I read an interview with Stewart Copeland once where he was talking about some hihat parts that he overdubbed in the studio. He said that some clinician-type drummer came up to him all proud once saying "I finally after years of working on it got that hihat lick down on X song" (I'm thinking it was walking on the moon where he does the sick triplets on the hats along with a cross-stick rim click), which totally blew his mind since even *he himself* hadn't played it all at once.
My first takeaway from that story is that you can do anything you want in the studio, that's the studio magic and even some of the great drummers have, so it's not cheating. Stewart is still the man.
Moral #2. If you practice really hard, you won't have to use the tricks.
Zoro told a very similar story at a clinic I went to, except he was on the other side of this coin. He got a chance to meet some old Soul or Funk drummer that he had studied and idolized. There was a particular lick that he had labored many hours/years to try to play, and still couldn't figure out what the trick to it was (and Z has some incredible chops to begin with). So he goes up to the guy, gives him props and says "hey, I've gotten this close to playing that lick, [procedes to wrap out super-human lick] and I was wondering if you'd share the secret to how you played it on that track". So the guy replies laughs at him and says "Z you'll never play that lick". And he's like huh? So old dude basically tells him (to paraphrase) "there where three of us drumming on that track, one guy on hihats, one on snare and one on a bass drum with mallets. But what you just showed me is amazingly close". A lot of the stuff that Zoro has mastered playing has been stuff that was from drum machine sequences or in this case 3 drummers, but it caused him to strive to a whole new level of drumming to be able to perform it live.
That is a whole other level of mastery. So really from that I'd say take those tracks that feel right, and make that feel the goal of your practice so that you can rock it live. The studio cut is a compositional phase, now that you've got the reference feel, build the chops.
-J