Solved Best "drums" options for recording

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SilverSurfer

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Software or Hardware?

If so, what do you suggest is the easiest and most reaslistic option for drums when you have....umm, no drummer?

Thanks!
 
I saw this ad for a guy that will play drums on your tracks for a fee. This is possible, of course, only if you are recording digitally and can send your files. He plays his kit and/or uses samples. He posts some mp3s of his playing, actually not bad! An interesting alternative, but certainly not free.

If you are planning on doing a lot of recording of yourself, you may want to take a look at some workstations. Go into a Guitar Center and bang away on a few options and then look for a better deal online.

And then there is always the option of creating your own percussive sounds using common household objects!
 
hasbeen said:
I saw this ad for a guy that will play drums on your tracks for a fee. This is possible, of course, only if you are recording digitally and can send your files. He plays his kit and/or uses samples. He posts some mp3s of his playing, actually not bad! An interesting alternative, but certainly not free.

If you are planning on doing a lot of recording of yourself, you may want to take a look at some workstations. Go into a Guitar Center and bang away on a few options and then look for a better deal online.

And then there is always the option of creating your own percussive sounds using common household objects!

Yep I have a session drummer should I need him, it's just not cheap and I prefer to write my own stuff.

I am wondering if getting an electronic kit, such as a roland set, would be a good idea....
 
surfer. you could record midi drum tracks into a pc using a roland midi brain drum kit. i use powertracks from pgmusic.com. 49 bucks for a hefty set of audio multitracking and midi features. just try the demo.
it also has "quickie" facilities for making quickie drum tracks. including variouis song "styles". and a drum machine built in software and drum pattern maker if you cant afford the roland approach.
you can edit and notate the drum tracks to your hearts content.
just make sure you try the demo on a recent pc (2ghz preferably)
with 512 ram.
also search under my name for loads of tips posted in past year re drums and lots of other recording tips. then just ask Q's if you wish.
peace.
 
I use reason 2.5 for my drum sounds. You will never run out of sounds because you can alway use the Reason Refills. It's a good option.
 
hasbeen said:
I saw this ad for a guy that will play drums on your tracks for a fee. This is possible, of course, only if you are recording digitally and can send your files. He plays his kit and/or uses samples. He posts some mp3s of his playing, actually not bad! An interesting alternative, but certainly not free.

If you are planning on doing a lot of recording of yourself, you may want to take a look at some workstations. Go into a Guitar Center and bang away on a few options and then look for a better deal online.

And then there is always the option of creating your own percussive sounds using common household objects!



that's a great idea. heck, i'd do it for, like, 5 bucks a song.

anyone want to take the offer?
 
I use all hardware, and I was looking for the same thing(more live/real sounding drums. You can adjust the quantize level on drum machines (lower it) so when you record it in real time it will be looser. I am using the korg es-1 sampler. I downloaded individual live drumkit wav files and put them into the es-1. Then I program the patterns using real kit samples, and I'm liking the results. You assign which wav sample you want for each button and it's really simple to use. My songs arent as rigid now because of programmed drums.
evt
 
You shoudl check out beta monkey (I think it's betamonkeymusic.com). He puts out loop cd's that are very useful- I just used one for a song I produced, sounds really good. A songwriter that I work with turned me on to these, he's had good luck with them too.
 
Electronic/ acoustic drums

Im a 20 year drummer, only a hobby for me, nothing professional. I've switched to guitar and passed on the kit to my son. My other son now plays bass. To tie this into this thread we are building a jam studio and the drum question is up for debate.

The way I see it, there are pro's and cons to almost every option. We ask ourselves the question 'when we record, how do we want it to sound. Anything electronic will sound electronic. Anything electronic will look electronic. Bands like Deadsy, Ultraspank, Static X have made good use of an electronically produced percussion. But you can still tell, and it feels kinda techno. The nice thing about anything electronic- no mic's. Just plug in to a pa and your done. There is a huge advantage to that both technically and financially- Unless you eyeing that nice set of high end Roland electronic drums like we are...,.

Acoustic drums are the most impressive to look at IMO. I believe that If you want others to look at you and say you just plain ROCK! you need someone sitting behind an acoustic set of drums. Nothing is worse than to go see a band at a bar and see the drummer sitting behind an electronic kit. And lately seeing an electrinic kit can mean you not watching live music! Probably a prerecorded track or some crap like that.

For years I played pearl Export. They were cheap, and noone cared because I just played for myself. Sound quality, that deep ringing tone that makes for good music will only be there if you spend the money to purchase good drums, good mic's. Then you need someone who can "play" the drums, not just hit the heads. There is a whole lot of feel in good drumming. To get a good recorded sound, youll need good drums and good drummer. sometimes hard to come by.

What we have narrowed down our decision to do may not be your decision, but Ill share it anyway. We are going to eventually buy the Roland V drums to save on a world of mixing and micing headaches. Once youve Played those nice set of electronics, nothing else will suffice. My kids are young, and if they ever want to take this recording to another level, they can get their own setup. But for our hobby, and the fun and ease of recording, I think you cant beat electronic drums, whether that is electonically produced by software, or in a kit.

but I havent done a lot of recording yet, so of course my opinion could be up for a lot of criticism. :eek:

D

D
 
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