by bongoron » Sun Jan 22, 2006 5:46 am
Thanks! My stage position is all the way to the band's left, on a raised platform. There is a keyboard several feet away, on my right, and a guitar in front on the lower level, also slightly to my right. Because he uses his amp as a monitor, it's pointed away from my position. I have a small hotspot monitor, and I can hear the keyboard off its internal speaker. Our stage is a semi-circle, so I'm right at the front, even though I'm on the rear upper level. Make sense? My monitor levels are very low, so my studio mike rejects them pretty well, as I tilt it toward the quinto. I play the bongos unmiked...they really pop! The mike gets the conga and the tumba too. I can tilt it up for singing when I have vocals, and it lowers the drum levels automatically from the new position. I have a mike under the tumba for bass impact effects on the subwoofer channel, but it isn't always used...just for the really powerful numbers. I also play tumba in the basement on Wednesday nights...unmiked with the stand on the hard floor. It carries in the hard room, even though the guitars are amped. I really like the schalloch drums...bang for buck-wise. I know they aren't the max, but they really perform well in my church, and I get alot of encouragement from everyone. When I don't play, like last week with the flu, I really hear about it from lots of folks. They were the most I could afford, and having three really gives me a versatile setup for worship music. I do two-handed bass tones as part of my pattern in many songs...conga on the left, and tumba on the right. It makes it easy to add more bass while maintaining my rhythm patterns. I can also do three drum patterns. I got them for 249 bucks on sale, so I'm very happy. I've moved them around alot for different "gigs" at the park and other places, and no sigh of any wear at all. An occasional dab of lanolin, and they keep on making great tones. I tune them for whatever the most prominent key is each sunday. Many of my parts are actual melodious drum parts using all three open tones to accompany a piano or guitar solo. I like that drumline. Djembe is good for me, too. I play it at outdoor gatherings around the fire, etc.