Cymbals
Cymbals for Recording & Studio Sessions
In the studio, a cymbal's character is unforgiving — microphones reveal every nuance of an alloy's grain, the depth of its hammering, and the subtlety of its taper in ways a live room never does. Sabian's range here, spanning the B8X, AAX, HH, and HHX families, gives producers and recording drummers a clearly mapped tonal spectrum to work from. Brighter, more focused cymbals like those in the AAX line translate cleanly in dense mixes without building up mud in the high-mids, while the darker, more complex HH and HHX series sit beautifully behind vocals and melodic instruments without demanding attention.
Cymbal weight and size are critical recording decisions. A thin crash decays quickly and leaves space in your arrangement; a heavier, larger cymbal sustains longer and can swell underneath a section in a way that feels more composed than percussive. For hi-hats specifically — one of the most mic'd elements of a drum kit — the difference between a crisp, cutting top and a darker, washier pairing can define the entire rhythmic feel of a track. Studio Gears stocks dozens of Sabian options so you can make those choices deliberately rather than working with whatever came on the kit.
The selection also includes orchestral percussion cymbals and triangle accessories, which are genuinely useful for producers building out orchestral, cinematic, or hybrid arrangements in the box or with live overdubs. When outfitting a studio kit, consider keeping one versatile, mid-weight set for tracking most sessions and supplementing with specialty cymbals — a dry, low-pitched crash or a large, slow-building ride — that solve specific mixing problems before they start.