I was at a arts festival in Harrisburg PA with a fellow Agon bud, a band was playing and useing a small almost guitar inspired drum gizmo that was really awesome, the guy let me try it after the show. I used to dable in drums till disability ended that and was really curious to check the kit out as I figured it would be a way for me to have some fun.........very cool and really good sound.
Digital Drum Kits
At A'gon member Ulf's recommendation, I got hold of the tremendous live DVD "Lindsey Buckingham at Bass Hall". His drummer gets this amazing kick drum sound out of a digital set. It looks really strange, but sounds amazing. Anyone know which drummers use these on recordings and do they generally sound so impressive. Any comment is appreciated.
Marty
Marty
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I was a drummer for nearly twenty years. I know drums. You might enjoy the V expressions custom kits much more than me. I bought the Hodgepodge - 30 kits - all Acoustic and more dynamic/realistic than what the TD-9 came with (although what it came with was quite exceptional as you say - I think Roland is hands down the leader in standard electronic drums) |
The Roland TD8 brain I owned had some exceptional bass drum, tom tom and snare sounds, not merely good. They were almost infinitely adjustable/tunable. There were also some very "electronic" sounding samples which were not to my liking, but were sounds you could commonly hear on many recordings. I was a drummer for nearly twenty years. I know drums. |
I understand the principle, as I have a Kawai digital piano. Digital keys work in a similar fashion and the current batch of high rez software (Garritan, Ivory, Piano Teq) is very good. I was just struck by the tone of Mr. Reyes' kick drum - a big, whopping sound that grabbed my attention. I was wondering if other drummers use the same tools to similar effect. Sloth, thanks. I'll definitely check out the Bela Fleck. Marty |
Lots of drummers use electronic kits, or use electronic triggers (that trigger drum samples) on their acoustic sets to augment the sound. There are several manufacturers. I have direct experience with Roland professional grade stuff. Amazing really. The user can dial in the drum shell material (birch, maple, steel, brass, copper...etc), shell depth, drum head composition, and many other variables to get a specific sound (reverb, decay, pitch...it goes on and on). The sound quality of the tom toms and bass drum are outstanding. Snare drum is also excellent. The cymbals are where the tell-tale digital sound is most apparent, IMO. |

