(Redirected from Ludwig Drums)'Ludwig-Musser' is a
drum and
percussion instrument manufacturer owned by
Conn-Selmer, Inc.
History
The company was formed in 1910 as ''Ludwig & Ludwig'' by brothers William F. and Theo Ludwig. The brothers' first product was a
bass drum pedal followed by
timpani. Production then expanded into other types of drums. Because of the
Great Depression, the company had to merge with the C.G. Conn Company in the 1930s. William, who disliked his lack of involvement with the design and manufacture of the instruments, left the company in 1936 to open his own company, the W.F.L. Drum Company in 1937.
[1]
William's son, William F. Ludwig, Jr, says his most memorable moment was "my bid to buy back the Ludwig name from Conn in 1955 - against my father's wishes." In 1955, the Ludwig division was purchased back from Conn and renamed the ''Ludwig Drum Company''. In 1966, Ludwig purchased the Musser Marimba Company, which produced
mallet percussion.
The Ludwig Drum Company are famous for their
Vistalite drum kits. Vistalite was the trade name used by Ludwig for its line of
acrylic (mostly see-through) drums in the 1970s.
Led Zeppelin drummer
John Bonham famously played a Vistalite. While Vistalite sales declined toward the end of the 1970s, Ludwig reintroduced them in 2001. Sales of clear Vistalite and Bonham-replica amber Vistalites have been strong enough that a multitude of companies make acrylic drums in 2006.
Ludwig saw a lot of changes. In the 1980s they introduced a new heavy duty modular hardware system. They abandoned the much-loved modular system in favor of a less expensive L-arm/double braced industry standard hardware system. Until the 90's, Ludwigs drums were made of maple and selected hardwoods. It wasn't until the late 90's that they started making all maple wood shells. Ludwig maintained a reputation for exceptional sounding and projecting maple drums into the 2000s. Ludwig started branching out with exotic wood finishes supplied by
Steinway and Sons. They also have an import line called "Accent" made in Taiwan, and another import line called "Accent CS" made in China. Ludwig remains one of the few "name" American drum makers left. The company is a subsidiary of Selmer, and is not family-run.
Mod Orange is a wrap finish, that was introduced by Ludwig Drums in 1967. It was produced from then and up through the 70's, but was put on a shelf. The recently it was reissued on the Ludwig Classic Maple series drums. The name refers to the ''mods'', who were a part of British subculture during the 1960s, and according to the pattern of the finish, it must have been the more psychedelic part of the mods.
Ludwig snares are very popular. One of these is the Ludwig Supraphonic, considered to be the industry standard for snares for professionals. The Black Beauty is also a a standard, it is a black nickel plated brass shell drum.
Ludwigs resurgence in popularity has continued steadily from 2001 though 2007.
Notable endorsing artists
List of artists:
[2]
★
Jess Margera of
CKY
★
Ginger Baker of
Cream (in the past, currently he uses
Drum Workshop drums)
★
Mitch Mitchell -
The Jimi Hendrix Experience (also uses a
Premier Percussion, but in
Woodstock and in other shows he uses a Ludwig drum kit)
★
John Bonham of
Led Zeppelin
★
Ian Paice of
Deep Purple (in the past, currently he uses
Pearl drums)
★
Neil Peart of
Rush (1985-1994, currently uses
Drum Workshop)
★
Don Henley of
The Eagles (1971-85, currently uses
Drum Workshop)
★
Mick Fleetwood of
Fleetwood Mac (1967-82)(currently endorses
Drum Workshop)
★
Karen Carpenter of
The Carpenters
★
Tré Cool of
Green Day
★
Barriemore Barlow of
Jethro Tull
★
Eric Carr of
Kiss
★
Fabrizio Moretti of
The Strokes
★
Nick Mason of
Pink Floyd (live 1970-1990) (studio 1977-91) (currently endorses
Drum Workshop)
★
Myles Heskett of
Wolfmother
★
Ed Shaughnessy of the
Doc Severinsen orchestra
★
Roger Taylor of
Queen (he had used
Yamaha Drums on the Magic Tour and currently uses a Sleishman bass drum while all the the toms and snare are Ludwig)
★
Alan White of
Yes
★
Alex Van Halen of
Van Halen
★
Gary Burton, Jazz
Vibraphonist
★
Patrick Wilson of
Weezer
★
Ringo Starr of
The Beatles
★
Patrick Keeler of
the Greenhornes and
the Raconteurs.
★
Randy Lane of
Pat Travers and
No Address.
★
Meg White of
The White Stripes
★
Carl Palmer of
Asia,
Emerson Lake and Palmer (though he had also used Gretsch, Premier, Paiste, and Remo drums)
★
Matt Sorum of
Velvet Revolver
★
John Siomos of
Peter Frampton
★
Clive Burr of
Iron Maiden (1979-81)
★
Bob Siebenberg of
Supertramp
★
Rick Allen of
Def Leppard
★
Roger Meddows-Taylor of
Queen
★
Bobby Blotzer of
Ratt
★
John Fred Young of
Black Stone Cherry
★
Shinya of
Dir en grey (though he also uses Yamaha and Pearl drums)
★
Ronnie Vannucci of
The Killers
★
Joe Morello (Formerly of
The Dave Brubeck Quartet)
★
Chris Deaner of
Plus/Minus,
Kelly Clarkson band
Notes
1. Ludwig-Musser Company site
2. Ludwig-Musser artists listing
External links
★
Official website
★
Ludwig in the Drumming Database
★
vistalites.com Web page devoted to Vistalite drums.
★
vistalitedrums