So many great and silly cymbals. - the dry master of bonk - the egg - the plastic cymbals from the printer - the steel cymbal with pure radiator slapping power - the thicc boi decapitator
As someone who knows nothing about drums but has tons of drummer mates, this is such a great channel for me. I can finally understand what they're all saying and join in. Thanks Wade!
Yes good but the crashes are distracting. I'd rather hear them later on. I find it difficult to compare the riding beats. The last one is a higher pitch so why bother adding all that weight.
I don’t know why but when you said “let’s hear them all together” I was fully expecting to hear every cymbal played all at once on top of one another in a cacophony of sound.
yea its baffling how different it sounds from the 70s and 90s version yet branded similarly. It sounds so good and i wonder why they'd release the 90s version like that afterwards. Did people want the original sound? Did they want to use less material? It's like they perfected it in the 80s but then said nope
I don't understand why he is even attempting and demonstrating crashes with an Earth Ride. It's like trying a motocross with an 18 wheeler. I would never expect to get a crash out of an Earth Ride. You are spoiled with your 20" K Custom that makes the most lovely sounds. (I have one too) On the other end of the spectrum is My 18" Kerope Ride which is a complete wash out in comparison. The think about the K Custom though, is it doesn't cut through like the Earth Ride. I don't understand comparing apples to oranges.
Hearing you bring up Billy Cobham really took me back to my childhood. My old man loves his music, and I spent a good chunk of my teens listening to Crosswinds because of my dad. It’s one of my favorite jazz fusion albums ever, along with Spectrum. Thank you so much Wade.
Chad Szeliga of Breaking Benjamin used a 20" earth ride in a brilliant finish that he had custom made for him. Iconic songs with ride bell parts like "i will not bow" were made with this ride
I love my 20” earth ride. It’s heavy and cuts through all the guitars with ease. Mine is an 80’s (no serial number). And it’s a ride, no crashing here. I actually crash it for a “gong” sound. It’s a beauty and beauty is in the eye of the beholder. 😊
Can we just appreciate how awesome the editing of the sample great is? Ya old mate is so flipping a good drummer, that the beat never changes and it looks perfect too.
Don't wanna burst your "can we just appreciate" bubble (that's a lie, I strongly dislike the phrase when used here), but it's really just a matter of a steady camera and basic video editing knowledge. I used to edit a ton.
I rewatch the entirety of this channel in preparation for the next video, and i'll keep doing it until i'm in a constant loop of watching The Drum Thing videos
Yes but the crash sounds that start each one make it harder to compare the ride beats. (And they aren't designed to crash anyway). I think it'd be much better to have edited and compared the ride beats separately from the crash hits.
I first experienced the Earth Ride in 1991, when I went in to record my first ever demo. At the time I was using the Pearl starter cymbals I'd bought with my first kit, and I wanted something better to record with, so I asked a drummer mate if I could borrow a decent ride. He lent me a 20" Brilliant Earth Ride, and as soon as I hit the thing for the first time I fell in love. I went out and bought one a couple of weeks later. It's still the only ride I use - in fact it's the only cymbal that appears on every recording I ever did. I love the ping, the thunderous buildup when you play with the flat of the stick, the clang of the bell...the thing is a monster. There's something primeval about it, the sheer weight, power and physicality of the thing...
I've ordered a 22" Earth Brilliant in '89...Took 9 months for Zildjian to deliver it.... Used it for 20+ years as my only ride(rock/blues), and loved it.... Still dig it out on occasion.... Glorious!!
The original Z Custom rides were heavy as frak too. They had a bit of a similar sound to the Earth Rides. I had one of those at one point and it sounded really cool.
I love the way Wade uses his cymbals. He doesn't care if it's the most brutal, thick, and loud rock cymbal, He's still gonna play it like it's a jazz one. Love the little elevator beat at 4:29 !
The Earth Ride was my first replacement of the original Scimitar Bronze Rock Ride I got along with my first drum set. Never regretted it a bit. Earth Ride rules. I love it. Just a secret weapon that nobody is prepared for 💥
I had a 22" Brilliant Earth ride, it was awesome. Heavy cymbal too. I bought it because Simon Phillips played one back in the 70's/80's. Dennis Chambers also played one on John Scofield's "Loud Jazz", that bell cut through everything. I sold it years ago, I wish I kept it.
the bell sound on the 80's earth ride would be so fucking brilliant for black metal or anything that does a lot of bell accents, holy shit. it's so gongy and church-like
i want one of these lmao, i love playing metal also, absolutely love you man, im a huge drum nerd, but dont know where to find a lot of this info, so thank for putting so much on youtube!
