The splash cymbal, because of its varied usage and small size, is mounted in many ways. Some common ways are: • On a separate boom stand. This can be of relatively light construction without a
counterweight owing to the light weight of the cymbal. • On an auxiliary boom attached to a stand used principally to support a drum or another, larger cymbal. This is the traditional method. • On an auxiliary boom attached to the rim of a
snare drum or
timbales. This is particularly popular for playing
latin rhythms. • By
piggybacking on a larger cymbal. The two cymbals must be separated by an extra felt if they are not to each affect the other's tone and risk damage. • By use of a double stand that mounts the top cymbal on an extension of the stand that replaces the wing nut holding the bottom cymbal. These are commercially available but more often created by adding an accessory to a single stand. • As the upper cymbal in a
stack in which another cymbal is deliberately in contact with the splash. Several of these techniques, notably
stacking and
piggybacking, are very rarely used for cymbals other than splash cymbals. The rim-mounted boom is restricted to splash cymbals owing to the weight of other cymbal types, but similar mounts, traditionally on the top of the rear rim of the
bass drum but also on other drums, are occasionally used for other lightweight accent effects, particularly a
cowbell and/or a
wood block.
Stacking A
cymbal stack is a combination of two or more cymbals mounted in contact, producing a sound unlike any single cymbal. The effect is similar to a loosely closed
hi-hat, or can alternatively be seen as an extreme case of a
sizzle cymbal with the upper cymbal serving as a single large jangle. The exact effect is dependent on the tension on the mounting bolt, and with some combinations can be varied from a very short crunch to a much longer buzz. This technique was pioneered by
Dave Weckl,
Mike Portnoy and others, originally using a china splash as the upper cymbal. Portnoy mounted both cymbals bell up, with no spacing felt, to maximize contact between them, and choosing cymbals of sufficiently different profile to ensure that the contact was not enough to
choke them completely. As the technique became established, cymbal makers introduced specialized
stack cymbals designed specifically for use in stacks. However the older technique, using a china splash on top of a crash, china or another splash, also remains popular. Stacking should not be confused with
piggybacking, in which the upper cymbal is bell down, the lower cymbal bell up, and a spacing felt is used between the cymbal bells, preventing any contact.
Piggybacking Piggybacking is a method of mounting a splash cymbal, mostly restricted to small splashes, by simply placing it inverted above another cymbal, with which it shares the mounting bolt and its sheath, washers if used and wingnut. A spacing felt is normally used to separate the cymbals, serving as the top felt of the lower cymbal and the bottom felt of the upper cymbal in order to avoid cymbal cracking. There is an essential difference between this technique and
stacking. A cymbal stack produces a different sound to that produced by either cymbal individually. The piggyback, like the double stand, is primarily a method of mounting the splash cymbal, without producing any major difference in the tone of either cymbal. Advantages of piggyback mounting are: • Requires minimal mounting space, and therefore produces a more compact drum kit. • Allows the drummer to move between the two cymbals of the piggyback in a single motion. • A bonus for drummers who play in venues where space is very limited. • In very large,
extended kits, it allows more cymbals to be within reach of the drummer. • Requires little or no extra equipment, only the cymbal itself and normally one extra felt for spacing between the cymbals. • Faster setup and takedown. • Lighter
traps cases. • Less to buy. • It is possible to connect the two cymbals tonally by leaving out the spacing felt (but this risks damage and probably voids any warranty on both cymbals). Disadvantages are: • Requires the upper cymbal to be mounted bell down. • Produces a trashier tone which not all drummers like. • Exposes the rim to the stick in a way that the designer did not intend, often leading to damage. Many splashes have a relatively thick rim for their size, and can withstand a stroke that would break a crash cymbal, but thin splashes cannot generally be mounted bell down. • Restricts playing of the lower cymbal, generally even to making playing its bell impossible. • Restricts adjustment of the damping of either cymbal. The mounting bolt tension and the size of one felt are the same for both cymbals, as the mounting bolt, wingnut and this felt are all shared between them. Many china splash cymbals and some bell cymbals are designed to be mounted bell down, and are particularly suited to piggyback mounting. Other splash cymbals, however, are very rarely mounted bell down except when piggybacked. Most but not all drummers put an additional
felt between the bells of the two cymbals, to eliminate any direct contact between the cymbals and retain the tone of each. However the slight contact between the bells if the extra felt is not used affects the tone of each cymbal only subtly, and some drummers like the tonal connection that results. Beginners sometimes use this technique for another reason entirely: The mounting bolt may not be long enough to allow an extra felt, or they may simply not have bought a felt when buying their first splash. Unfortunately, the metal to metal contact and the playing of the upturned splash rim both decrease the life of the cymbal, particularly at the hands of a beginner. The lower cymbal of the piggyback is often a crash, or less often a
ride, but larger splashes and even
chinas can be used. The upper cymbal could in theory be any cymbal small enough to allow the lower cymbal to be played, but in practice is almost always a splash. ==References==