Click Track for a drummer - Delta 1010

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MercyfullMusic

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I have a Delta 1010 and Cakewalk SONAR. How can I set up a click track for a drummer to play to? The 1010 has MIDI in and out, but none of the Cakewalk Session Drummer stuff or Metronome stuff seems to work. Do I need a separate MIDI card for this to work? I think the 1010's MIDI connections are just through connections and not actually converting the MIDI. Is this right? And how much would a card for this cost me? Can I use a cheap audio card? Why wouldn't the 1010 have this?
 
Not a big fan of MIDI clicks (or internal software generated ones), unless the source of the click is in the same unit that your playing on , i.e. a keyboard.

There are many free software drum programs out there, that you can create a click in, and then export a wav file. Then import into Sonar.

This has a few advantages:

- controlling the volume of the click via fader instead of endless dropdown menu's.
- a more stable click
- makes you think more about 'how fast should it really be'... after exporting a dozen times... Thats a joke, not a real point.

Anyway, give that a go.

www.fruityloops.com

Is one,

http://www.threechords.com/hammerhead/

another, never used it though.

Or..

If you have a drum machine kicking around, wipe the dust off it, and use it to generate a solid click via output to an input on the 1010. Record it to a track, put down the scratch guitars, vocals whatever, do the drums and rock out!
 
The cheap and dirty workaround is to take a .wav file of a cowbell hit (or record one), edit it, then paste it into a track on beat 1, 2, 3, & 4. Then copy the entire measure and paste it repeatedly until your track is filled. You can take 4 & 8 bar measures and copy/paste them pretty quick. Use grid snap to ensure accuracy.

Of course, you don't wanna mess with tempo after that. :)
 
....none of the Cakewalk Session Drummer stuff or Metronome stuff seems to work....

To be able to play Cakewalk Session Drummer or Metronome, which in Sonar is MIDI-based (or any MIDI file for that matter) you need a device which will generate the sound for you. It may be a hardware card with an on-board synth such as Soundblaster or a software synth such as LiveSynth or Roland Sound Canvas (bundeled with Sonar XL) or an external synth. Then you even will be able to connect a MIDI controller to your Delta MIDI inputs and play it.
 
Heinz is right. And screw trying to get midi stuff to work. You have a 1010. Record something. A cowbell hit, spoon on a glass, kick the dog, whatever.
But instead of cutting and pasting a bar, make it a groove clip and stretch it thru the song. And if your tune has tempo changes, your clip should adjust with it.
 
(beavis voice) ooohhhhh yeeeahhhh.... uh huh nnhh huh huh... groove clips... unh huhuhuh huhuh..... cool...

Kick the dog? He said "click" track not "kick" track hee hee- certainly would stand out in the mix though.
 
Okay friends.........

I took your advice and recorded some drum sounds from my Casio keyboard, a little kick and snare, boom - tah, boom - tah, etc.

I made that into a groove clip and looped it, the problem was, no matter where I cut the audio up to make the groove clip I got this gap of sound between each loop. I tried messing with the Tempo setting, but it didn't remove this gap. Does anyone know what this is from?
 
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