I cant help but just pay attention to the huge and loud reverb of the cymbals, cause im in band and i play french horn and have to listen for every other instrument
My drum teacher in middle school had one of these. It was the ride cymbal on his student kit. The crash he paired it with: 16" A Paper Thin Crash. talk about contrast
I remember randomly coming across this beast in a music store in the early 80s...original raw finish..it amazed me as i struck it and got the heavy ting I like... and the name is cool as well....I've never forgot that brief encounter.
Well am learning there is far more to drum kits than I ever thought possible, it's amazing and educational, wish my music teacher at school had your enthusiasm
I remember reading an interview with John Stanier, drummer for Helmet. Then seeing them live. Amazing experience. He used "regular" ride cymbals for crashes, and used a 22" Earth for his ride because he played so hard and hit with so much power that was the only way he wouldn't break cymbals every gig. Got him to autograph a broken drumstick from that show too. Lost it many years ago, but... what a show!
Every time you hit one of these different cymbals I can't help but laugh, even though I know nothing of drums besides this channel! That tonk sound when you smack it is priceless tho.
I the knowledge obtained from this channel to impress the cute music teacher at my community center and now I am in deep Frank turds SOO KEEP EM COMING!
I bought a Paiste RUDE 22 inch The Reign ride cymbal a few months back. Weighs about 3.8 kg. Though I've played drums as a hobby for about 16 years, I'm not actually well-versed in any technical stuff, I mostly just wing it. Wanted a cymbal that sounded like what Slayer had on their Reign In Blood album, so The Reign made the most perfect sense. I did not expect it to weigh as much as it did when it arrived. And then I stumble upon this video where my mans showcases a 4.5 kg beast with a great sound. Love it.
Personally I prefer that sound. If I want a crash sound I use a crash or crash/ride. I really love a crisp bell and a high ting sound. That’s what makes a ride stand out especially in louder rock music. It really cut through.
@Lord of Diamonds blast beats require that you play your bass drum really hard and fast, which is a skill I don't think most jazz players spend a lot of time practicing.
@@HrKCA have you not seen him play? his right foot and power hand are both ridiculously fast, not to mention he has the excellent limb independence that comes with jazz training. he can sound like he's got two bass drums with just one foot, that's how fast he is. and it's not unique to just him, either. many great metal drummers had jazz/university training backgrounds, like Mike Portnoy and Danny Carey
So in conclusion, the more a cymbal has the chonk, the more is has the bonk
I like that analogy
HAHAHA thats great
Just like the gong
Chonk equals bonk.
real
So many great and silly cymbals.
- the dry master of bonk
- the egg
- the plastic cymbals from the printer
- the steel cymbal with pure radiator slapping power
- the thicc boi decapitator
don't forget the STOP
cashies peace cymbal
@@pigfish99 I opened the replies to this comment *specifically* to see whether ol' mate STOP sign was mentioned.
I was not disappointed.
And the STOP signbal
Radiator slapping power
Honestly, Boring Time is actually where I learn a lot of drums. Please, more Boring Time!
Yeah, honestly it is not boring at all. I love hearing someone talk about something they're passionate about.
we need an entire episode of boring time
We need an actual Boring Time channel.
Agreed, more boring time.
give me THIRTY MINUTES of boring time, i will enjoy it all
As someone who knows nothing about drums but has tons of drummer mates, this is such a great channel for me. I can finally understand what they're all saying and join in. Thanks Wade!
As someone who knows nothing about drums and has no drummer friends, this is still a great channel.
@@SarcasticDragonGaming defo
Buy yourself a kit. It's that easy to become a drummer. One of us,one of us, one of ussss
As someone who drums nothing about friends and has no knows who drummer. I still enjoy this channel.
So…you’re a bass player?
It's nice to see that the museum has bronze age shields besides the drum stuff.
That thing would definitely stop an arrow 🤣
Spartan shield 80% wood 20% bronze .
@@h0lycrap Yes, hell, it might stop a bullet! But it would also stop a soldier carrying it for very long. Shields are mostly wood for a reason.
--*slaps roof of Earth Ride*-- you can fit so much ping inside this bad boy
You spelled tonk wrong
@@danielsim8211 🤣
You wouldn't believe how many babies this baby could baby?
