I was perusing the internet and found this guy's page....thought it might help explain the Gretsch sound...He has a lot of Gretsch videos and I think he's a really nice player.FRANCO DAL MONEGO PLAYS GRETSCH ROUNDBADGE VINTAGE 60's SILVER SPARKLE JAZZ SET 18/12/14 - YouTube
I'm still not, shall we say, enamored with Gretsch drums after watching that video. First, the sound of Ambassadors on toms grates on my nerves like nails on a blackboard. They sound so metallic and far removed from the warm and fat tone I like on toms.
Second, those little jazz size drums really don't work for me. I only keep a set of 20/12/14 drums on hand for when I'm called upon to use them on a small space gig by the bandleader. 18" bass drums are a joke as far as I'm concerned.
Third, I'm absolutely not a fan of the jazz played by the drummers who used and endorsed Gretsch drums back when they were made in Brooklyn, so I have a built-in bias. All those bop guys like Mel Lewis, Tony Williams and Elvin Jones do nothing for me at all, sorry to say. A few drummers I know think Elvin was the greatest, but I don't "get" him either. Elvin sounded like someone threw him and his drums down a flight of stairs. I remember that Zildian ran a tribute ad after Elvin died saying he had the, "Swingingest beat." I almost laughed out loud at that statement. Elvin's drumming always sounded nervous to me.