multiperc wrote:yeah the hihat on the left and 'toms' out in front suggest more of the trad kit layout. I'll take a guess that the positioning of a hihat on the left had to do with the availablity of the left foot for the pedal. but not so with a closed or cable hat!
This comment really made it all click for me. Seven years ago, when I started playing the drums with a Yamaha Club Jordan, I immediately bought a second cymbal arm so I could mount my closed high hats on my left, my crash/ride in front of me, and a 12 x 10 inch tom on my right. I used the main drum as my snare and this arrangement seemed perfectly natural.
Later, I sold my Club Jordan and bought a Peace Manhattan. I always wondered why the pictures of that kit showed the high hats mounted on the right and the crash and splash on the left. (That one has the tom mounted directly in front of the snare, which is again directly in front of the player.)
Now I realize that the high hats are traditionally mounted on the left because that's where your other foot is! If you use closed, passive hats exclusively, as I do, there's no particular reason to mount them on the left and it's more straight-forward to mount them on the right, since that's the hand you're using to hit them with! Duh!
Reminds me of traditional versus matched grip. When the drum is slung over your shoulder and at an angle, the matched grip doesn't work but once you mount it flat, directly in front of you, the matched grip makes more sense.
Funny the way people learn things.
Now I also see why, for players using a side snare, the closed hats on the right are a natural and the bass pedal mounted directly under the big drum is no big deal. You stand to the side of the big drum, with the side snare in front of you and your right foot just where it needs to be. In my case, where I keep the main drum directly in front of me, the pedal needs to be off to the right. Hence the DW 5000S SideKick pedal, which works great when the main drum is your snare.
I just reversed the positions for the hats and the crash/ride on my micro cocktail kit (see my misplaced post in the Discussion section) and I see why traditional players get such a creative rush from the cocktail kit. Everything feels strange, but in a good way!
Bruce (the K)