Any 1ply Remo head actually. But my absolute favorite would be the Remo Ambassador coated. Great for all styles of music, brush playing possible and it feels great while playing. For me they bring out the most natural sound out of any drum.
Evans G1 coated. It sounds better than than the UV1 while still having a coating that lasts much longer than Remo's. I get better results with Remo on the snare side though.
If Remo had explained it like you guys just did, their sales would increased 3 times or more. This is a great explanation for both new and seasoned drummers… thank you
@@unclerhombus Some people want to know the differences between them. He said at the very beginning that they'd all be played back to back at the end. It's not unnecessary talking. It's informative.
For my low volume jazz playing which includes lighter weight sticks and brushes, I use the Remo Ambassador Renaissance batter and resonant heads on my 5" x 14" mahogany shell snare drum (Gretsch 30" bearing edge). These heads are excellent for light and distinct brush sounds. For my higher volume playing jazz and light pop and classic rock playing which includes heavier sticks and brushes, I use Ambassador coated batter head and Ambassador clear/hazy snare head on my 6" x 14" maple shell snare drum (Gretsch 30" bearing edge). These heads are also great for brushes but work better in bigger venues. Obviously, the size, type of shell and bearing edges affect my choice for each type of venue. Wonderful description. I wish your info was available back when I started out as a professional jazz drummer back in the early 70's.
This video is quite honestly the best I’ve seen in snare drum head comparison’s. They were all put onto an aluminum drum. It would be nice to see this done on a wooden snare, as well if that hasn’t been done yet. Thanks for posting!
recently switched over to ambassadors on my toms, and the difference is just night and day. with those heads you can almost make toms sound like timpani. just a wide open, massive sound
Powerstroke3 has been my go-to snare batter for many years. Die cast hoops and Masshoff tuning method for the ability to go from low to high and ringy to dry with a few turns of a tuning key.
My personal favorite snare top head is the powerstroke 77. You should definitely include it in a video in the future because it has a very unique timbre.
Right now I'm working with a power stroke on a 6.5 deep snare. Was working with a clear pinstripe on a 5" deep snare. Taking some getting used to that deep powerful sound. Plus the 5 is metal and the 6.5 is Maple. Both sound good to me. Just real different. Thinking about using both by putting one or the other to the left of the high hat.
Controlled sound sounds absolutely amazing I’m real life. If your going for the perfect amount of overtones with excellent tones with (arguably the best durability).
Remo definitely has to owe you guys royalties for the sheer number of heads potentially sold due to the expert presentation, high production value and amazing drumming in this video. Hands down, the best product demo/comparison vid i've seen...youtube or otherwise!
AOD, terrific video and content description of various REMO batter heads for Snares. I'm a 71 yo, resurrected drummer, playing again after 50 years[1969]. I play for retirement enjoyment / hobby at home , no Gigs (yet!!). I have a DW Design Series 14 X 6.5 Nickel over Brass Snare drum and a PDP Concept Maple 14 X 5.5 Snare (part of my PDP 6 drim Kit). The DW was purchased USED an it came form the previous owner with a HD Dry batter head. It sounded great, right out of the delivery box. A few months ago, I replaced the HD dry with anew HD dry head. I cannot achieve the same sound, either too "cracky" or too choked. I re-installed the reso head, re-installed the snare wires, and re-installd the Batter heads. Tuned and re-Tuned. CI tried a UV1 and a UV2 - NG. I did stumble upon a "weird" hack. I placed the DW snare on top of my 16" Floor Tom one day to get the drum out of the way. Doing a fill, I hit the DW snare - and Bingo !! That was the Ludwig Supraphonic - John Bonham sound. Take the drum off the Tom, not the same. If I play the DW in the snare stand, it is not the same sound. I posted this on various drum forums, and posters have responded by saying I'm palying two drums simultaneously or I may have invented a new Snare Stand!!. I'm tempted to try the Remo Emperor head? BTW, it was the same response on the PDP Maple snare too. Any thoughts??
May sounds weird but every snare as is own best drumhead, my go to is the Remo ambassador coated , but sometime, it's a Remo CS, a emperror , a Evans G1 or a Ludwig weathermaster medium. Depends on the shell material, tickness and depth. Usually i go trough 5 snare head with various tuning to find the sweetspot ! Great demo guys.
