gmiller1122
Addled but happy
I'm not new here, but it's a newbie-type question, and I wasn't sure where else to put it....
Here's what I understand. Correct me if I'm wrong. If I buy a CD full of beats, like Drums on Demand, I still need drum loop software like Acid or Fruity Loops to arrange these loops, right?
I'm seriously considering using Drums on Demand or Betamonkey. The samples on their websites sound great.
I use nTrack. (maybe this should go in the nTrack forum? I'll move it if I don't get much response here.) Anyhow, I have been able to just copy and paste (and paste...) a few random drum loops into a track in nTrack and it SEEMS to work okay, so would software like Fruity Loops make sense for me? Is it necessary or would it just take up space on my PC?
BTW, I'm recording originals -- folk, acoustic, roots rock, cowpunk, think Jayhawks, Steve Earle, pretty straightforward drum beats...
Thanks,
G
Here's what I understand. Correct me if I'm wrong. If I buy a CD full of beats, like Drums on Demand, I still need drum loop software like Acid or Fruity Loops to arrange these loops, right?
I'm seriously considering using Drums on Demand or Betamonkey. The samples on their websites sound great.
I use nTrack. (maybe this should go in the nTrack forum? I'll move it if I don't get much response here.) Anyhow, I have been able to just copy and paste (and paste...) a few random drum loops into a track in nTrack and it SEEMS to work okay, so would software like Fruity Loops make sense for me? Is it necessary or would it just take up space on my PC?
BTW, I'm recording originals -- folk, acoustic, roots rock, cowpunk, think Jayhawks, Steve Earle, pretty straightforward drum beats...
Thanks,
G