$1000 Conga Drum - Inside Skin On Skin
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- What does a $1000 conga drum sound like? This lesson is all about disocvering what makes a conga great and how Skin on Skin became one of the most highly regarded names in the business. Learn how to choose a conga drum when buying as well as how to make your congas sound better. I even give you a short tour of the Skin on Skin factory in Brookly, NY. Like this video? Please help us produce more videos like this by supporting our channel: Visit and join at / kalani
Yo fabrico Tambores. Es un arte apasionante y difícil de realizar ;)
Sobre todo si en tu región hay escasez de materiales ;)
Saludos desde Arica Chile
Hi, this is Jay’s daughter, Cara :-)What a great video, glad I found it!
Wonderful! Please let him know! Thanks for stopping by the channel. Will post more with SOS in the future.
Cara Bereck Levy Is he still making drums?
Nelson Elias No, Jay retired.
Cara Bereck Levy, your father is a master craftsman! It took me an early morning trip to Staten Island 4 yrs ago to find them, but I consider myself lucky to own two of your father's drums. Great video!
Mike G if ever you want to Sell the SKIN ON SKIN CONGAS that you own Please find me tommydedrum@gmail.com
Thank you
nice story with Skin on Skin. There are one or two similarities with the owner of Moperc. Michel was a construction worker and I believe his father was a steel worker. Michel still makes Moperc drums by hand. The staves are not steam bent, but instead they are cut to shape, and Moperc drums are heavier than most other drums.
the inside metal part of the drum is call an " alma" ( soul in Spanish ) 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
There are no bad congas just bad conga players. You never forget your first. Mine was a 1972 Lp conga, when they were made in Palisaides New York. Tumbadora was next followed by a quinto. Then later a wood Salsa model quinto by Lp. Then my last was a cherry colored, mahogany quinto made by Gon Bops. When the day came that my playing was over my beautiful wife repurposed my Gon bop quinto into a lamp stand which 25 years later sits next to her piano. Fun memories.
His oak drums were the loudest and the heaviest. They cut through horns without a mike.
Love them.i had a friend in the 80 that had them.he told me he use to import mutes skins from Peru. I did put one on my tambora.im dominican drumer....
Really enjoyed your video. As an owner of Skin On Skins I too can attest to their superior quality, construction and sound, without a doubt, some of the best congas ever made. I would like to invite you and your audience to visit my Facebook forum "Vintage Conga Drums" where you can view literally hundreds of images of these, and many other, wonderful Classic and Vintage drums. "facebook.com/groups/657966647623440/ By the way, Michael Pluznick and Cara Bereck, Jay Bereck's daughter, are also members. Thank you.
Bro.... You had a lot of hair. Lol. Jay makes amazing drums for sure. Some of the best out there!!
I was fortunate to have Jay make me 7 cherry with stainless hdwr back when he was charging $275 a drum. I would send the deposit ($75) then save up to pay for the drum when finished then immediately order another drum. Although I was in California Im from Jersey and a cabinetmaker so we had many great conversations over the many years it took to save and get them that I cherish. I was also fortunate to be friends with the legendary Armando Peraza who played them when he would come over my house. He always complimented them and when we would meet up his first question was always " hey mine ju still got jur drums. day are co lector items , am i right?(this is me trying to imitate Armando.) He really loved them and when LP made the APeraza drum my phone rang and it was my teacher and mutual friend Jorge Bermuedz asking hey man Armando wants to know what kind of wood your drums are made of. I couldnt help but notice that when they made the AP drum (in the style of Valje) they were cherry. When I ordered my first drum from Jay I asked how long it would take he said something like I dont know mabey 6 months you ask again mabey never. Hanging with Armando and getting to know Jay are the greatest memories of my life. Great video and thanks for honoring Jay, he was one of the finest craftsman I ever knew. I would just add that if Patato was the Jackie Robinson of the conga Armando was the Yogi Berra.
Great story. Thank you for your comments.