Thank you for this. So informative for snare batter head shopping. My favourite has always been the Coated Ambassador. When I say always I mean over 40 years. It's been the industry go to but there are so many choices now. I still use the Ambassador but I add the Evans rings to dampen the sustain for playing in pubs.
thanks for showing love to the clear ambassador. Not many people know the clear ambassador for the snare gives the snare so much crack tuned high , its the best snare head ive use. couldnt be any happier! great review
I have tweaked on bottom and top head brands on every part of a drum kit. Remo is All around the best with Sounds, Tuning, Durability and taking Abuse if you are the "Brick Layer" type drummer. And Evans has a few good all-around tasty ones too. But Remos never disappointed me once.
I'm not a drummer but I'm an aspiring producer. For the 80s inspired sound I'm going for I liked the Empreor the most! Not much ring if not at all and letting the reverb do the sustain. For stuff like alt rock or math rock I loved the Ambassador Clear, and for most metal I think the Pinstripe will work well :)
In my 60 years of playing the Evans Dry Genera sounds and plays the best on my Ludwig 4x14 Supralite and my 6 1/2 x14 Super Sensitive. Rim shots are clear and sharp and there is no need for any type of muffling. Most importantly the head is easy to tune to get a perfect sound.
My personal favorite is the ambassador coated or an Evans G1 coated. With these heads I can get the wide open sound or if I want a more focused sound I can use Drum Dots or Drum Rings depending on the room or the amount of muffling I need.
I found the Power Stroke 3 a good option if you intend to play a wide variety of styles. As a single ply the overtones are close to the classic Ambassador, but the added damping around the edge means you can get much more controlled sound with lower tunings etc.
The Evans Genera and Genera Dry are the analog in the Evans world. The Dry has tiny vent holes on the perimeter of the head that eliminates the overtones more than the Genera. I've used all three, all are good.
Thanks for the comparison. I am starting my study on drums, and I want to understand the difference between all the drum set elements to take the best step in buying my first one. I will keep an eye on your channel because it looks exactly what I want. Thanks!!!
I think my favorite drum shell for both live and recording, has to be the aluminum shell. I've heard many different brands and even though there are obvious differences between different depths, they all sound great for their respective sizes. For me, the perfect head for snare is the controlled sound coated black dot..This snare with the black dot coated is a perfect, all around and versatile snare sound.
Different heads for different drums and uses. For my very "standard" 5x14 maple, I go with a very "standard" ambassador. For my 6.5x14 steel snare, I use a powerstroke to tame the overtones a bit. For my 5.5x14 hammered steel drum, I use an ambassador X which gives it a little more durability and slightly dryer sound than a standard ambassador. I generally advise people to consider the ambassador as a benchmark and then decide how much and what type of overtone control and durability they need, and go heavier accordingly.
I'm using a HD Dry on my DW Brass 14 X 6.5 Snare drum. Just ordered a Powerstroke 77 (Remo) to try it out. The HD dry can "choke" the drum iof tuned too high. I do like High tuning. I am a 72 yo guy who resurrected playing drum after 50 Years [1969] in 2019. Tuning is new Art to me. I knew nothing of this way back when. Never too old to Learn. I posted about a "Weird" hack I discovered - by playing the Snare drum atop of my 16 X 14 Floor Tom. It was discovered by accident fooling around one day months ago. For whatever engineering reasons the sound affects - My snares (14 X 5.5 Maple and a 14 X 6.5 Brass) in a Positive way. This method cancels out any Snare Buzz from the Rack Toms too! I also tried this: in the Snare stand, I took a 16" Floor tom batter head placed it on top of the stand (only two arms will fit) and then the Snare on top of that - that improved the sound to my ear as well. Playing atop of the Floor Tom was best though. Lastly, doing this has educated me in Sound Engineering : a 14" deep Tom vs a 16" Tom is different as well!!
I love the coated ambassador X, classic warm sound with more durability. Also love the coated cs real crisp with just enough overtones, I hated the pinstripe I bought once years ago, only good thing that lifeless head had was durability. That's it. I have never played an emperor snare head and I am curious to try it out. I also read of a great drummer who records rock with super thin diplomat heads, just plays one song and replaces them every studio day!
The single ply coated Ambassador all the way (for my toms too)! Have tried many heads in the past on my Sonor Champion (+ Sonor snare 5x14 and my Supra 6.5x14), but kept coming back to it... since some 20 years now I have stuck with it and have never looked back. I love the way it sounds and how it plays... the way the sticks feel when I play Ambassadors - the responsiveness. I like the openess and I love the ring and when it's too much for the occasion there's nothing a piece of tape or my wallet or hanky can't fix. Great video, as usual!
Same! I used to muffle the crap out of my snare and get the thickest “overtone control” heads I could find then I embraced the overtones for what they were and play singly ply Aquarian heads on all my drums.
