Here are pics of the snare. Any info on that would be awesome too! Wow you guys really know your stuff. Glad I joined!
Newbie who just inherited Premier set from Uncle for son. Last viewed: 1 hour ago
Here are pics of the snare. Any info on that would be awesome too! Wow you guys really know your stuff. Glad I joined!
That appears to be a 60's era Ludwig Acrolite snare, 8 lug, aluminum shell, Keystone badge. Very cool drum. They were considered a "student line" drum, back in the day, but are very popular nowadays. Lots of vintage collectors have one (or more), in their arousal. The muffler on yours looks to be non original, a replacement. The original one is known as a "baseball bat" muffler/tone control.
In regards to the bass drum question. No need to get a head with a "hole" (known in drum world typically as a "port"), unless you want to get a mic inside the drum, or prefer that "vented" sound. For this kit, I'd recommend a solid head, get that nice vintage sound. Btw, you can still mic a bass drum with no port/hole in the head, just put the mic up near the sealed front head, just has a different sound/effect.
Cheers.
The muffler knob may be original guys.
At one point in the Keystone time, they changed from Baseball bat to round knobs.
Thanks to Mr. Jerry Jenkins
Here are pics of the snare. Any info on that would be awesome too! Wow you guys really know your stuff. Glad I joined!
That is indeed an Acrolite, most likely mid/later 60s due to the muffler not being a "baseball bat" style. That one there has the adjustable knob muffler. The Acrolite snare is just an all around workhorse that can be used in any style of music. I have a '65 Acro and I can't seem to make it sound bad... I use it for nearly every gig I play.
Check for a date stamp inside the drum and also see about matching up the serial number on the badge to the Ludwig timeline for serial numbers.. should give you a solid date for the shell.
"People might look at you a bit funny, but it's okay. Artists are allowed to be a bit different."- Bob Ross
"After silence, that which comes closest to expressing the inexpressible is music..." - Aldous Huxley
That appears to be a 60's era Ludwig Acrolite snare, 8 lug, aluminum shell, Keystone badge. Very cool drum. They were considered a "student line" drum, back in the day, but are very popular nowadays. Lots of vintage collectors have one (or more), in their arousal. The muffler on yours looks to be non original, a replacement. The original one is known as a "baseball bat" muffler/tone control. In regards to the bass drum question. No need to get a head with a "hole" (known in drum world typically as a "port"), unless you want to get a mic inside the drum, or prefer that "vented" sound. For this kit, I'd recommend a solid head, get that nice vintage sound. Btw, you can still mic a bass drum with no port/hole in the head, just put the mic up near the sealed front head, just has a different sound/effect. Cheers.
"Lots of vintage collectors have one (or more), in their arousal."LoLoLoLo
Freudian slip ? I don't think collectors get THAT excited about Acrolites ! ;)
It’s all about the sound.
Let’s be thankful the “pretentious” don’t value it so any drummer can have a world-class sounding snare in their kit without eating Ramen for two months.
Red Ripple '70's Yamaha D-20 20b-12-14f
Piano Black Yamaha Recording Custom Be-Bop kit 18b-10-14f
Snares:
Yamaha COS SDM5; Yamaha Cobalt Blue RC 5-1/2x14; Gretsch round badge WMP; 1972 Ludwig Acrolite; 1978 Ludwig Super Sensitive; Cobalt Blue one-off Montineri; Yamaha Musashi 6.5X13 Oak; cheap 3.5X13 brass piccolo
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