Jay Bereck used to have a place in Downtown Brooklyn on Smith st. when I was just a kid before he moved to Atlantic ave, which is the location I believe you took the pictures in . Had I known then what I know now about the quality of these Congas ,I would have owned a pair of these amazing instruments . The truth is I play for my own pleasure , and used to play at church with the worship team many years ago .
Im` very glad to see this !!! I have exactly these 4 congas as a set, authentic "Skin On Skin", same sizes, same wood, same hardware !!! Beautiful drums !!!
Awesome! Hope you're enjoying them!
Good idea to make reviews to different drums from different companies.
I took a few lessons from Tommy Lopez one of Eddie Palmieri's congueros at SOS in Flatbush AV in the 70's. Used to take Amtrak from Boston then hit The all night salsa clubs like Club Broadway till 5:30 am then hit White Castle burgers then slide with all that grease in me back to Amtrak.
I agree SOS drums are built like tanks. Those steel bands are about 1/8 inch thick so that if you drop it, will not split like a watermelon. And sound is great!
Now I need to repair LP Classic with warped slats due to folks not tuning it evenly. Left them at the club cuz they were heavy with lots of stairs to climb especially after playing till 2:30 every night.
Thanks for your video. Jay made a set of 4 like yours in 1980s for me. Traveled from Malibu to Yuma to a beautiful tropical island now in the Philippines! Treasures!
How would you go about selling your Skin on Skin conga drums to get the best price?
No no Gon BOPS our the best congas make best sound had my for over 30 years
Can I use a normal price cowskin for my Gon Bop Quinto -Conga?
Hello Kalani, I appreciate your clear, fun video of useful information. Yes, I prefer mule (Cali RIP at JCR in Bronx used to be my source) and just started trying American Buffalo that I use for my making my Native American Drums. Do you have any of your booklets available on Bata rhythms and Djembe ensemble parts. I bought one years ago and haven't been able to find a replacement. Thanks, Tony Redhouse.
I disagree. check out these handmade congas: ua-cam.com/video/P9-WneGbp4s/v-deo.html
Loved the analogy of the "price of a dental crown".
How come there’s no link in the description for Skin on Skin?
I actually have one of these. Pretty sure a relative actual founded the company, really nice drum.
que altura tienen los tambores conga??
change the heads to either Moperc cow skin, or ManitoPercusion natural stear skin
As a woodworker and a percussionist I love drum building. There is so much talent and skill in it. Thank you for sharing!
You're welcome. It's important to support craftspeople of all types. This is where the true art of music begins.
Beautiful!!!! Awesome Vid!
Thank you Brother. I enjoy your channel as well. You make some nice videos.
WORLD DRUM CLUB Thank you so much!!!!! Hopefully one day we can collab! Haha
You used to have hair!?!?! :O
I was in Brooklyn in the early 1980's and went to the Skin on Skin shop.At that time,some of the drums were having a problem with Steve separation.If you find some to buy now watch out for signs of that just in case.
MINT congas!
Interesting that for Conga drums that even for top of the line drums they do no work to the inside of the drum. There are not a lot of musical instruments where having random pressed out glue globs on the inside would be a desirable thing. Hard to imagine Wynton Marsalis wanting a trumpet with dried glue on the inside. It is nice how beautiful most congas are on the outside but... In terms of durability I dont think it is very common for even low end stave drums to fall apart so I am not so sure that is so incredibly important. Anyone out there have them fall apart with regular use? I have some higher end bongos and those are turned and finished on the inside. In my opinion they sound much better than the ones that are just unfinished staves like the congas. Here is the thing though - those are more of a straight through barely tapered design so the sound does not get trapped in them and the heads do not ring. I took a tumba conga and sanded the inside with some tools I rigged up (a lot of work- probably the main reason why no one does it). The sound of that drum with a synthetic head was more ringy but for the real cow skin heads there was little ring and the sound of the note of the drum was much much easier to pick out when tuning with some other instrument like a marimba setting on a keyboard. See other discussions below on ringing conga heads.