You really can't go wrong with a coated Ambassador. If the overtones are too much I control them with a moongel or a half a moongel or a drumdot. I love the Evans Genera Dry and HD Dry too which have tiny vents around the perimeter of the head to control overtones. But the Ambassador is the best all arounder.
I liked the Evans Genera Dry with the vents too. But ultimately I'm a lazy drummer who's not really fond of swapping heads all the time... so coated Ambassadors it is! ;)
I prefer it because I’m not fan of that open sound of single ply, but also don’t wan’t to put on controled heads, two ply showed to be ideal, if I want more mufled sound I can add those mute rings or gel on top.
I'm quite a hard hitting drummer and I absolutely love the coated ambassador! Every time I try something else I go back to it, I just love it's throaty crack LOL Best head in my opinion
@@rohayek8492 I don't play very often, I hit hard but to me the head is still good. It's a Remo controlled sound X, pretty durable... In the last few weeks I noticed it's getting weaker, maybe it's time to change it
Best video about drum heads i’ve ever seen. Very interesting features. You guys should make a video like this one with evans drum heads as well! Great job!
I do wish Remo would make an effort to explain/demo their heads like you’ve just done - great video, and love your precise narrative. I’ve used both Remos and Evans in the past - right now I have Remo Emperors (clear) on all the tom-toms and the bass, with an Evans EC Reverse Dot on my Ludwig Supralite steel snare and an Evans G1 on my Sonor AQ2 maple snare. Will be switching to a Remo Powerstroke on the steel snare and a Remo Ambassador coated on the maple snare the next time I change. I also have a Ludwig Weather Master medium head that I might use on the Supralite at some point. And I want to get a Ludwig Silver Dot head (made by Remo, I think) for my Ludwig Black Beauty once I’ve worn out its factory Weather Master. These brands have slightly differing approaches to their specialized heads i.e., Remo Weather Kings, CS, Powerstrokes, Pinstripes and Evans EC series with their reverse dots and all that stuff. So there is probably no ‘best brand’ but overall I’ve found that Remo heads hold their tuning better and always sound great. Evans make some nice heads too - I like their G1s and Genera HD Dry heads. Remo Powerstroke 77s or Evans EC Reverse Dots on low-mid tuning are an easy way to get a ‘fat’ snare. I guess although I tend to prefer Remos I’m not biased. Remos are a global standard, though.
Great video which I found really helpful, think you've sold me on the emperor double ply. Love that crisp sound, and favouring hard rock/metal drumming myself the added durability is very welcome!
this video is the perfect format of a comparison, my only observation is that on the overhead takes, tue use of ring shot accentuates more the shell and makes it hard to tell the difference between them
Very interesting..most useful to have a direct comparison on the same drum at same tuning. My favorite of this group is the Emperor. One type of snare drum batter head not reviewed is the 'faux calf' type heads..like Remo Fiberskyn and Evans '56 Calftone. I have an Evans '56 Calftone head on a wood shell 5 x 14" snare drum and it is perfect the venue I use it in..a church praise band. Great for jazz too.
There’s PLENTY of snare head comparisons on YT. Check out the Timpano Percussion channel. Nothing wrong with this comparison. However it’s been done before.
Great explanation of each and well done with the structure too (meaning tuning each to the same level and having each played after their explanations and then also having the direct comparisons)! I use Evans myself and specifically use hydraulic heads for my toms. Just to experiment I tried a hydraulic head on my DW Edge snare drum. It was quite different from the coated heads and predampened (reverse power dot) type heads I've tried in the past. Fun experiment and good sound but not nearly as versatile as actual snare heads.
I've been using Evans since the early 2000s but recently decided to change my snare out to a Remo ambassador. It sounds so nice but I do worry about durability. I remember a snare I bought had a Remo on it and I used it and loved it but it was the only drumhead I have ever had blow out on me during a gig. So I just stayed away for the longest time but I'm playing with lighter sticks now and also not playing heavy rock as much anymore.
Nice info. You guys should make a video on how the bottom (response) head of a snare drum can change all those factors too. I used to place an ambassador coated for an open tone paired with a thicker response head. It controled the excesses very well without having to use muffles or special top heads.
Thank you very much for that great comparison of REMO snare drumheads. Please do another with EVANS drumheads and at last a comparison with snare drumheads from both manufacturers. Thank you! With regards from Germany!
