Sabian Alu Bell And Vault Collection Radia Nano Hats

July 27, 2009 · Print This Article

As a top cymbal company, Sabian’s stock trade is in bronze. The Alu (aluminium) Bell is thus a rare departure into the world of sound sculpture. The Radia hats fall into Sabian’s high-end Vault series and outcome from the company’s collaboration with Terry Bozzio.

Build

The Alu Bell must be Sabian’s most strange offering, looking something like a helmet you might wear going into battle. It’s sand cast from aluminium and is completely rigid, with a roughcast finish.

"Be careful where you position your clutch wing nut - whether your aim’s not true, you’ll hit that as often as the cymbal"

The Vault category was launched in 2005 to highlight special cymbals beyond Sabian’s usual series, while Radia is the label given to designs prompted by Terry Bozzio. These B20 bronze 7" and 9" Nano mini-hats are certainly beautiful looking.

The top cymbal is medium weight with a raw bell; the bottom is heavier and flat. Both cymbals are hand hammered, with raw-finish bands attractively surrounding a central band of etched gold.

Hands on

Most drummers start out walloping saucepans and the Alu Bell is like revisiting your childhood. Tap the hard dome with your stick tip and

you get an abrupt, thin ‘ting’. Catch the turned-out edge, though, and the sound is transformed into an eerie, piercing yet mellow ‘ping’ that sustains literally for minutes

Swapping to mallets or soft beaters, the timbre is more oriental. that is for a percussionist’s rig really: striking it with any found object will aftermath in a new effect. It’s an evocative sound, best used sparingly.

The 9" Radia Nano hats are nearly big decent to recreate those early days of swing when Buddy Rich played ultra-small hats. Alternatively, both the 7" and 9" pairs propose a stint of nifty Jojo Mayer drum’n'bass-style beats.

The fact the bottom cymbals are so heavy makes the Nanos surprisingly full-bodied, with plenty of volume and zing. The 9" pair is darker, thicker and warmer than the 7". The 9" open sound is more of a ‘tahh’ than a ’tiss’, while the closed sound is crisp. The 7" pair is quite different – open they emit a sort of high-pitched scream, the conclusion of the bell taking up most of the top cymbal.

Be careful where you position your clutch wing nut - whether your aim’s not true, you’ll hit that as often as the cymbal.

[Source] Geoff Nicholls (Rhythm Magazine)

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