Only ping louder is an m1 garand ejecting its clip
5:30 man those transitions are CLEAN
I don’t think it’s too hard since it’s a fast movement in the same general area, but doesn’t change the facts that it’s clean af
Yes good but the crashes are distracting. I'd rather hear them later on. I find it difficult to compare the riding beats. The last one is a higher pitch so why bother adding all that weight.
i love how the 70s and 90s versions crash awfully, but the 80s one is so heavy that it just doesn't crash at all
Manhole cover!
I don’t know why but when you said “let’s hear them all together” I was fully expecting to hear every cymbal played all at once on top of one another in a cacophony of sound.
I was thinking "huh, that's neat to know but Earth Cymbals probably aren't for me" then the brilliant 80s one kicked in and I fell in love
that 80's earth ride sounds AMAZING, compared to the other two. no wonder you like playing with it, despite the weight!
I agree, the 80's version is the best of the lot.
yea its baffling how different it sounds from the 70s and 90s version yet branded similarly. It sounds so good and i wonder why they'd release the 90s version like that afterwards. Did people want the original sound? Did they want to use less material? It's like they perfected it in the 80s but then said nope
As a mortal, I am cowering.
As a cow, I am mortaring.
@@endig4501wat
@@Tha-mountain you will never understand
the 4.5kg earth ride is absolutely beautiful and I love it, truthfully. So colorful and full to the brim with tonality
Those cymbal crash transitions near the end we're just *chef's kiss* MAGNIFICENT
I don't understand why he is even attempting and demonstrating crashes with an Earth Ride. It's like trying a motocross with an 18 wheeler. I would never expect to get a crash out of an Earth Ride. You are spoiled with your 20" K Custom that makes the most lovely sounds. (I have one too) On the other end of the spectrum is My 18" Kerope Ride which is a complete wash out in comparison. The think about the K Custom though, is it doesn't cut through like the Earth Ride. I don't understand comparing apples to oranges.
For the American units the earth ride nearly weighs 8 pounds.
Or 38 1/2 bananas
@@HappyBeezerStudios or 352 boolets
and the 80s one is 10 lbs
Weird how cymbals always seem to be measured weight in grams, but always measured diameter in inches.
@@AfferbeckBeats like bike wheels
Hearing you bring up Billy Cobham really took me back to my childhood. My old man loves his music, and I spent a good chunk of my teens listening to Crosswinds because of my dad. It’s one of my favorite jazz fusion albums ever, along with Spectrum. Thank you so much Wade.
I have the 70s version and have been playing it since the 80s. I love it and engineers fear it. PERFECT!
Heaviest ride cymbal i've played is probably the Sabian Paragon Ride.... that thing weighed a tonne and ping'd so hard. No wonder Neil Peart loved it.
My favorite was the 70s model, what an amazing tone! I want one just so I can hit it and listen to the wash of overtones
Chad Szeliga of Breaking Benjamin used a 20" earth ride in a brilliant finish that he had custom made for him. Iconic songs with ride bell parts like "i will not bow" were made with this ride
That editing at the end, switching between each of the symbols was really clean. Just wanted to put that out there. Keep up the good work man 👍
I love my 20” earth ride. It’s heavy and cuts through all the guitars with ease. Mine is an 80’s (no serial number). And it’s a ride, no crashing here. I actually crash it for a “gong” sound. It’s a beauty and beauty is in the eye of the beholder. 😊
Can we just appreciate how awesome the editing of the sample great is? Ya old mate is so flipping a good drummer, that the beat never changes and it looks perfect too.
Don't wanna burst your "can we just appreciate" bubble (that's a lie, I strongly dislike the phrase when used here), but it's really just a matter of a steady camera and basic video editing knowledge. I used to edit a ton.
When boring time is a million times more fun than watching "compulsory training" videos in work
That 80's one has that sustain goin' for it.
Your blasts are solid dude! The best bell is one the 90's one imo. KILLER!!🤘🤘🤘
Honestly I think the Earth ride sounds great. That darkness/short sustain is exactly what I look for in a ride.
The demo of all of them at the end almost sounded like it had chord changes happening with each cymbal sounder deeper than the last
I feel like that 80s Earth Ride is the drummer's answer to the car guy's "no replacement for displacement"
im so drunk right now thankl you for postinf this 15 seconds ago oh myyyyyy
Those blast beats were unexpected and NICE.
I absolutely craved that blast beat, these cymbals sound best for agressive and fast playing imo
@@matthammond3563 in that case look at the last video I posted, it has some blastbeats on a 22" Brilliant earth ride.
