Yeah, but all these modern floor tom-toms that people pass off as being "tenor drums" - struck with hard, modern sticks - just ain't it! If they took the time and trouble to find an old-style, long military drum - lots of wood on the shell; calf skin head; not too tightly wrenched down - and struck it with a stick that isn't too narrow, then you might get something more authentic sounding. Otherwise, if they can't come up with something along those lines, I'd much rather that they use a plain-old bass drum.
If you can't really drape a cloth on a bass drum (I've seen it done, actually; especially with the ones you can tilt sideways), you can experiment with different mallets, and moving the drum to different locations. I still think that doing bass drum shots slightly offstage - or maybe even far offstage, played really loudly - could work just fine.
Personally, I think it's rather important that the dynamics for the drum somewhat follow the dynamics of the music surrounding each stroke. At the start, since the tuba and sustained chords are rather low in volume, the "drum" (boy, do I want to write "bass drum") shouldn't blow you out of the room. But later on, when the drum returns - long after the flute solo has been passed off to the violins - then it can be very loud and threatening, as the tuba plays his/her (Philadelphia) upper register scale runs quite loudly; not to mention the "dah-dah-daaaaaaah" gestures from the trumpets. To me, that just makes better musical sense.
To me, at least half of the M10 recordings out there have really crappy sounding solo drums. Too soft - too loud; too thuddy - too hard sounding; you name it.