Thanks for the info TommyP. i had no doubt about the fact that Buddy actually did this on his personal drums. my question was if anyone could say for certain that this made any discernible difference in sound characteristics of the snare. i know that changing anything, related to the construction of the drum itself, will alter its sound. has anyone had an experience that could answer this?
ludwigdan!
Ah!... you meant LITERALLY! My reply was of a duple nature actually. The opening "It's not theory... it's fact" has two meanings here. I thought you were mostly interested in the "story" behind Buddy's extra lacquer, not whether it actually makes a difference aurally/sonically... but it does... make a difference that is. Here's my experience with it:
Buddy's request of EXTRA lacquer made sense back in the day I suspect as he was coming out of just about every wood snare drum being either solid shell or 3 ply/rings. The Rogers wood Dynasonic he played most was the 5 ply/rings with lacquer on the inside that we know so well today, but perhaps THAT wasn't even "crisp" enough for him, especially coming out of his WFL endorsement, and that snare drum was again, 3 ply/rings, giving a very low fundamental. Anyway...
The thought behind it was to make the Dynasonic sound BRIGHTER, and the way to do it was extra lacquer, as that would SEAL the interior and make the "sound" extremely reflective. I realize that you may know all this already, but maybe some guys reading this do not. So!... did it, does it, work? I can honestly tell you that it does, as I have done it... but not on a wood Dynasonic. The drum I tried this on was a 1997 Ludwig 10 lug WMP with a 10 ply maple shell, no rings... and the interior was left NATURAL, as in nothing on it. No stain, clear, nothing. The drum as it was sounded "good", but I thought it could possibly benefit with some clear coats on the inside, and for the very same reasons that Buddy had it done when he was with Rogers. I was also very curious about the same thing you are here, and wanted to try it! So...
I used a HIGH GLOSS polyurethane as I thought that would replicate the clear lacquer of the day as those tended to be glossy. I lightly sanded between coats, and ended up putting on 5 coats, which very nicely SEALED the interior of that drum. The interior looked and felt like a sheet of glass! After reassembling the drum I was very curious as to HOW it would sound. Would there be a discernible difference? There was!... and most especially at low to medium volume. The drum became more "crystaline" if you will. Extremely "high endy" for lack of a better term. I thought the drum originally sounded nondescript... but now had more presence. For me, it was mostly experimental, and to improve on the aesthetics overall.
With the way drum making has gone today though, there are so many choices for different woods.. plies.. rings.. shell design.. etc., that it probably doesn't have the same result or even reason for doing it that it used to. Your drum, what with 8 and 8, will be approx. what the old Rogers 5 and 5 was back when.. but .. your shell is most certainly going to be much harder with most probably a tighter grain too. You may have the sound you're looking for without doing anything other than a perfunctory coat or two of clear. Personally...
... I might clear the interior with a couple coats/sanded, and play the drum for a bit and see if that's what you like! If so... you're done! If not... start adding coats of clear until the drum is where you want it with regard to reflectivity and treble. I will say again though... EXTRA coats of clear does indeed change the aural signature of the drum, but in your situation, it may not be warranted... but that is entirely your call!
Tommyp