A few bodhran questions
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2018 7:47 pm
Hi, everybody. Haven't been around here for a long time. I see that the rubber room has gone away...the toxic waste cleanup must have cost a fortune. And I'm glad that the musical hybrid and flange/hummus forums are still going strong.
Anyway. I've given up trying to re-head my old Halpin tunable bodhran. It will never be restored to its former glory. Moment of silence, please.
OK. A few questions.
Does anyone know anything about Robin Shackleton/Sylvan Temple drums? I've discussed design with him; I like his philosophy, and his drums look beautifully made and unique. But it's a lot of coin to slap down on a relative unknown. I'm inclined to pay my money and take my chances, but if anybody has played his drums I'd love to know your thoughts. http://www.sylvantemple.ca/products/Bodhran.html
As far as what I'm shopping for: can anyone tell me a bit about the older-type, wide-and-shallow drums vs. the newer style, narrow-and-deep drums? I have only played on the former, and I'm curious about the latter. How is the sound/playability different? What diameter should I go for in a deeper drum like this? I was going for a 16x6", but I think that is going to be a HUGE drum, and I'm not sure how it's going to sit on my leg at that size. No chance to try them out, so any purchase is going to be an educated guess. Any thoughts?
Robin does a cool steam bending thing that makes the shell concave. It looks great and would probably sit on the leg nicely. Any experience or recommendation on concave shells? It looks like a reasonable idea, but no one else is doing it, and I wonder if there's a reason for that.
If it helps with your recommendations, I pretty much do old-school, Kerry-style accompanying, mostly for my own whistle playing. I'm not really interested in John Joe Kelly-style virtuosity at this stage in the game, but I do like to throw in some triplets and move the pitch around quite a bit.
I have very little opportunity to try out different drums here in Nowhere, Wyoming, so I would appreciate any help. Thank you!
Thomas
Anyway. I've given up trying to re-head my old Halpin tunable bodhran. It will never be restored to its former glory. Moment of silence, please.
OK. A few questions.
Does anyone know anything about Robin Shackleton/Sylvan Temple drums? I've discussed design with him; I like his philosophy, and his drums look beautifully made and unique. But it's a lot of coin to slap down on a relative unknown. I'm inclined to pay my money and take my chances, but if anybody has played his drums I'd love to know your thoughts. http://www.sylvantemple.ca/products/Bodhran.html
As far as what I'm shopping for: can anyone tell me a bit about the older-type, wide-and-shallow drums vs. the newer style, narrow-and-deep drums? I have only played on the former, and I'm curious about the latter. How is the sound/playability different? What diameter should I go for in a deeper drum like this? I was going for a 16x6", but I think that is going to be a HUGE drum, and I'm not sure how it's going to sit on my leg at that size. No chance to try them out, so any purchase is going to be an educated guess. Any thoughts?
Robin does a cool steam bending thing that makes the shell concave. It looks great and would probably sit on the leg nicely. Any experience or recommendation on concave shells? It looks like a reasonable idea, but no one else is doing it, and I wonder if there's a reason for that.
If it helps with your recommendations, I pretty much do old-school, Kerry-style accompanying, mostly for my own whistle playing. I'm not really interested in John Joe Kelly-style virtuosity at this stage in the game, but I do like to throw in some triplets and move the pitch around quite a bit.
I have very little opportunity to try out different drums here in Nowhere, Wyoming, so I would appreciate any help. Thank you!
Thomas