Difference between revisions of "Meinl Generation X"
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==== Stacks ==== | ==== Stacks ==== | ||
| + | *'''[[Meinl Attack Stack|Attack Stack]] - [[Meinl Generation X 6"/8" Attack Stack|6"/8"]] [[Meinl Generation X 6"/10" Attack Stack|6"/10"]] | ||
*'''[[Meinl Electro Stack|Electro Stack]] - [[Meinl Generation X 8"/10" Electro Stack|8"/10"]] [[Meinl Generation X 10"/12" Electro Stack|10"/12"]] | *'''[[Meinl Electro Stack|Electro Stack]] - [[Meinl Generation X 8"/10" Electro Stack|8"/10"]] [[Meinl Generation X 10"/12" Electro Stack|10"/12"]] | ||
*'''[[Meinl X-Treme Stack|X-Treme Stack]] - [[Meinl Generation X 12"/14" X-Treme Stack|12"/14"]] | *'''[[Meinl X-Treme Stack|X-Treme Stack]] - [[Meinl Generation X 12"/14" X-Treme Stack|12"/14"]] | ||
Revision as of 20:07, 2 June 2025
Introduction: 20011
Background: Series began with "Safari" cymbals created with Johnny Rabb.*
Innovation: Many models were borne out of collaborations with Meinl artists - Benny Greb, Thomas Lang, and Johnny Rabb.
Alloy: Varies - MS63 & FX9 are both used on select models.
Quality: Professional
Applications: Live and Studio
Sound:
More models and sizes to be added later
Rides
Crashes
Hi-Hats
Chinas
- China Crash - 15" 17" 19"
- Jingle Filter China - 10" 12" 14"
- Filter China - 8" 10" 12" 14" 16"
Drumbals
FX Hats
Stacks
Source:
1 meinl.com (retrieved on December 13, 2024)
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