Drum module questions

  • Thread starter Thread starter Executivos
  • Start date Start date
well i needed the money for the amp so that I could buy the dm5

:) oh well.
 
no, the reason I wanted the TMI was because I thought I was wasting money with the dm5 because I'm not using it's sounds, but it turns out that a TMI is more expensive then the dm5 which is a tmi w/ sound.

so i'm cool with what I got.
 
awesome...thats pretty much what i was looking for. It would be nice if it had more trigger inputs but beggers cant be choosers.

thanks!
 
Retail Price

According to Tara Callahan (PR Specialist of Roland Corporation) the MC-6 MIDI Trigger Converter "will be released later this month with a US MSRP of $295".

Sounds overpriced to me.

Regards,
rathpy
 
Drums triggering on Alesis SR16

I 'm sure it's not triggerable, but any of you could explain how to play the Sr16 not using its own pad, but external pad?
Is it possible to use Sr16 samples with ext.pads (home built, like the one you explained before?)
thanks
nok
 
Just a FYI. I have a few of those triggers made from Remo practice pads and they can break pretty easy if you get carried away. They might work better in a studio environment, but I used them live so I had to turn the sensitivity way down to avoid false triggering. This means I had to whack the hell out of them to get them to trigger. This led to the plastic breaking on two of em.
 
Sound module - Alesis SR16 triggerable?

I just want to apologize to you for my delayed thanks.
I've had long time problems with my PC and just now I'm readyin your posts.
Tanks a lot
nocaster
 
Drumagog might be the best solution!

Executivos, if you want a extremely flexable way to record drums. You should check out www.drumagog.com . What it will do for you is act as a trigger for sampled drum sounds that you can pick from. Here's how it works... First mic the kick, snare, toms, and then over heads into a multitrack program such as Cakewalk, Nuendo, etc. Then insert the Drumagog plugin into the channel you wish to trigger. Say for instance the Snare sounds terrible... all you do is insert the plugin into the Snare track, then pick the snare sound you want and boom.. your Snare sounds like a million bucks. It works great because it has two powerful feature called dynamic and random multisampling.. with dynamic enabled the volume that triggers will determine what volume sample of eight samples is to be played... also random multisampling is a setting that randomly picks a sample of that same snare sound which makes it sound like a human was playing instead of the same exact sound over and over which makes this a killer plugin... Also it has a Stealth mode.. which is awesome.. say you recorded the snare and hi-hat with the same mic... with it in stealth mode it passes everything just like it was except the snare which would be replaced by samples... If you get the chance download the demo and just try it out.. It's the single best plugin I've seen in a long time... probably since AutoTune came out... And best of all it actually works without a bunch of tweaking.. which you can do also... Just to let you know what can be done with this plugin .. they said that a guy sent a demo of himself playing on carboard boxes.. lol.. and each one was miked .. and after the Drumagog plugin was inserted into each channel it sounded like a million dollar drum set.. .lol.. you don't have to get that adventureous... :) It will also give you flexability to change drum sounds at any time.. without having to re-record.. There are tons of other features that Drumagog has.. but I'll let you read them on the web page... I thought I'd just pass this information on since someone got me hooked on it about 2 weeks ago.. lol GL
 
well....

First of all I live in an apartment so that whole part about miking drums isn't possible.

I have drumagog, allthough I don't use it. I often use sound replacer, which is about the same thing for protools, but sound replacer works much better.

Thanks for the idea though!
 
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