In contrast Djembes if made from a section of a log have to be carved out, and the standard wisdom is that the good ones have spiral carving to help with the sound. If you look at Sageman Djembes they are turned smooth on a lathe on the inside except for the bottom of the main bowl which is made as rough a cob to kill the ring - I assume. I don't own one and although not made in Africa the totally traditional way they sound good. I am curious if the plastic Remo "Tumbano" straight cylinder conga like drums ring much. I am guessing they don't unless the sound is bouncing back up off the floor.
wow, you had hair!
they sound amazing
Thanks for the video. Would you consider selling them? I'm not trying to be funny, I will pay a lot more than 1000 each!!!
I bought a set of 4 w Bongos LP's but I played at many weddings and the condensation just killed my sound and I always was re-tuning them. I went with Evans skins which stay tuned but lose the incredible sound of real skins.
You're good. I want Mopercs... The Rumbero series are sweet... Oh, and keep the thick skin
Really funny to see myself in rhis video working on a drum at skin on skin all those years ago..
Do you have any more pictures??
Pm me if you do??
Alan tellas on facebook...
Very fine, well informwed!
goood idea we love you cip it up
why did your skin break...
Old age. It was over 25 years.
Great video. I have a set of 3 oak drums from Jay from the 80's. My teacher, Bobby Torres, used these for recording. Unfortunately I need to sell them. Do you have any advice on how I can connect with someone who would appreciate them?
John Stump See the comment from hitleelee above!
Thats ritym got a name? Thankyou
I have a pair of Jay Bereck's congas. 10" made in 1999 and a 11" made in 1994. What are they worth? Also signed on both by Jay as well.
Mr Music If in good condition, at least $800-1000 each.
@@WORLDDRUMCLUB thank you for the response, i appreciate it.
Like
RcJ :v best LP GIOVANNI HIGALGOS
What about solid wood congas?
William Brown A lot of people love those. Depends on construction, but they can be amazing.
Do you know what cause the ring of the drums? Not ring from the head tuning, but the inherent ring of the wood. It's very frustrating for me to tune all three of my conga drums - no matter how nice of a tone it get, there is still an underlying ring. Sometimes it's fine because the ring tone works with the tone of the head. But that becomes difficult to get all three of my drums to sound great - it seems that each of my drums has its "Goldie Locks" tuning zone where it's sounds best due to the natural ring.
Are you talking about a high-pitched ring, like an overtone, or something else?
Yes. The very subtle high ring that you can get my knocking the side of the drum shell as well. I notice it in most conga drums. I'm guessing its a combination of the head vibrations as well as all the hardware and wood. I watched an intersesting video of how someone got rid of it by rigging a suspended piece of foam in the center of the drum half way up.
It's probably just a resonant tone caused by very short (high) sound waves bouncing across the inside of the shell. This is more common with synthetic shells and factory-made drums where the shells are very smooth. You can try running some duct tape up the inside, bunching it up a little every 2-3 inches. I wouldn't use hanging foam, but you could also try a few pieces of weather stripping up the shell. Hope this helps.
It sound like your describing overtones. These are caused either by the shell itself of by the skin mounted. You can get rid of this condition by adding some foam to the inside of the shell. You will need to experiment by using different size until you find the tone that you are satisfied with. I've used this and have had success every time. You can also try a thicker head however this does require much more work.
Thanks! I'll give it a try :) I use to think the rough interior of congas indicated bad construction. Good to know.
My question is what type of skins should I buy to replace my lp skins because I dont like them. I have a set of 1970s lp classic fiberglass congas....no synthetics
If you can, get cow skins and fit them yourself. I'm not a huge fan of the Bison (Water buffalo) skins. You need untreated leather (just cleaned and not tanned).
Ryan Wendel of Manito Percussion sells a variety of natural heads. Steer, bull, cow, even camel
Sounds Good!