You forget the remo cybernax that i am using since over more than 10 years on my main snare. It is used normally by the so called pipe snare drummers in the scottish bagpipe marching music but it sounds amazing on a regular snaredrum aswell. it gives the snare body but also good ammount of crack
I mentioned this on another of your videos but man, I changed the way I hear snare drum sounds as I played longer. I used to hate the overtones from the snare but now I absolutely love hearing the difference of my steel Sensitone snare vs my 12 ply Maple Masters Custom snare. When I get a bronze or brass shell, I think my snare drum collection will be complete. (Until I want aluminum or titanium! Lol)
It’s a case of which is best for you, so there’s a spectrum of appeal, maybe demonstrate or mention ghost notes in a similar way to brushes, subtler techniques might fail on an inappropriate drumhead. I use a coated Ambassador for its response and feel, that is without compression into a triggered sound-alike, tonal envelope.
There is nothing quite like a coated emperor once it's broken in. Take some time or find sandpaper over some of the coating in the middle but it does marry the attack with ring of the ambassador, with a bit more durability.
As a beginner drummer I worry about my neighbors hearing me even tho they're a long ways away. I don't play after 10 to be respectful. As a new drummer I don't care about sound that much so which heads do you think would be best? I also thought about buying those moon gels.
I noticed you are using th bass drum from the Yamaha Stage Custom Hip. I recently purchsed one of these kits. Yours sounds amazing. What head combination, muffling and tuning details did you use?
I tried the Pinstripe recently, could not get it to sound good on my walnut snare. Too much ring and not enough brightness. I 'm going to try the Powerstroke or go back to the controlled sound ! Thanks for the video !
I noticed that you didn't talk about the powerstroke 4. Because I have have one for my '13 soundpercussion snare drum and it's great. Even though right now two of the lugs on the snare are broken but it makes a nice really low old school snare drum sound
What’s your favorite drumhead on your Snare 🥁?
Any 1ply Remo head actually. But my absolute favorite would be the Remo Ambassador coated. Great for all styles of music, brush playing possible and it feels great while playing. For me they bring out the most natural sound out of any drum.
Ambassador coated. But for really tight sounds on 5 inch snares I had good sounds with an Remo pinstripe clear.
Aquarian Hi-Energy
Evans G1 coated. It sounds better than than the UV1 while still having a coating that lasts much longer than Remo's. I get better results with Remo on the snare side though.
Evans Hydraulic for phat snare and low tunings and Evans ST Dry for medium and high tunings.
If Remo had explained it like you guys just did, their sales would increased 3 times or more. This is a great explanation for both new and seasoned drummers… thank you
🤫Shhh... don't tell Remo lol.
@@cremist2317 😂🤣
Bruh I got a whole library of heads I wouldn’t have if I knew what I wanted right away
Lol
This video gave me answers to questions I didn't know I had.
7:03 Ambassador
7:09 Ambassador Clear
7:15 Emperor
7:22 Controlled Sound (Dot)
7:28 Powerstroke 3
7:34 Pinstripe
Thank you. So much unnecessary talking.
@@unclerhombus Some people want to know the differences between them. He said at the very beginning that they'd all be played back to back at the end. It's not unnecessary talking. It's informative.
@@unclerhombusyou could just say ”my attention span is fried from years of tik tok”
I just love the Controlled Sound so much, even on a entry level matching snare, with the right tuning, it can make wonders.
I put the controlled sound on all my snares!
For my low volume jazz playing which includes lighter weight sticks and brushes, I use the Remo Ambassador Renaissance batter and resonant heads on my 5" x 14" mahogany shell snare drum (Gretsch 30" bearing edge). These heads are excellent for light and distinct brush sounds.
For my higher volume playing jazz and light pop and classic rock playing which includes heavier sticks and brushes, I use Ambassador coated batter head and Ambassador clear/hazy snare head on my 6" x 14" maple shell snare drum (Gretsch 30" bearing edge). These heads are also great for brushes but work better in bigger venues.
Obviously, the size, type of shell and bearing edges affect my choice for each type of venue.
Wonderful description. I wish your info was available back when I started out as a professional jazz drummer back in the early 70's.
You guys consistently have high quality, well produced content. Well done
thanks Jonathan - we're just doing as best as we can.
Free sign-up on their site, as well!
And they are delivering high quality videos not in their native tongue. Sehr gut!
Just trying our best ;-)
@@ArtOfDrumming Allo Allo.... 😂🤭 AUFMACHENNNN 🤫😡😠😈
This video is quite honestly the best I’ve seen in snare drum head comparison’s. They were all put onto an aluminum drum. It would be nice to see this done on a wooden snare, as well if that hasn’t been done yet.
Thanks for posting!
recently switched over to ambassadors on my toms, and the difference is just night and day. with those heads you can almost make toms sound like timpani. just a wide open, massive sound
Powerstroke3 has been my go-to snare batter for many years. Die cast hoops and Masshoff tuning method for the ability to go from low to high and ringy to dry with a few turns of a tuning key.