I rewatch the entirety of this channel in preparation for the next video, and i'll keep doing it until i'm in a constant loop of watching The Drum Thing videos
They way you edit the final run through all of the cymbals back to back is incredibly well done
Yes but the crash sounds that start each one make it harder to compare the ride beats. (And they aren't designed to crash anyway). I think it'd be much better to have edited and compared the ride beats separately from the crash hits.
The greatest ride Zildjian ever made imo. Have 20" and 22" brilliants in my collection. For rock and metal it's virtually unmatched.
I was thinking this as i watched the video, the 22” is 😩😩😩
I first experienced the Earth Ride in 1991, when I went in to record my first ever demo. At the time I was using the Pearl starter cymbals I'd bought with my first kit, and I wanted something better to record with, so I asked a drummer mate if I could borrow a decent ride. He lent me a 20" Brilliant Earth Ride, and as soon as I hit the thing for the first time I fell in love. I went out and bought one a couple of weeks later. It's still the only ride I use - in fact it's the only cymbal that appears on every recording I ever did. I love the ping, the thunderous buildup when you play with the flat of the stick, the clang of the bell...the thing is a monster. There's something primeval about it, the sheer weight, power and physicality of the thing...
I've ordered a 22" Earth Brilliant in '89...Took 9 months for Zildjian to deliver it.... Used it for 20+ years as my only ride(rock/blues), and loved it.... Still dig it out on occasion.... Glorious!!
The original Z Custom rides were heavy as frak too. They had a bit of a similar sound to the Earth Rides. I had one of those at one point and it sounded really cool.
Lovely cymbal for heavy music. Very similar to the Sabian Leopard ride, my favourite for blast beats!
I knew it straight away from the intro, editing and voice that this dude is DankPods! Dawg it’s awesome to see this dude to have a drum channel!
I love the way Wade uses his cymbals. He doesn't care if it's the most brutal, thick, and loud rock cymbal, He's still gonna play it like it's a jazz one. Love the little elevator beat at 4:29 !
Billy Cobham is such a well known legend, but still manages to be underrated!
Those all have such unique sound! 🤘
Man thats the best sounding manhole cover Ive ever heard!!
the Earth Ride sounds like straight up OLDER, like it has it's own built in vinyl effect or something, i love it, thank you for making this
This ride really reminds me of the last album from bolt thrower where it’s just full of beautiful ride sounds
The clip of Billy playing on the gong drum @2:30 sounds like a commercial airplane taking off.
What these videos really taught me is what an absolute gem that 20" custom dark ride is.
i love that the smell of boring time doesn't need to be addressed anymore
Yes because for real drummers it’s actually more like “EXTRA FUN TIME”.
I never would have thought a heavier cymbal would have sounded better than a less heavier cymbal. 😂 That 4.5kg one is amazing!
This one sounds great!
Reminds me of my absurdly dirty, dented 80-94 ping ride
The Earth Ride was my first replacement of the original Scimitar Bronze Rock Ride I got along with my first drum set. Never regretted it a bit. Earth Ride rules. I love it. Just a secret weapon that nobody is prepared for 💥
I had a 22" Brilliant Earth ride, it was awesome. Heavy cymbal too. I bought it because Simon Phillips played one back in the 70's/80's. Dennis Chambers also played one on John Scofield's "Loud Jazz", that bell cut through everything. I sold it years ago, I wish I kept it.
Im not even a drummer and I watch these videos because theyre so entertaining and fun (Im a guitarist and amateur audio engineer)
- T H I C C - Z I L D J I E -
Fun how he bonks all three of the earth rides when setting them down or turning the around, but gently caresses his dark ride
This is one of the best cymbal comparison videos I’ve ever seen. Thank you for this
90s Earth Ride - A Fine Boi
70s Earth Ride - A HECCIN CHONKER
80s Earth Ride - *OH LAWD HE COMIN'*
The 24” Z Heavy Power ride weighs something like 13lb-14lb, it’s insane. I own two 😁
mine weighs 6.5 kgs
i love each time i get a notification that you posted on either channels
The "tonk" got a solid nostril exhale from me. Literally 5 seconds in and already 10/10.
It’s got a nice bell sound though
They really do.
Damn boi he *THICC*
That 4.5 is such a monster I love that rich sound so lovely
Thank you so much for including blast beats for us death metal knuckle draggers
Oh yea the thicc boi episode
Are we sure that's still a cymbal and not just a small gong?
