I can totally understand your point here. If you would listen back to the kick drum soloed, you would be able to hear the differences more clearly- but in reality, you never hear the solo kick, but the whole set - especially the snare wire response. So this demonstration might not be that impressive or clear, but it is realistic. So for me, i like this kind of denonstration with a full drum mix. Nevertheless- an extra kick-solo demo would provide a better image of the beaters unique possibilities - i agree
@@Streichholztasche I put on earphones and listened carefully, but I couldn't really tell much of a difference in the audio of this video. The wood beater didn't sound as hard as I thought, and the felt(cajon) beater didn't sound as soft as I thought. I thought they could have captured the sound difference more clearly...
They all sounded the same to me
check out the jelly dog
its a combo of everything great responsiveness
what kinda settings are you using on the tama dyna sync?
The audio in this video doesn't really convey the difference between the beaters.
I can totally understand your point here. If you would listen back to the kick drum soloed, you would be able to hear the differences more clearly- but in reality, you never hear the solo kick, but the whole set - especially the snare wire response. So this demonstration might not be that impressive or clear, but it is realistic. So for me, i like this kind of denonstration with a full drum mix.
Nevertheless- an extra kick-solo demo would provide a better image of the beaters unique possibilities - i agree
@@Streichholztasche I put on earphones and listened carefully, but I couldn't really tell much of a difference in the audio of this video. The wood beater didn't sound as hard as I thought, and the felt(cajon) beater didn't sound as soft as I thought. I thought they could have captured the sound difference more clearly...
He should have used an open drum ie no dampening.