drumset Seating/Positioning and playing powerfully..
11tim wrote:scott wrote:One of the best drummers I've played with actually angles his snare *forward*. So it's higher up near the drum throne than it is near the kick drum. I thought that's pretty crazy, but he really is one of the best drummers I've played with, so... this isn't so odd. i've seen it a bunch. think about traditional left hand stick grip. the old timey way. with this grip, having the snare angled forward is the only realistic way to do rim shots.i do it too, although i use 'regular' grip. it's so that i can get rim hits without having to have my snare too high. i like my throne at a moderate height but the snare kind of low. actually, the snare is usually oriented so that the highest point of the rim is where my right (cymbals) hand comes down to hit it, with my left (snare) hand hitting at the point at which the snare is kind of level, if you can picture that. i'm a pretty decent drummer but i do have a tendency to get my sticks caught up with each other if the snare and hihat are too close, so having the snare like this enables me to keep them the furthest possible distance apart. it allows me to get rim hits on pretty much every snare hit, if i want.for the rest of it, toms slightly angled (maybe 10-20deg), cymbals similar. i generally only really use a floor tom and a ride (other than snare/kick/hats). knee bent at about 90deg, maybe slightly more (so that my kick foot is very slightly in front of my knee).it struck me a while ago that the better the drummer, the flatter the drum orientation. i just kept noticing that whenever i saw a really good drummer, their toms and (to a lesser extent) cymbals were usually kind of flat. conversely, really bad drummers always seemed to have their rack toms at 45deg or even more. i'm pretty sure that it's the skill of the drummer that causes the flatness of the drum orientation and not the other way around. i guess that you have a wider array of tones available when the drum is flat (eg: getting a rim hit on an angled drum would be pretty difficult, which would explain why bad drummers who probably get lots of accidental rim hits would angle their drums more). as i've become a better drummer over the years i've noticed that all of my drums have flattened out, without any conscious thought from me.