Depends on the drum. Still love the regular old coated Ambassador. Also love the Fiberskyn Diplomat. Coated CS is great, as well.
Those are my favorites too!
My personal favorite snare top head is the powerstroke 77. You should definitely include it in a video in the future because it has a very unique timbre.
Right now I'm working with a power stroke on a 6.5 deep snare. Was working with a clear pinstripe on a 5" deep snare. Taking some getting used to that deep powerful sound. Plus the 5 is metal and the 6.5 is Maple. Both sound good to me. Just real different. Thinking about using both by putting one or the other to the left of the high hat.
Controlled sound sounds absolutely amazing I’m real life. If your going for the perfect amount of overtones with excellent tones with (arguably the best durability).
Great drumhead for sure!
Remo definitely has to owe you guys royalties for the sheer number of heads potentially sold due to the expert presentation, high production value and amazing drumming in this video.
Hands down, the best product demo/comparison vid i've seen...youtube or otherwise!
I've seen better.
@@alanduncan1980: 😂
AOD, terrific video and content description of various REMO batter heads for Snares. I'm a 71 yo, resurrected drummer, playing again after 50 years[1969]. I play for retirement enjoyment / hobby at home , no Gigs (yet!!). I have a DW Design Series 14 X 6.5 Nickel over Brass Snare drum and a PDP Concept Maple 14 X 5.5 Snare (part of my PDP 6 drim Kit). The DW was purchased USED an it came form the previous owner with a HD Dry batter head. It sounded great, right out of the delivery box. A few months ago, I replaced the HD dry with anew HD dry head. I cannot achieve the same sound, either too "cracky" or too choked. I re-installed the reso head, re-installed the snare wires, and re-installd the Batter heads. Tuned and re-Tuned. CI tried a UV1 and a UV2 - NG. I did stumble upon a "weird" hack. I placed the DW snare on top of my 16" Floor Tom one day to get the drum out of the way. Doing a fill, I hit the DW snare - and Bingo !! That was the Ludwig Supraphonic - John Bonham sound. Take the drum off the Tom, not the same. If I play the DW in the snare stand, it is not the same sound. I posted this on various drum forums, and posters have responded by saying I'm palying two drums simultaneously or I may have invented a new Snare Stand!!. I'm tempted to try the Remo Emperor head? BTW, it was the same response on the PDP Maple snare too. Any thoughts??
May sounds weird but every snare as is own best drumhead, my go to is the Remo ambassador coated , but sometime, it's a Remo CS, a emperror , a Evans G1 or a Ludwig weathermaster medium. Depends on the shell material, tickness and depth. Usually i go trough 5 snare head with various tuning to find the sweetspot ! Great demo guys.
Thank you for this. So informative for snare batter head shopping. My favourite has always been the Coated Ambassador. When I say always I mean over 40 years. It's been the industry go to but there are so many choices now. I still use the Ambassador but I add the Evans rings to dampen the sustain for playing in pubs.
thanks for showing love to the clear ambassador. Not many people know the clear ambassador for the snare gives the snare so much crack tuned high , its the best snare head ive use. couldnt be any happier! great review
Try a clear Pinstripe or Emperor I use both
I have tweaked on bottom and top head brands on every part of a drum kit. Remo is All around the best with Sounds, Tuning, Durability and taking Abuse if you are the "Brick Layer" type drummer. And Evans has a few good all-around tasty ones too. But Remos never disappointed me once.
I'm not a drummer but I'm an aspiring producer.
For the 80s inspired sound I'm going for I liked the Empreor the most! Not much ring if not at all and letting the reverb do the sustain.
For stuff like alt rock or math rock I loved the Ambassador Clear, and for most metal I think the Pinstripe will work well :)
Great video! The Ambassador (the coated / single ply one) sounds like butter.
I also like the dotted one.
You forget the Emperor X. This is my favorite for now. Not a long time ago my fav was Pinstripe. But with metal snare it’s too high
He Looks like a captain from the German soccer team!...and for sure he knows how to tune a snare drum!!! Great video, helped a ton!
Remo Coated CS is how I roll. Very versatile snare head✌
In my 60 years of playing the Evans Dry Genera sounds and plays the best on my Ludwig 4x14 Supralite and my 6 1/2 x14 Super Sensitive. Rim shots are clear and sharp and there is no need for any type of muffling. Most importantly the head is easy to tune to get a perfect sound.
I like the coated pinstripe on that drum
Very very helpful! Thank you for the video. I like how well organized and clear it explains the differences.
My personal favorite is the ambassador coated or an Evans G1 coated. With these heads I can get the wide open sound or if I want a more focused sound I can use Drum Dots or Drum Rings depending on the room or the amount of muffling I need.
