I did a ton of showcase gigs in NYC in the 90s, and exactly every house kit I played(mandatory considering no room/multi band bills) sucked. Amount and level of suck varied. Pearl Exports(and lower), Tama Rockstars(and lower), concert toms(or just no bottom heads). All heads pitted plus duct tape. Even Don Henley would have run screaming from the sound.
It was much like what one encounters in a rehearsal studio--every part stripped due to some clueless moron that feels they must tighten something to the point that Superman couldn't loosen it--with the additional, even more worthless addition of DUCT TAPE AS BASS DRUM HEAD PATCH. This is a joke, because inevitably the beater will stick to the head with awful results.
I never, ever trust "we have a kit here". Ever. When possible, I'll bring an entire setup and leave it in my car. Snare, bass pedal, throne, cymbals and hardware at the very minimum. Even a reputable place in Atlantic City touted "DW Snare". Nope. Junky PDP with the strainer stuck on with duct tape.
Eventually, I was able to talk one of the NYC places into my using my 70s Ludwig kit. The guy at Kenny's Castaways said it was the best sound he got in years(duh. properly maintained and tuned kit, not thrown from a speeding bus).
Last few months, the opposite happened(twice)--huffing and puffing my kit up ramps while a shiny new Tama kit stared me right in the face....of course no one should ever, under any circumstances, TELL us a new house kit is available in advance. Pft.
Every place has a great kit until you arrive. I have rarely found that to be different. Even the DW kit I last used as a house kit...stripped tom holder that made the 12" tom s l o w l y fall away from where it could be reached.
Dan