G
gordholio
New member
Hi guys:
I wonder if anyone can be of help. I write rock songs and record them via Sonar 2. I play the guitar and bass and sing (for what it's worth!). But, I don't play drums. I've been using some of the drum loops included with Sonar, because they do sound good. They're real drums, recorded in a real studio, etc. BUT, now I'm getting pretty tired of the repetiveness of one main drum beat. I'm breaking it up by inserting crashes, stops, breaks, etc., but I'm doing it all in the main Sonar window. It's sounding much better, but this is a hard way to do it. In fact, if a certain crash or odd beat doesn't fall right on a grid line, I MANUALLY place it as close to where it should be as possible.
This is obviously not the way to do it. What do you guys do, bearing in mind that I want rock beats (not, for the most part, techno beats) and I want the sound of REAL drums. And no, I don't have the facilities to learn how to play a real drum myself.
Is there an effective tool for chopping up and positioning loops, for example?
Thanks so much in advance.
gordo
I wonder if anyone can be of help. I write rock songs and record them via Sonar 2. I play the guitar and bass and sing (for what it's worth!). But, I don't play drums. I've been using some of the drum loops included with Sonar, because they do sound good. They're real drums, recorded in a real studio, etc. BUT, now I'm getting pretty tired of the repetiveness of one main drum beat. I'm breaking it up by inserting crashes, stops, breaks, etc., but I'm doing it all in the main Sonar window. It's sounding much better, but this is a hard way to do it. In fact, if a certain crash or odd beat doesn't fall right on a grid line, I MANUALLY place it as close to where it should be as possible.
This is obviously not the way to do it. What do you guys do, bearing in mind that I want rock beats (not, for the most part, techno beats) and I want the sound of REAL drums. And no, I don't have the facilities to learn how to play a real drum myself.

Thanks so much in advance.
gordo