where can i buy a nice remo

Just for giggles
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby bubudi » Thu Jun 11, 2009 3:28 am

that link is from one of our members, renki from helsinki. he's categorized his videos by rhythm. nice idea.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby Kendall » Fri Dec 04, 2009 5:30 pm

On the other hand... :)

If a REMO Signature/key/fiberskin is played in the same manner as an African/wood/skin/traditional then the sound will certainly not be the same and certainly not sound so good...
But, this would be like playing a modern synthesizer with the same technique as used when playing a concert Grand Piano. Two different machines. Two different playing styles to bring out the beauty of each.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby wonderwebb » Tue Dec 28, 2010 9:39 pm

could not a nice remo but got a superb toca if you are still looking

:D
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby bubudi » Wed Dec 29, 2010 6:03 am

love the nose rub at the beginning of that video! almost a prelude to his musical skills!
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby ubba » Sun May 15, 2011 7:54 pm

zackaa05 wrote:I definitely hear what you guys are saying, and where the rubs are. -- thanks for the vids, I'm a big fan of David K. as well, I actually got turned on to Djembe AFTER becoming obsessed with frame drums :-)

Z

I too was obsessed with David K, he's from Germany and I loved his frame drum playing, from there I went to djembe. I just played a synthetic nuskyn djembe and a traditional W. African shell and to tell you the truth I was quite impressed with it, great for playing outdoors. I live in California, high desert and we have a lot of fluctuations in temperature and fog rolls in now and then. Up in the mountains and at the side of the road are my favorite places to play and with nuskyn I don't have to worry about the head splitting just when I'm having loads of fun. Yes, I agree that goat skin and cow are much preferred but dang, I'm gonna git me one of those nuskyn heads on a traditional W. African drum.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby e2c » Mon May 16, 2011 12:27 am

Our weather here (East Coast, mid-Atlantic states) has been so humid and rainy for the past month and a half that I'm thinking you've got a good point there, ubba! :)
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby juggernaut » Sun Dec 25, 2011 4:38 am

I'm new to this and see the elitist attitude and it is a definite turn off.I feel that we should be promoting the drumming not putting anyone or their drum down. I don't feel that I'll be comfortable playing with or learning from people that hate the way my drum sounds. I bought mine for three reasons. One is I live in a very wet climate so I wanted a drum that was easy to maintain.Two, price my drum cost me 150 usd and I could barely afford that. Three I like the way it sounds I'll enjoy playing and learning on my drum.And I don't think I'll be on this site as much as I hoped to. This music came from humble beginnings and now look at the attitude that people have.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby michi » Sun Dec 25, 2011 8:49 am

juggernaut wrote:I'm new to this and see the elitist attitude and it is a definite turn off.

Hi,

don't let your drum deter you from drumming! What matters is the drummer, not the drum!

Here is an image of the first djembe I ever owned. I still own it:

IMG_0316.JPG
Michi's first djembe
IMG_0316.JPG (90.83 KiB) Viewed 39 times

I laced it up and skinned it myself. (That is still the same skin on it, almost eight years later.) I was very proud of my work and my new drum then.

That drum has a diameter of 9.5 inches and is 19 inches tall. That's not really a djembe. At best, it would qualify as a child's drum. It doesn't sound very good (certainly nothing like a traditional genuine djembe), but that is the drum that got me started on my journey. Without it it, I may well have never found drumming at all. Now, almost eight years later, I own a hole bunch of top-class djembes, have been to Africa twice, have been teaching for nearly three years, have been performing, and have met a number of people who have become very close friends. It is fair to say that this first drum has changed my life more profoundly than I ever would have believed possible.

There are many ways to start this journey and, for most people, it does not start with a traditional djembe made in West Africa.

I bought mine for three reasons. One is I live in a very wet climate so I wanted a drum that was easy to maintain.Two, price my drum cost me 150 usd and I could barely afford that. Three I like the way it sounds I'll enjoy playing and learning on my drum.

You do not need an expensive drum to enjoy it. And a synthetic skin can make sense in wet climates, where goat skins don't fare at all well. My first drum cost about the same, and it was quite likely the best expenditure I've ever made in my entire life.

And I don't think I'll be on this site as much as I hoped to. This music came from humble beginnings and now look at the attitude that people have.

You have to accept that a Remo will not sound like a traditional djembe. That's just how it is. (It's not reasonable to expect a $150 drum to sound as good as a $700 one.)

What people here object to more than anything else (I believe) is that the Remo drums are sold as djembes even though they have only a passing resemblance to the traditional instrument. (It's a little like calling a 30cm long plastic guitar a "guitar". It's sort of a guitar, but not quite.)

But it does not matter. If the djembe decides to speak to you, it will speak to you no matter what drum you have.

My suggestion would be to hang around, read and learn, and contribute to the forum. There are many members here who are extremely helpful and knowledgeable. Rather than closing your mind, keep it open, and enjoy your drum!

One of the most rewarding things you could do for yourself is to try and find a teacher in your area. Go to classes for a while, learn the traditional music, and see what it does to you. If the djembe grabs you and ignites your passion, you will eventually trade up to a better drum. (And you may well keep trading up for many more years to come. The second djembe isn't the final one for most people.)

If that is what happens, that first Remo of yours will always have a special place in your heart. And, ten years down the track, you may well thank the djembe gods for having sent that first Remo your way!

Cheers,

Michi.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby EvanP » Mon Dec 26, 2011 3:55 am

Well said Michi.

Juggernaut, you'll find Clifford and most (if not all) of the folks in the djembe scene in Portland to be great down-to-earth folks focused on the music and not the tools. One of the better drummers in Clifford's performance class last summer played a Remo and he had some amazing solos. I got started with an inexpensive Ghanaian djembe that grabbed my heart. I've since moved on to a Malian drum, but I got a chance to play the drum that started it all for me a couple weeks ago and it still made me smile.

Looking forward to hooking up with you when I get back.
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Re: where can i buy a nice remo

Postby juggernaut » Mon Dec 26, 2011 11:14 pm

Thanks Ill try in the future to not be so thin skinned
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