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Hey! This is Philip and we are going over how to set the drum set. This is all of our
work put together. This is everything that we have done. I just compiled into a drum
set, and I am going to go over everything we have done. So we worked on setting up a
high hat cymbal, and so this is it right here. You put it on your left, you want it on your
left foot so you can do this... because you want a bass drum on your right foot.... and
so this is generally how everyone sets up, generally... there are exceptions. You want
your snare drums sitting between your legs; and now the height of your snare drum is an
all a comfort thing. I know people who set it really low, I set it relatively high compared
to most people. Now, then you want your high tom right here. Here's your high tom, and
then here's your floor tom, sitting here on the floor, if that makes sense. Your bass
drum sits right here with your bass drum pedal hitting it. Now the cymbals, you want your
high hat to the left. I like to sit my higher crash cymbal, the splashy one I talked about
earlier, I like to set that right here on the left. You put your ride cymbal right here;
and if you had a 5 piece drum set, just put another drum like make it look like its right
there; just visualize that. You put another drum right there, and then you put your ride
cymbal higher. Here is my dark crash; I put it on the other side. And this way as you
are playing, you have bright on your left hand and dark on your right hand. You can
mix it up, but this is your primary crash cymbal. So that is how you generally set up
a drum set. You make it look like this and you get comfortable. You just adjust everything
to your personal preferences and angles and everything; but this is what a drum set should
look like.