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Friday, June 27, 2014

It's All in Your Head, Part One: A Guide to Buying Drumheads That Are Best for Your Playing Style

By Vic Salazar


In this 2 part article, I'm going to offer some general recommendations to help you decide on the right drumheads that will match your particular requirements.

Drumheads are one of the most important elements of your drum. The type of drumhead that you select will determine the overall sound that your drum will produce. By installing a new drumhead, you can bring a drum "back to life" by adding tone and projection that were lost by using a worn, old head. You can also enhance the sound of a less expensive drum by replacing its stock head with a new, professional-quality one.

Prior to the mid 1950s, drumheads were made of animal hides, like calfskin. This all changed when the DuPont Company created a polyester film they called Mylar. By employing this plastic film instead of an animal skin, drumhead manufacturers such as Remo and Evans made amazing sonic options possible for drummers while adding consistency in quality and tone that wasn't previously achievable. With calfskin heads, drummers had to deal with the frequent need to re-tune their drums due to weather and temperature fluctuations. Plastic drumheads virtually eliminated this problem.

Today, plastic drumheads are utilized not just on drum sets but also on timpani, marching drums, and timbales, as well as hand drums like congas, bongos, djembes, darbukas, frame drums, surdos, pandeiros, doumbeks, tambourines, and caixas.

Number of Plies

The first thing to choose when selecting heads for your drum set is head weight. Single-ply heads offer a bright sound with greater resonance and sustain, while two-ply heads yield a darker, thicker sound with improved durability. If you're a heavy hitter and want a lower, more controlled tone out of your drum, you may want to go with a 2-ply head. If you're a finessed player and want to hear more overtones, you might use a single-ply head.

(NOTE: There are variations to this approach. For instance, you might play heavy rock but prefer the sound that a single-ply drumhead produces. I personally use single-ply drumhead and hit pretty hard - which means that I need to switch my drumheads more frequently than if I was using two-ply drumheads.)

Other types of heads include:

Dot - This head features an additional dot-shaped ply (approx. diameter five inches) in the middle. The dot can give you the durability of a two-ply head, but with a sound more like that of a single-ply head because only one layer of plastic sits on the drum's bearing edge. Drumhead companies like Remo, Evans, Aquarian, Ludwig, and Attack all create their own versions of a head featuring a reinforcement dot.

Three-ply - Aquarian recently introduced a 3-ply drumhead for players who require the ultimate in durability. Obviously, this head produces an extremely dark and richer fundamental pitch.

Next week in Part 2, I'll go over drumhead muffling, coating, and bottom drumheads. In the meantime, if you have any questions or require specific feedback regarding your drumhead decisions or dilemmas, feel free to reach out. I'm always here to help!




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