A
ahuimanu
New member
When you strike a drum head, the tension in the head causes the head to move back into place rather quickly. The force of the strike and the articulation of the stike also effect the manner in which the drum head snaps back towards neutral. The process of the head moving back and forth as it stabilizes and neutralizes is a reverbration of sorts.
All the while, the air in the drum shell has been compressed by the movement of the top head and the remainder of the shell vibrates in reaction to the struck batter head. We hear these series of events as a percussive note.
Some drummers, drums, rooms and recording techniques make this whole process sound better than others. These sounds can be sampled and played back so that a drum sound is consistent. Furthermore some percussion instruments are too rare or difficult to include in your daily/nightly kit setup.
So, with triggering, you are still getting 100% of your intended peformance on the acoustic drums AND more.
We have triggering for enhancement, reinforcement and variety. All of which are in addition to your regular kit.
What's the problem?
All the while, the air in the drum shell has been compressed by the movement of the top head and the remainder of the shell vibrates in reaction to the struck batter head. We hear these series of events as a percussive note.
Some drummers, drums, rooms and recording techniques make this whole process sound better than others. These sounds can be sampled and played back so that a drum sound is consistent. Furthermore some percussion instruments are too rare or difficult to include in your daily/nightly kit setup.
So, with triggering, you are still getting 100% of your intended peformance on the acoustic drums AND more.
We have triggering for enhancement, reinforcement and variety. All of which are in addition to your regular kit.
What's the problem?