I found the Power Stroke 3 a good option if you intend to play a wide variety of styles. As a single ply the overtones are close to the classic Ambassador, but the added damping around the edge means you can get much more controlled sound with lower tunings etc.
The Evans Genera and Genera Dry are the analog in the Evans world. The Dry has tiny vent holes on the perimeter of the head that eliminates the overtones more than the Genera. I've used all three, all are good.
i like the power stroke 3.... almost no overtone.
I never understood the differences of these drumheads and I just knew I like remo over evans. This helped so much you explained it really well.
Why remo over evans? Just curious because I have been playing a long time and don't know the difference.
@@thomastucker5686 cuz more pros use it 😂😂😂 I don’t know the difference either lol 😂 I just like the sound control one
Thanks for the comparison. I am starting my study on drums, and I want to understand the difference between all the drum set elements to take the best step in buying my first one. I will keep an eye on your channel because it looks exactly what I want. Thanks!!!
I think my favorite drum shell for both live and recording, has to be the aluminum shell. I've heard many different brands and even though there are obvious differences between different depths, they all sound great for their respective sizes. For me, the perfect head for snare is the controlled sound coated black dot..This snare with the black dot coated is a perfect, all around and versatile snare sound.
Different heads for different drums and uses. For my very "standard" 5x14 maple, I go with a very "standard" ambassador. For my 6.5x14 steel snare, I use a powerstroke to tame the overtones a bit. For my 5.5x14 hammered steel drum, I use an ambassador X which gives it a little more durability and slightly dryer sound than a standard ambassador. I generally advise people to consider the ambassador as a benchmark and then decide how much and what type of overtone control and durability they need, and go heavier accordingly.
I'm using a HD Dry on my DW Brass 14 X 6.5 Snare drum. Just ordered a Powerstroke 77 (Remo) to try it out. The HD dry can "choke" the drum iof tuned too high. I do like High tuning. I am a 72 yo guy who resurrected playing drum after 50 Years [1969] in 2019. Tuning is new Art to me. I knew nothing of this way back when. Never too old to Learn. I posted about a "Weird" hack I discovered - by playing the Snare drum atop of my 16 X 14 Floor Tom. It was discovered by accident fooling around one day months ago. For whatever engineering reasons the sound affects - My snares (14 X 5.5 Maple and a 14 X 6.5 Brass) in a Positive way. This method cancels out any Snare Buzz from the Rack Toms too! I also tried this: in the Snare stand, I took a 16" Floor tom batter head placed it on top of the stand (only two arms will fit) and then the Snare on top of that - that improved the sound to my ear as well. Playing atop of the Floor Tom was best though. Lastly, doing this has educated me in Sound Engineering : a 14" deep Tom vs a 16" Tom is different as well!!
I love the coated ambassador X, classic warm sound with more durability.
Also love the coated cs real crisp with just enough overtones, I hated the pinstripe I bought once years ago, only good thing that lifeless head had was durability. That's it.
I have never played an emperor snare head and I am curious to try it out. I also read of a great drummer who records rock with super thin diplomat heads, just plays one song and replaces them every studio day!
The single ply coated Ambassador all the way (for my toms too)! Have tried many heads in the past on my Sonor Champion (+ Sonor snare 5x14 and my Supra 6.5x14), but kept coming back to it... since some 20 years now I have stuck with it and have never looked back. I love the way it sounds and how it plays... the way the sticks feel when I play Ambassadors - the responsiveness. I like the openess and I love the ring and when it's too much for the occasion there's nothing a piece of tape or my wallet or hanky can't fix. Great video, as usual!
Same! I used to muffle the crap out of my snare and get the thickest “overtone control” heads I could find then I embraced the overtones for what they were and play singly ply Aquarian heads on all my drums.
You really can't go wrong with a coated Ambassador. If the overtones are too much I control them with a moongel or a half a moongel or a drumdot. I love the Evans Genera Dry and HD Dry too which have tiny vents around the perimeter of the head to control overtones. But the Ambassador is the best all arounder.
I liked the Evans Genera Dry with the vents too. But ultimately I'm a lazy drummer who's not really fond of swapping heads all the time... so coated Ambassadors it is! ;)
Thank you. Great video. Love mine Coated Emperors on all drums for that nice vintage sound.
Definitely a cool choice - to be honest I didn’t expect the emperor being a good option on a snare but it definitely is.
I prefer it because I’m not fan of that open sound of single ply, but also don’t wan’t to put on controled heads, two ply showed to be ideal, if I want more mufled sound I can add those mute rings or gel on top.
