Acoustically, drums sound good with reverb on them. With rock bands, it's common to put room mics far from the source to get the natural sound of the room, and you sum this up with the drum mix. Some bands like to have the room sound be really present in the mix, while others prefer it to be subtle.
In hip hop, not many drums sound like rock, but you can do whatever the hell you want. Most hip hop beatmakers and producers like to add a little reverb to the snare, or leave the entire drum mix dry, which is common. Our ears are accustomed to hearing hip hop records with little to no reverb on the drums.
But then you have groups/artists who like to divert from the norm, and make everything sound really wet. Or there may be one song on the album that has light drums and a finger-snap or rim-shot that has CRAZY hall reverb on it that sounds like it's under a bridge or in a tunnel.
If you do use reverb on your drums, it should sound natural. So get a GOOD reverb unit or plug-in to make this work. Cut off the highs a little so that it sounds like it's in a real room, and not a wall with mirrors or steel panels. A room with a wood floor is really reflective, but it SOUNDS like wood, and there are usually deadening panels in the room as well, so the walls won't reflect as much.
Some people don't know this, but reverb on a kick drum is more natural than higher frequencies. Kick drums and low-frequencies sound better in a large room because the actual sound wave is longer and needs the space in the air to move around. BUT if you put an artificial reverb on it, or send the kick drum to the same reverb that everything else is going to, it will sound fake. The kick reverb should be cut in high frequencies according to the kick drum. If you hit a kick drum in a large room, frequencies that have nothing to do with the kick drum aren't going to bounce around the room. They're going to be low-frequencies. You may hear higher pitches coming from the beater hitting the head of the kick drum, but not as much as the actual ring of the kick that moves around the room.
Basically, if you're going to make it sound good, make it sound real. Or, if you want to experiment, just play around with it until it sounds good. It doesn't HAVE to sound REAL to sound GOOD. I'm just giving a couple tips that I use in accordance with natural acoustics.
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