Why do Scandos rule so hard?

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Seriously. If they done nothing more than unleash a single Yngwie, it would have been enough. If they had done nothing more than unleash Yngwie and oversee the unholy whelping of the blackest of metal, it would have been enough. If they had done nothing more than unleash Yngwie, oversee the unholy whelping of the blackest of metal, and teach four cellos to shred with the apocalyptic fury of the darkest winter storm, it would have been enough...

Now, they have unravel'd the very warp and woof of matter and energy and pierced the final veil of rocking...

Dude, drüm picküps. DRÜM PICKÜPS!

Surely Mjolnir, the very hammer of Thor, is fallen into Midgard.

http://feed.proteinos.com/item/3075

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:04 (twenty years ago)

NANOTECH DRUMKITS
posted 08.07.05

A new nanotech plastic material will change the way drummers mike up their kits.

The material has been used to make a pickup - a device that acts as a detector and captures mechanical vibrations - which can be permanently installed on drums allowing drummers to plug in and play just like guitar players. The pickups, the first on the market for drums, will be launched in the UK this summer by Finnish company B-Band.

Pickups detect mechanical vibrations and convert them into an electronic signal that can be amplified and recorded. Traditional pickups, which are made of sensitive crystals, are not suitable for drums. Miking up a drum kit is complicated and time consuming, as each drum must be miked separately.

The microphones must be positioned so that each picks up the sound from the drum to which it is assigned, with the minimum possible bleed from adjacent drums, and where they are not likely to be hit by a stray drumstick.

The new pickups are permanently attached to the drums. After one installation, there is no further set-up required, no stands to set up and no microphones to position. And they only pick up the sound of the drum to which they are attached.

"Microphones take the sound from the air," says Heikki Raisanen, CEO of B-band. "The pickups take the sound directly from the body of the drum, solving the problem of leakage from the other drums.

"The sound is more natural than that obtained using microphones." The pickups are based on a very thin, elastic polymer film with tiny gas bubbles trapped inside.

The film is made of polypropylene, a plastic used in everything from chairs to plastic cups. The polypropylene is treated with a high-pressure gas to introduce the microscopic lens-type bubbles.

The film is charged and covered in electrodes and any change in the thickness of the film creates an electrical charge that can be measured. Hitting the drum produces vibrations that compress the tiny air bubbles, generating a current.

"Because it only picks up the sound of the drum it is on, it's simple to dial in a great sound quickly," according to Janne Vuori, a sound engineer for the heavy metal band 69 Eyes, who is testing the pickups.

"From one show to another, they are ready to go. They sound great and they're a real time saver," he said.

But Rory Horan, a sound engineer based in London said: "I would be concerned that the pickups may not be able to faithfully reproduce the sound of the metal wires on the snare drums. Conventional mics may still be the best option for those." [BBC News]

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:05 (twenty years ago)

http://www.moviepoopshoot.com/comics101/images/2003/june11/mjolnir_sinscription.jpg

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:06 (twenty years ago)

http://wiw.org/~jess/wp-uploads/thor.jpg

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:06 (twenty years ago)

haha..

SWEDEN will rule experimental house

donut e- (donut), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:07 (twenty years ago)

http://www.marvelvc.com.br/Vingadores/Thor/thor.jpg

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:07 (twenty years ago)

DRUM PICKUPS? i think i just peed myself a little and gurgled like a happy baby.

matlewis (matlewis), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:09 (twenty years ago)

Yeah - ease of setup/breakdown is awesome, but the universe of effects to which the drummer may soon have easy access is mindscrambling.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Friday, 8 July 2005 19:26 (twenty years ago)

"...the heavy metal band 69 Eyes, who is testing the pickups"

All that power, in the hands of one man... a man they call... Jussi.

http://www.69eyes.com/img/photos/2004_devils4.jpg

rogermexico (rogermexico), Saturday, 9 July 2005 16:42 (twenty years ago)

drum pickups!!
why didn't anyone think of this before?

m0stly clean (m0stly clean), Saturday, 9 July 2005 19:32 (twenty years ago)

four weeks pass...
What makes these interesting, aside from Jussi's come-blow-me pants, is their sensitivity to both force and location of impact.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Monday, 8 August 2005 22:28 (twenty years ago)

Please to forgive me, but what can drum pickups do that piezo-triggered drums can't?

I mean, you can betrigger yr acoustic drums and make them make any sound in the universe through the magic of MIDI and samplers and whatnot, right?

The Mad Puffin, Tuesday, 9 August 2005 14:27 (twenty years ago)

I think the notion is greater sensitivity to dynamics, "real-time" speed (no loss of e.g. rolls), and greater isolation from the other drum heads (no false triggers).

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 9 August 2005 15:24 (twenty years ago)


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