There is definitely enough flavor in these to create anything from heavy hitting, to the somber melodic swing sound. They range from the crunchy, to the reverberated, to the low-fidelity crisp, as well as the vintage “straight off the vinyl” snap sounds to them. As a whole, the snares and claps are as diverse as any drum kit out there. Fortunately, this kit is rare with these mishaps. But with files particularly to the kind of ‘snare peeeew’, ‘snare money’, and ‘snare lend me a ear’, I can not stand when they have these half cut off sounds to them. I get the idea of stacking snares to make a crunchier, heavier, more full snare. Let me get my biggest complaint out of the way, and it’s not even pertaining specifically to this kit, but this kit also has them. Snares/Claps – All together in this kit, I counted 10 claps, and 47 snares. I’m going to take a different approach from most reviews here and break them down by each piece of content you get… It sounds like it’s straight from the sewers. I personally, with what I like to do, am all about these types of sounds. For me, he’s got more of an infamous, vintage, dirty, raw, boom-bap sound to him. As we all know, Jake One is no stranger to the producer scene. My first review is for the Jake One “Snare Jordan Kit”.
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