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Drori Mondlak Never Taking
The Middle Ground Sometimes the truth about
drums will come to Drori Mondlak
at night. He'll stay up late, long
after the gig, changing heads and tuning. Sometimes it will come to him
during a jog in
the forest, away from inner-city New York. Knowing a
few truths lends urgency to his work, urgency you hear plainly on
jazz
guitarist Cary DeNigris's album Between The Lines.
Says Mondlak, "Engineers don't recognize the
importance of the
cymbals to music. The true sound of cymbals has to ring out. For Cary's
album, we used overheads
way up in the air, a snare mic', a bass drum
mic', and that's it - no tom mic's at all."
While
Mondlak scrounges for old cymbals like the rest of us - K
Zildjians, older Sabian HHs, and Paiste 602s - he is equally adamant
that
his drums growl in low frequencies. "Many jazz drummers talk about how
the old Gretsch drums are so fantastic," he
says. "Then they tighten
them to death and choke them. Sometimes their bass drum is higher than
their
toms!"
Born of a Polish father and English mother in Mexico City,
Mondlak recalls an insight offered by Lennie
Tristano the day before
the famous pianist passed away. "Lennie said to me, 'With a name like
that, two things are
going to happen to you. Either nobody's going to
know you, or everybody's going to know you. There's no
in-between!'"
T. Bruce
Wittet
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