
Sky Blue Lou
Well-known member
Thanks in advance. I'm looking for a hardware or software, simple, cheap solution for putting down basic drum tracks. I'm a guitar guy and couldn't keep a beat with sticks if you put a gun to my head. When I first got into the DAW thing I had a hack/demo version of Cubase that came with a little software bit - LM9 I think? It was kinda cool, if painstaking, because you could lay out the hits on a grid - no sense of rhythm required. I got involved in a band shortly after and pretty much stopped recording entirely.
I'm now starting over messing with recording again. I have upgraded to a legit copy of Reaper and a newer, faster PC. I'm not sure I can get to the old Cubase shit and it's a hack anyway - good to get a taste but I don't want to use it.
I am looking for thoughts on the best approach here. I only want decent demo track capability for songwriting. If anything comes of my work I have access to real drummers with equipment to do it right. I don't want to spend big bucks. Freeware or shareware would be fine. Hardware - drum machines - is a possibility if they can be had on Ebay for reasonable $. I'd even consider pre-recorded drum tracks although I wonder at the versatility of such.
Thoughts and suggestions are appreciated. I realize most users of this forum are the real deal so you kinda have to step out of your box and consider it from a non-drummers perspective. Drumbing for dummies. I'm the dummy.
Thanks.
lou
I'm now starting over messing with recording again. I have upgraded to a legit copy of Reaper and a newer, faster PC. I'm not sure I can get to the old Cubase shit and it's a hack anyway - good to get a taste but I don't want to use it.
I am looking for thoughts on the best approach here. I only want decent demo track capability for songwriting. If anything comes of my work I have access to real drummers with equipment to do it right. I don't want to spend big bucks. Freeware or shareware would be fine. Hardware - drum machines - is a possibility if they can be had on Ebay for reasonable $. I'd even consider pre-recorded drum tracks although I wonder at the versatility of such.
Thoughts and suggestions are appreciated. I realize most users of this forum are the real deal so you kinda have to step out of your box and consider it from a non-drummers perspective. Drumbing for dummies. I'm the dummy.
Thanks.
lou