I thought it sounded amazing before, but you perfected it. I think it now has that perfect Old K sound to it. It's still very complex but not too complex. I hear a perfect balance.
Great job of tweaking an already sweet cymbal! When you played the before the mod cymbal, it had two frequencies that clashed near the bell area. You were able to dial out those clashing notes without ruining the complex character of this pie. This shows your skill at doing mods, I'll never say that "it can't be done" when it comes to cymbal mods, just point to you and your golden ear & craftsmanship. Thanks again Timothy!
Thank you! I've got other videos where I show the process. I don't always have the time to film/edit the entire process, but I try to show that whenever possible!
Fantastic job Tim! It reminds me of the 21 block stamp you changed for me, in the way that a small precise adjustment can take something that someone really likes to make it something someone loves!!!
Really liked the Spizzichino before the modification, but loved it after your tweeking... more focused, but not too restrained. Great work, Timothy. Cheers.
Yeah man! I had to bail on a used Kerope because of a weird hum so I get it. Not fun to be distracted by something so little yet major. Wonderful mod! You really nailed it.
Probably my Labyrinths. They have more drastic shapes, curves, and lathing techniques. Granted, I've played plenty of Spizz rides that are warm and mellow, but when most people think of Spizz's they're thinking of the wilder and more complex sounding ones.
I think you should always bake it at 350 degrees for 15 minutes before you touch it again. And then let it rest for 36 hours minimum. Same principle as cast iron seasoning. Beautiful spizzy.
PS I know a lot of fellow drummers love to purchase old K's, but considering the price most of them are going for, I would rather get one of your handmade cymbals or have you mod a pretty good late model K. No keyholes, no empty wallet, and no worries about getting my old K ripped off. I can see why the big cymbal companies can't replicate what you do, as they just don't have the time to spend on one cymbal alone.
Wow, what a stunner. Personally I would have left it, quit my band and just played that cymbal in my basement forever like a creepy b20 goblin. That being said, Hollyshit does that MF sound sooo good now. I liked the weird glassy thing it was doing right after but now it’s lush and warm. Like Wagu and caviar rolled into a blunt.
@@schukki6608 pretty middle aged. it's a very subjective thing. You might like a wild cymbal with a frequency hum - I have many cymbals that are wild and they are fun to play solo, but if you play in a band as a pro drummer like Timothy's customer, you've got to stay in your lane from a frequency perspective. Hence, why he ordered this mod for a very expensive and rare cymbal.
I thought it sounded amazing before, but you perfected it. I think it now has that perfect Old K sound to it. It's still very complex but not too complex. I hear a perfect balance.
Thanks! I'm glad you liked it!
Great job of tweaking an already sweet cymbal! When you played the before the mod cymbal, it had two frequencies that clashed near the bell area. You were able to dial out those clashing notes without ruining the complex character of this pie. This shows your skill at doing mods, I'll never say that "it can't be done" when it comes to cymbal mods, just point to you and your golden ear & craftsmanship. Thanks again Timothy!
Thank you!
Your confidence is admirable! (as is your craftsmanship, great mod).
Your drumming is excellent. And this cymbal sounds fantastic. Cheers.
Thanks you!
You got a beautiful tone from an already amazing cymbal. Great job. Pity of course you did not show the process.
Thank you! I've got other videos where I show the process. I don't always have the time to film/edit the entire process, but I try to show that whenever possible!
Fantastic job Tim! It reminds me of the 21 block stamp you changed for me, in the way that a small precise adjustment can take something that someone really likes to make it something someone loves!!!
Thank you brother!
Really liked the Spizzichino before the modification, but loved it after your tweeking... more focused, but not too restrained. Great work, Timothy. Cheers.
Exactly. Tim is an American treasure
@@ericvulf-k7z Agreed, I love his work!
Thank you!
It would be great to see your process when making those adjustments 👍
I'll do that in a future video!
Looking forward to it!@@ReverieDrumCo
Great job, I own myself a Spizzichino , these cymbals are fantastics, I wish that you refine mine.
Like butter for the ears, damn
Your drums are very nicely tuned as well‼️✌️🇦🇺
Thank you!
I understand the mod completely.
Not sure which I like more. Both veeeeery nice sounds
Beautiful!!!!😍
Yeah man! I had to bail on a used Kerope because of a weird hum so I get it. Not fun to be distracted by something so little yet major. Wonderful mod! You really nailed it.
Thank you!
I love how people are trusting people so much with the Spizz’s. You did an amazing job on mine!
Thanks John!
Sounds pretty slick..👍
which of your cymbal line comes close to a "Spizz sound/Spizz technique??
Probably my Labyrinths. They have more drastic shapes, curves, and lathing techniques. Granted, I've played plenty of Spizz rides that are warm and mellow, but when most people think of Spizz's they're thinking of the wilder and more complex sounding ones.
Thank you@@ReverieDrumCo
I think you should always bake it at 350 degrees for 15 minutes before you touch it again. And then let it rest for 36 hours minimum. Same principle as cast iron seasoning. Beautiful spizzy.
Heat treating destroys the temper and makes the alloy brittle. Spizzichino was a real one for experimenting with it, though.
PS I know a lot of fellow drummers love to purchase old K's, but considering the price most of them are going for, I would rather get one of your handmade cymbals or have you mod a pretty good late model K. No keyholes, no empty wallet, and no worries about getting my old K ripped off. I can see why the big cymbal companies can't replicate what you do, as they just don't have the time to spend on one cymbal alone.
Wow, what a stunner. Personally I would have left it, quit my band and just played that cymbal in my basement forever like a creepy b20 goblin. That being said, Hollyshit does that MF sound sooo good now. I liked the weird glassy thing it was doing right after but now it’s lush and warm. Like Wagu and caviar rolled into a blunt.
hahaha award for the best comment always goes to you!
😌 Promo-SM
It was better before modification. Now it sounds like any industrial production.
@@schukki6608 it was definitely more wild before the mod. If you like it better before that’s cool!
Nope. Better after
@@cookq How old are you?
@@schukki6608 pretty middle aged. it's a very subjective thing. You might like a wild cymbal with a frequency hum - I have many cymbals that are wild and they are fun to play solo, but if you play in a band as a pro drummer like Timothy's customer, you've got to stay in your lane from a frequency perspective. Hence, why he ordered this mod for a very expensive and rare cymbal.
@@cookq 👍
I think the cymbol is too thin.
To each his own!
He made some beautiful sounding cymbals
And some not so beautiful sounding cymbals
I had one for a while
It was the latter
He did say “anyone can make a cymbal good, he made them to sound bad”
@@johnrobertcorney he also said ugly is more interesting than beautiful
you are not shipping outside the us?
We ship outside the US through an online invoice. Send me an email if you want more info! tim@reveriedrums.com
Made in Italy
Indeed!