JimmyM
Diamond Member
I don't mean that in a snarky way, either. The title was total clickbait. I am in love with Ludwig snares just like most of the free world. I thought I'd be so cool showing up here a couple months ago with limited skillz and a killer vintage Standard to make people think I knew something, and everyone on here has at least one killer vintage Ludwig, and some of you have a couple dozen. Oh well...
But what amazes me is how in every single category of snare across the board, everyone has fantastic snares, but there are only a handful of snares that have woken me out of a stupor...all Ludwigs. King daddy of them all was a 6 1/2 x 14" newish Black Beauty with whatever type of shell's the most common. It was supplied on a road gig a few years back, and you get some good snares from backline companies but never a BB. It's the only snare I've ever heard that was as good as mine, and I prefer wood shell snares. And it doesn't seem to matter when they were designed...for my money, they've consistently made the best sounding snares in every shell category, and in most price categories. Price of admission to the club isn't bad at all if you're a smart shopper. I got mine free for Christmas when I was 7. Doubt you'll do that well out there but there's bargains.
YMMV, and I'm sure it does, but at the very least, we can agree that they've set many standards for snare drums and they're almost required when you show up to a bigtime master session for hire. So what is it about the construction of them that makes them stand out so much? What's the secret sauce? Is there a certain tonality they try to get out of every drum? I don't know if bearing edges have a lot to do with it, but other companies use their bearing edges, too. Often very similar construction methods, too. They make some great snares, but Ludwigs just have that little something. How do they get to it?
But what amazes me is how in every single category of snare across the board, everyone has fantastic snares, but there are only a handful of snares that have woken me out of a stupor...all Ludwigs. King daddy of them all was a 6 1/2 x 14" newish Black Beauty with whatever type of shell's the most common. It was supplied on a road gig a few years back, and you get some good snares from backline companies but never a BB. It's the only snare I've ever heard that was as good as mine, and I prefer wood shell snares. And it doesn't seem to matter when they were designed...for my money, they've consistently made the best sounding snares in every shell category, and in most price categories. Price of admission to the club isn't bad at all if you're a smart shopper. I got mine free for Christmas when I was 7. Doubt you'll do that well out there but there's bargains.
YMMV, and I'm sure it does, but at the very least, we can agree that they've set many standards for snare drums and they're almost required when you show up to a bigtime master session for hire. So what is it about the construction of them that makes them stand out so much? What's the secret sauce? Is there a certain tonality they try to get out of every drum? I don't know if bearing edges have a lot to do with it, but other companies use their bearing edges, too. Often very similar construction methods, too. They make some great snares, but Ludwigs just have that little something. How do they get to it?