180
by evanrowe_Archive
subprime wrote:I've been rethinking my use of heavy cymbals. Ive realized that for a lot of the stuff I do I get a bit too spastic for using my 24 ride. Its uses are just so specific Ive realized. I just need something that crashes easier than my secondary 20 ride cymbal that I use for a crash. I always feel sorta sketchy using heavyish cymbals as crashes because of how brittle they can be.I will once again endorse the Paiste Giant Beat 24 multipurpose cymbal. I play this cymbal in Maple Stave, a band that generally runs at around 110 dBA, both dumb complicated patterns with the tip of the stick and laying in (with the aforementioned glancing blow) with the shoulder. It sounds glorious. I also play it in the Five Fifths, a band that just made a record on which I never used sticks, only brushes and an occasional mallet. Everything was live, and I was right between an upright bass and a cello. I put a ball chain on it. It sounds glorious.It's fairly thin, and the softer B8 bronze, so darker than most. But it is both useful and lovely from a whisper to a roar.NB: I destroyed one of these at a BBQ a couple years ago. It'd had a good few years of touring, but man something about that set really made me act like a real prick to that cymbal (probably the fact that Andy was wearing GD shorts onstage). Was lucky to replace it for $250. I turned the cracked one into a 15 bottom hat (that is prone to turning inside out if I'm not careful with the pedal) and it sounds great.I'll also endorse the 20 crash and, to a slightly lesser extent, the 18. The latter is a little less consistent cymbal to cymbal, and when I was in three loud rock bands at once I was kind of mowing through them.Fucking drumming. Everything is a consumable good.Ringo! An endorsement! I salute you as I seethe with jealousy.