G
genejhsn
New member
Drum soundfonts & MIDI
I agree wholeheartedly. I do not like the standard GM drums that are on most soundcards. I use Cakewalk PA 9 for recording on my PC and use soundfonts for my drum sounds. I have been using drum kits from Sonic Implants for rock and they are indistinguishable from real drums, despite what others have commented here.
In order to program realistic rock drums - or any other style - you have to be able to think like a drummer and know how to program that into thte MIDI drum track. It takes knowledge and skill. I use the staff view in Cakewalk to write out drum parts in standard musical notation on the staff. The biggest issue with feel is using velocity settings. Drummer do not hit every drum or cymbal with the same force and that is how you get the "feel".
I have read over and over about how MIDI drums suck because they don't have the feel, or how you have to mess with the timing to get the feel of a "real" drummer...a real sloppy drummer, maybe. As for myself, I lke a drummer that can actually keep perfect time having played with too many that can't...
Again, it's knowledge and skill. If you are not willing to put in the effort to learn how to do it right, your results will be less than satisfactory. If you have never programmed MIDI drums, you will not likely learn it overnight, but if you are willing to put in some time, you can use them very effectively. I have the advantage of having learned how to read music, especially drum adn percussion parts when in elementary & high school, so I can use standard musical notation to do my drum parts & fills. Virtually any rhythmic oddity you can think of for a fill can be duplicated in MIDI with standard musical notation.
One great advantage is that you can do a basic beat, copy and paste,record other tracks, then go back and add fills and accents after recording other tracks and add to the "live" feel. that way your "drummer" isn't playing the same fill every 8 or 16 bars.
The Seifer said:Any program that can sequence midi will do. The rest in up to you. You have to like, compose the feel and emotion into the parts yourself.
I agree wholeheartedly. I do not like the standard GM drums that are on most soundcards. I use Cakewalk PA 9 for recording on my PC and use soundfonts for my drum sounds. I have been using drum kits from Sonic Implants for rock and they are indistinguishable from real drums, despite what others have commented here.
In order to program realistic rock drums - or any other style - you have to be able to think like a drummer and know how to program that into thte MIDI drum track. It takes knowledge and skill. I use the staff view in Cakewalk to write out drum parts in standard musical notation on the staff. The biggest issue with feel is using velocity settings. Drummer do not hit every drum or cymbal with the same force and that is how you get the "feel".
I have read over and over about how MIDI drums suck because they don't have the feel, or how you have to mess with the timing to get the feel of a "real" drummer...a real sloppy drummer, maybe. As for myself, I lke a drummer that can actually keep perfect time having played with too many that can't...

Again, it's knowledge and skill. If you are not willing to put in the effort to learn how to do it right, your results will be less than satisfactory. If you have never programmed MIDI drums, you will not likely learn it overnight, but if you are willing to put in some time, you can use them very effectively. I have the advantage of having learned how to read music, especially drum adn percussion parts when in elementary & high school, so I can use standard musical notation to do my drum parts & fills. Virtually any rhythmic oddity you can think of for a fill can be duplicated in MIDI with standard musical notation.
One great advantage is that you can do a basic beat, copy and paste,record other tracks, then go back and add fills and accents after recording other tracks and add to the "live" feel. that way your "drummer" isn't playing the same fill every 8 or 16 bars.