Megadeth's custom 8-piece bubinga DDrum kit played by Shawn Drover on the Endgame Record and across the world on the 2010 Endgame Tour which included main stage at Download Festival in the UK and Sonisphere Festival with the Big 4 (Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Anthrax) - Brought to our studio by legendary, Grammy winning producer and mix engineer Andy Sneap, who produced and mixed the Endgame album and currently plays guitar for Judas Priest while his latest mixed & mastered record for Dream Theater took home the Grammy for Best Metal Performance last year! Extremely well preserved kit and includes the Gibraltar drum rack. This is a kit that is absolutely suitable for the world's best studios and biggest stages today!
Megadeth are heavy metal royalty and need no introduction. As far as we are aware, this is the only Megadeth kit to ever come up for sale. To get one album played and toured around the world with the biggest names in rock and metal is completely unheard of... all for the price of a Rolex watch. This is much, much cooler than a Rolex watch. Epic conversation piece and functional art at its finest. So many epic names in metal are tied to this kit, and we can confirm it sounds like no other kit that's ever come through our studio. You can hear it on the King of the Dead tracks and Forged In Black's latest album released by Fighter Records as well. Full provenance and a signed COA provided to the new owner. You can see a video of when Megadeth's producer Andy Sneap brought the kit to our studio and did an hour long video with us on our YouTube channel. This incredible piece of heavy music history is part of the world famous instrument collection at Essex Recording Studios! More pics, info and best prices are always on our official Essex Recording Studios site. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, & Twitch @essexrecordingstudios YOUR PURCHASE HELPS MUSICIANS and supports our studio! Buying from us directly helps support unsigned musicians and bands that struggle to produce professional music without help from major record labels these days. Thank you for your support! |