Do yourself a favor and try an emperor x on ur snare.
As far as your test goes. i liked the 1st and last. Ambasador and pinstripe. But i also like clear for toms.
I'm quite a hard hitting drummer and I absolutely love the coated ambassador! Every time I try something else I go back to it, I just love it's throaty crack LOL Best head in my opinion
We totally agree with that!
I've been playing with the same snare head for at least 4 years now, still sounds good
👍🏻
Does it tho? Or have you just gotten used to the sound? A drumhead normally lasts a max of 6 months
@@rohayek8492 I don't play very often, I hit hard but to me the head is still good. It's a Remo controlled sound X, pretty durable... In the last few weeks I noticed it's getting weaker, maybe it's time to change it
Great stuff - love the direct comparison demo! The classic Ambassador then the Powerstroke to my ears 👏
same
Yep
Most appreciated. This video is all in all very helpful. I never know what heads to get.
I put a PowerStroke 3 in my snare and with just tunning it sounds great, didn't have to put any muffle
Very informative thank you great sounding demo! Nice Job!!!
Best video about drum heads i’ve ever seen. Very interesting features. You guys should make a video like this one with evans drum heads as well! Great job!
best video about remo snare drumheads.. i prefer the controlled sound coated..;)... it's good at funk, reggae even in hardcore..
This came just in time cuz I'm planning to change mine
Great! It‘s surprising how big the difference is!
Ok Shakespeare
Awesome thx man! Now it will be easier to decide what snare head to purchase!
I do wish Remo would make an effort to explain/demo their heads like you’ve just done - great video, and love your precise narrative. I’ve used both Remos and Evans in the past - right now I have Remo Emperors (clear) on all the tom-toms and the bass, with an Evans EC Reverse Dot on my Ludwig Supralite steel snare and an Evans G1 on my Sonor AQ2 maple snare. Will be switching to a Remo Powerstroke on the steel snare and a Remo Ambassador coated on the maple snare the next time I change. I also have a Ludwig Weather Master medium head that I might use on the Supralite at some point. And I want to get a Ludwig Silver Dot head (made by Remo, I think) for my Ludwig Black Beauty once I’ve worn out its factory Weather Master. These brands have slightly differing approaches to their specialized heads i.e., Remo Weather Kings, CS, Powerstrokes, Pinstripes and Evans EC series with their reverse dots and all that stuff. So there is probably no ‘best brand’ but overall I’ve found that Remo heads hold their tuning better and always sound great. Evans make some nice heads too - I like their G1s and Genera HD Dry heads. Remo Powerstroke 77s or Evans EC Reverse Dots on low-mid tuning are an easy way to get a ‘fat’ snare. I guess although I tend to prefer Remos I’m not biased. Remos are a global standard, though.
Great video which I found really helpful, think you've sold me on the emperor double ply. Love that crisp sound, and favouring hard rock/metal drumming myself the added durability is very welcome!
Well done! Remo Ambassador coated here!
this video is the perfect format of a comparison, my only observation is that on the overhead takes, tue use of ring shot accentuates more the shell and makes it hard to tell the difference between them
Very interesting..most useful to have a direct comparison on the same drum at same tuning. My favorite of this group is the Emperor. One type of snare drum batter head not reviewed is the 'faux calf' type heads..like Remo Fiberskyn and Evans '56 Calftone. I have an Evans '56 Calftone head on a wood shell 5 x 14" snare drum and it is perfect the venue I use it in..a church praise band. Great for jazz too.
Searched this kind of video for a long time. Thx
There’s PLENTY of snare head comparisons on YT. Check out the Timpano Percussion channel. Nothing wrong with this comparison. However it’s been done before.
Great explanation of each and well done with the structure too (meaning tuning each to the same level and having each played after their explanations and then also having the direct comparisons)!
I use Evans myself and specifically use hydraulic heads for my toms. Just to experiment I tried a hydraulic head on my DW Edge snare drum. It was quite different from the coated heads and predampened (reverse power dot) type heads I've tried in the past. Fun experiment and good sound but not nearly as versatile as actual snare heads.
I've been using Evans since the early 2000s but recently decided to change my snare out to a Remo ambassador. It sounds so nice but I do worry about durability. I remember a snare I bought had a Remo on it and I used it and loved it but it was the only drumhead I have ever had blow out on me during a gig. So I just stayed away for the longest time but I'm playing with lighter sticks now and also not playing heavy rock as much anymore.
Emperor coated or controlled sound is the way to go thanks for sharing this video
Very good in my boxes, I've already used emperror skyntone controlled sound ambassador
The Pinstripe sounds more open than the Emperor??
