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Jack White

Posts: 195 Threads: 6
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From shortyedwards

Ya gotta have a lot of real estate for a setup like that. I played some places where I'd need to leave most of it in the car. It does make a ton of sense ergonomically to me. Hands and arms are mostly down and relaxed. Neat. -Doug

I'm guessing small stages aren't something Jack White has to worry about too often. Dead Weather play pretty reasonable venues, not exactly your average bar gig...

Posted on 7 years ago
#11
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I actually tried putting my tom lower today. I'm using a 24" kick and I had to move the tom way over to my left. Having the tom that low and over may look cool, but it's not too easy to play, at least not for me. I had to raise it up a bit, still low, but not as low as on his kit.

Posted on 7 years ago
#12
Posts: 771 Threads: 132
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Very nice and refreshing look on sizes and set-up. Not for every kind of music but very well suited for what they play.

Keep fixing them up...
Posted on 7 years ago
#13
Posts: 1427 Threads: 66
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I think with traditional grip it won't work too well.

I revamped my set up years ago when I stopped with the double bass nonsense. The 8&10 that were over the high hat came down and I run 8-10-12 up front. On the RC drums all three of them are 8" deep so it makes a nice neat (and low, even over the 22) set up. The 13&15 act as floor toms and I put either the 16 or 18 on the left. Usually the 16 because the 18 is a friggin tympani!

One thing I spend a lot of time on is Tom angles. I set all my drums such that like the snare, I can do a rim shot easily on any of the drums with either hand. Not that I'm a big rim shot fan-boy or anything but having the drums flat relitive to the sick gives a clear and consistent tone as well as allowing heads to last through a presidential term.

The mounted 10 on my be-bop kit looks a bit silly but it sure plays nice! The floor time are angled away from me a bit, like Keith Carlock does with all his toms. I can't do that with rack toms but for the lower drums it makes sense to get my "rim shot capable" placement. It

Cobalt Blue Yamaha Recording Custom 20b-22b-8-10-12-13-15-16f-18f
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
Posted on 7 years ago
#14
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