That's gonna be the next thing in drumming: strapping gongs to your kit
@@HappyBeezerStudios Nicko McBrain :P
I love the 80s one. It's mysterious, it looks ominous, and the sound is... it's mesmerizing. I want it.
the bell sound on the 80's earth ride would be so fucking brilliant for black metal or anything that does a lot of bell accents, holy shit. it's so gongy and church-like
These guys are starting to get into bell territory with their sound, you might as well make a drum out of those guys to make the noisiest damn thing
Me: “My 1981 gibson is heavy
Dankpods: “hold my ride, mate”
i want one of these lmao, i love playing metal
also, absolutely love you man, im a huge drum nerd, but dont know where to find a lot of this info, so thank for putting so much on youtube!
I love the way it sounds honestly
Is it weird that I like boring time
What a nice and jazzy sound ride, one of the best rides that I have listened to in my life and easily one of my favourite bell pings of all time.
woke up at 7 am today, first thing I did was watch this. brilliant start to an otherwise garbage day. cheers wade
I cant help but just pay attention to the huge and loud reverb of the cymbals, cause im in band and i play french horn and have to listen for every other instrument
My drum teacher in middle school had one of these. It was the ride cymbal on his student kit. The crash he paired it with: 16" A Paper Thin Crash. talk about contrast
the 80s earth ride really is like a perfect blast beat ride. all that thiccness has got to give you more rebound for that speed!
Whenever he slaps the cymbal! That’s my favorite part!
I've played an earth ride for over a decade, my favorite ride ever
I'm learning more about drums/cymbals that I need to... and I LOVE IT
I remember randomly coming across this beast in a music store in the early 80s...original raw finish..it amazed me as i struck it and got the heavy ting I like... and the name is cool as well....I've never forgot that brief encounter.
Well am learning there is far more to drum kits than I ever thought possible, it's amazing and educational, wish my music teacher at school had your enthusiasm
I remember reading an interview with John Stanier, drummer for Helmet. Then seeing them live. Amazing experience. He used "regular" ride cymbals for crashes, and used a 22" Earth for his ride because he played so hard and hit with so much power that was the only way he wouldn't break cymbals every gig. Got him to autograph a broken drumstick from that show too. Lost it many years ago, but... what a show!
Every time you hit one of these different cymbals I can't help but laugh, even though I know nothing of drums besides this channel! That tonk sound when you smack it is priceless tho.
I don't even play drums, but I could listen to this guy talk about cymbals all day.
i love the constant drone of the 80s one
I love the big noise circles
My exact ride I use to play metal. It’s perfect with absolute definition with a nylon tip stick. I use a 22” one. Just in love with it.
that 90s model has so much bonk, it sounds like one of my old B8 rides, absolute bonk quality
Honestly I am always super impressed with anyone that has the coordination to play drums well.
Also, boring time is fun. More boring time please.
Just loving this channel. 😎
Those Earth Rides are out of this world!!!
I the knowledge obtained from this channel to impress the cute music teacher at my community center and now I am in deep Frank turds SOO KEEP EM COMING!
that 80s ride sounds smooth like butter
loving the new setup
the red backdrop holds up well on video
the blast beat section made me smile (im a cultured metalhead)
I bought a Paiste RUDE 22 inch The Reign ride cymbal a few months back. Weighs about 3.8 kg. Though I've played drums as a hobby for about 16 years, I'm not actually well-versed in any technical stuff, I mostly just wing it. Wanted a cymbal that sounded like what Slayer had on their Reign In Blood album, so The Reign made the most perfect sense. I did not expect it to weigh as much as it did when it arrived.
And then I stumble upon this video where my mans showcases a 4.5 kg beast with a great sound. Love it.
Personally I prefer that sound. If I want a crash sound I use a crash or crash/ride. I really love a crisp bell and a high ting sound. That’s what makes a ride stand out especially in louder rock music. It really cut through.
never thought I would see this bloke play blast beats. What a legend
jazz trained people can play anything. no matter what style of music you try, if you can play at the level required for jazz, you'll be able to do it
@Lord of Diamonds blast beats require that you play your bass drum really hard and fast, which is a skill I don't think most jazz players spend a lot of time practicing.
@@HrKCA have you not seen him play? his right foot and power hand are both ridiculously fast, not to mention he has the excellent limb independence that comes with jazz training. he can sound like he's got two bass drums with just one foot, that's how fast he is. and it's not unique to just him, either. many great metal drummers had jazz/university training backgrounds, like Mike Portnoy and Danny Carey