We like to say “it sings” more right?
The changes are very subtle. They wouldn't matter in most applications.
Excellent video. I learned so much. Thank you for sharing.
I like the sound of Ambassador Coated, Powerstroke 3, and Pinstripe here.
Nice info. You guys should make a video on how the bottom (response) head of a snare drum can change all those factors too. I used to place an ambassador coated for an open tone paired with a thicker response head. It controled the excesses very well without having to use muffles or special top heads.
Hello João! Thanks for your suggestion. We will consider doing this in one of our upcoming videos!
Did it also kill any snare wire response? When you say thicker do you mean a snareside specific head?
@@Assimilator702 for me just that excess of resonance while you’re playing on toms. But on the snare itself it was very good.
Thank you very much for that great comparison of REMO snare drumheads. Please do another with EVANS drumheads and at last a comparison with snare drumheads from both manufacturers. Thank you! With regards from Germany!
I’m liking the coated, pre-dampened Power Stroke 3!
Ambassadors coated and CS coated are the best heads for maple & Steel snares!
evans hd dry is definitely my favorite snare head same with the evans hybrid
You forget the remo cybernax that i am using since over more than 10 years on my main snare. It is used normally by the so called pipe snare drummers in the scottish bagpipe marching music but it sounds amazing on a regular snaredrum aswell. it gives the snare body but also good ammount of crack
I mentioned this on another of your videos but man, I changed the way I hear snare drum sounds as I played longer. I used to hate the overtones from the snare but now I absolutely love hearing the difference of my steel Sensitone snare vs my 12 ply Maple Masters Custom snare. When I get a bronze or brass shell, I think my snare drum collection will be complete. (Until I want aluminum or titanium! Lol)
One's snare drum collection can never be truly complete. There's always something new!
Evans ST Dry or HD Dry is my go to snare heads with Evans Hazy 300 snare side.
Bwoy having played with the double play Evans hybrid I don’t think I’d go back to a single ply though. Love the sound though
Liked most - emperor;
disliked - pinstripe.
Really great videos, guys! Thanx so much!
Awesome, thank you!
It’s a case of which is best for you, so there’s a spectrum of appeal, maybe demonstrate or mention ghost notes in a similar way to brushes, subtler techniques might fail on an inappropriate drumhead.
I use a coated Ambassador for its response and feel, that is without compression into a triggered sound-alike, tonal envelope.
This is the best comparison video I've seen!
Is it ok to take drum and snare sounds from youtube videos and use them in beats made in a daw?
Saludos desde México 🇲🇽 el controlled sound es mi favorito 👍🏼
I was always a coated Emperor X with the Emperor Hazy Snare on the bottom guy on all my snares. I liked the Black X too.
Controlled sound is my definite go to snare head
that emperor coated sounds really great😋
Love the controlled sound. Have you tried the Evans Genera HD Dry Drumhead? I want to try this next.
I have the P4 coated and it is very durable I might say and mind you that I play at church with it
Waw, I love the double drum heads, it's gives nice sounds
There is nothing quite like a coated emperor once it's broken in. Take some time or find sandpaper over some of the coating in the middle but it does marry the attack with ring of the ambassador, with a bit more durability.
As a beginner drummer I worry about my neighbors hearing me even tho they're a long ways away. I don't play after 10 to be respectful. As a new drummer I don't care about sound that much so which heads do you think would be best? I also thought about buying those moon gels.
Great video. I learned a lot from this. Thanks for sharing this
I noticed you are using th bass drum from the Yamaha Stage Custom Hip. I recently purchsed one of these kits. Yours sounds amazing. What head combination, muffling and tuning details did you use?
excelent, clear and simple , you roll!
I liked the last one and the one with circle in the center
Excellent explanations !! Great video. Thank you !
Best drum video of all time.
Nothing beats the coated ambassador for any type of music.
huge differences? I think the audible difference between the drumheads is incredibly small!:) Much smaller than I ever thought.
This is the best video ever.
Thank you very much dude!!!
I tried the Pinstripe recently, could not get it to sound good on my walnut snare. Too much ring and not enough brightness. I 'm going to try the Powerstroke or go back to the controlled sound !
Thanks for the video !
I noticed that you didn't talk about the powerstroke 4. Because I have have one for my '13 soundpercussion snare drum and it's great. Even though right now two of the lugs on the snare are broken but it makes a nice really low old school snare drum sound
Great idea ! Very educational. Keep up the awesomeness.
Excellent, thousands of thanks for this work !
I still love my Pinstripe on snare ! greetz from saarbroklyn/west germany
I love the sound of those high hats... what are they ?
Definitely going double ply