Recording drums can be difficult for several reasons: the room the drums are in, the microphones and mic placement, the tuning/quality of the kit/heads, and of course the player. I would first say that nobody get's great drum sounds with " a quick go...". It sounds like you had phase relationship issues with the multi tracks along with a lack of time spent getting best mic placement. Start with one mic. Either mic the kit from over the drummers head or out in front high enough to get the whole kit. Once you get that sounding pretty decent add an kick drum mic, doesn't matter whether inner or outer. Pick one and get the best sound you can possibly get with those two mics. NOT quickly , take your time, move the mics around and you should be able to get a good sound down. Don't forget to always try flipping polarity on the new mics track when adding a second , third, or more mics to make sure you don't have heavy comb filtering, if you do move the mic. Yes , you can leave the offending mic flipped but it gets more and more likely to have phase issues if you have polarities all over the place on multiple mics. I don't know what mics you are using so I wont make a bunch of useless suggestions. Plus not having heard what you have recorded it would be doubly useless. So try taking your time with what you have first is my advice.