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Sounds of cymbals are heard in the Q-C

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  • Sounds of cymbals are heard in the Q-C

    Quad City Times, IA
    Oct 8 2005

    Sounds of cymbals are heard in the Q-C
    By Tamara Fudge

    Master cymbal specialist Mark Love and other artists of a premiere
    cymbal company called Sabian spent an afternoon earlier this week
    under the awning of West Music's Davenport store on Brady Street as
    part of the group's Vault tour.

    Customers were able to have a cymbal custom-made, watch hand
    hammering and lathing demonstrations, and test or purchase the many
    cymbals on display. For a small donation to Hurricane Katrina
    victims, black Sabian wristbands also were available.

    `A lot of cymbals are developed working with the artists, taking a
    sound or vision in their heads and turning it into an instrument,'
    Love said.


    Jeff Cook/QUAD-CITY TIMES Allie Cougle of Sabian, a company that
    makes cymbals, uses a hammer to shape a custom cymbal during a
    company tour visit this week to West Music in Davenport.
    `The real secret we have at Sabian is the process added downstream
    from the metallurgical process,' said Bill Zildjian, part owner and
    an executive in the company his father created. `It's the attitude of
    our people, who are willing to tinker and experiment. The
    possibilities are limitless.'

    He listed the number of bronze alloys, patterns of hammering,
    lathing, shapes and sizes, all of which affect the cymbal's sound.

    His family's name has been connected with cymbal making for
    centuries. Zildjian said that his name is Turkish-Armenian for cymbal
    (zil) - smith or maker (dj) - son (ian) and can be dated back to at
    least the 1670s.

    According to the Percussive Arts Society's Web site, Bill's father,
    Robert Zildjian, worked for his father's cymbal business. Upon the
    older man's death, Robert and his brother, Armand, shared the company
    until deciding to split in 1982. Armand kept the original company's
    name, Zildjian, and younger brother Bob created his own company in
    Meductic, a small village in New Brunswick, Canada.

    `Sabian' is a combination of the names of Robert's children: `Sa' for
    Sally, `bi' for Bill and `an' for Andy. `We found out later that it
    is actually the name of a tribe of people in Turkey,' Zildjian said.

    Sabian cymbals, carefully hand-hammered in the Turkish tradition, now
    can be found all over the world, and are used by amateurs and
    professionals from the Royal Opera House in London to jazzmaster Jack
    deJohnette and rock star Phil Collins.

    The idea of this kind of tour came because `whenever drummers make
    the pilgrimage to Meductic, they have a great time seeing how cymbals
    are made,' Zildjian said. `They can select from a variety not
    available in a store.'

    At West's showing, there were prototypes - unique cymbals that never
    had seen store shelves.

    `It's a time-honored tradition,' said Justin Beahm, combo manager for
    West.

    `It shows people how they're made from scratch. They had some
    unmarked, unique cymbals for sale that no one else in the world has.'

    Why stop in Davenport?

    `West Music is one of the premier percussion vendors,' Zildjian said.
    `They have high quality and an aggressive program.'

    `It's interesting to see how they craft these plates, demonstrating
    this ancient method, into something that's still integral in music
    today,' said Shawn Lafrenz, general manager of West's Percussion
    Source division. `Watching them is an amazing process, a show in
    itself. The tour brings something quite special to Iowa.'

    `Our real competitors are not the other cymbal companies,' Zildjian
    said. `It's Nintendo, DVD players, and those kinds of things.'


    http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2005/10/08/news/local/doc43475d65d63f7213610590.txt
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