I was a real drummer when younger, after a long musical hiatus, i came back in computer composing.
I basically try to program a drum track like I would play it (or, like I would want to play it, lol) Sometimes I like the soft "boom-chik, boom-chik" really basic sound, like on a soft slow thing... sometimes I get anal and go back and score the whole drum line.
one major problem I hear a lot, is non-drummers forget that drummers have 2 hands and 2 feet, IE, you have to watch you dont have him doing something impossible, like, hitting 3 things at once. Or, when they hit the wrong thing with the wrong hand. heck, I'm a drummer myself... and I will sit there going "what IS it with this?" then I will find it, LMAO.
non musicians pick up on this without realizing it, let alone musicians, and dont even think about fooling a real drummer listening for quite some time, LMAo (though I myself wonder when listening to the radio, so, it happens)
listen top a real drummer playing by himself. Close your eyes, and stand in front of the set. What do your ears tell you? That the right and left panning of all the individual instruments is noticeable. When you back up, the panning gets closer together. People want to push the drums "back" in the mix with just simple reverb, but leave it panned like its up close. or vice versa.
a real live drummer has a subtle difference between his right hand and his left hand... you approximate this digitally with volume differences and a SLIGHT panning to the right and left hits on drum heads.
One thing i can not duplicate even remotely myself is what I was known for... intimate complicated hi-hat beats. not just open or closed, but... I was hitting sometimes AS it closed or opened, making unique sounds.
non-drummers scoring digital drum lines use, like 2 or 3 "rudiments" and forgbet the rest. Mere striking an instrument of the drum kit is a single rudiment!!! There are 52 distinct rudiments to a true percussionist. I myself a real drummer have often forgotten this, and you should look up the OTHER 51 rudiments and practice programmign them. may I suggest a f-a-s-t para-para-diddle ??? (R R L L R L) starting first only on snare, then the Rs and Ls start moving to other drum heads? (produces the fast razmatazz riff sound)
The rap age left us with drumming as just "eh, a beat timing thingy" and its almost all simple 4-4 stuff. yeah, its boring after a while. Theres more than just a "ONE two THREE four" or a "1 e & a 2 e & a 3 e & a 4 e & a" beat we all hear...
good drummers, even those that dont do fast slick double bass and roll solos... will move those 1,3 accents ahead of the beat and behind the beat seamlessly. or, play in 5/4 time when the song is 4/4 so the beat is dead nuts ON, but seems to be moving and shifting yet still is locked in.
Just like a guitar player can shift to a relative key? he still in tune, but its interesting? Drummers cant change key so we do it in timing and accents.
recording live drums can be a real bear. Mainly cymbals, but, the heads too. Zildjian turkish had long slow decays, sounded great live or on stage. for recording? paiste and fast decay and more small splash cymbals. You really needtwo whole sets, completely different from heads to cymbals and even stick types.
Good drummers have a sense of rhythm that most guitarists and singers cant really fathom. When guitarists start to songwrite and compose, they just want a live metronome a lot of times, LMAO. Consider writing a song, even a soft slow one in ANY time signature other than 4/4 time. The human brain is hearing and expecting a series of 4s, 8s, and 16s... they HEAR that in a 5/4 time, but, its really NOVEL to them and they dont know WHY.
The average non musician KNOWS what 4-4 "simple time" is, even if they have no knowledge of time signatures whatsoever. When you hear someone say "a really well written song can fool the listener into not knowing what the correct time signature is?" THATS how they do it. not that the whole song needs to be a "solo" like dream theatre did it, but... they would use 7/8 and 5/8 measures all thru it.
when you first experiment with 5/8? where to put the accents, eh? you have CHOICES now, flavors!
accents on the 1,3,5... 1,5... 3,5... soft 1 and hard 2345... get the idea? The listener HEARS teh 4/4 time, but, is constantly hearing "novel" accents as they THINK its in 4/4 time...
theres SO much more to a good percussionist than just being a live metronome, or to playing fast double bass and slick rolls all night long.
*LOOK UP THE 52 RUDIMENTS* ----- *lOOK UP 5/4 AND 7/8 TIME SIGNATURES*