#86745 - 11/04/2002 12:14
Electronic Drum Kits
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 27/06/1999
Posts: 7058
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
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Allright... I'm going to admit it. I'm a wanna-be drummer. Whether I'm at work, in class, or at home, I'm always tapping out rhythms on my desk, my keyboard, or whatever is available. I would love to start getting somewhat serious about it but my problem is I live in an apartment, and while I have no immediate neighbors, I couldn't be playing on a real drum kit without seriously disturbing everyone in my building.
So I was getting my mind thinking about electronic drum kits. I have MIDI capabilities on my PC, and I've seen electronic drums which actually have a trap-set arrangement with bass and hi-hat pedals, etc. Of course it won't be a natural drum feel, but it's probably as close as I can get without getting evicted.
Anyway I have done some net searches but couldn't find any good unbiased reviews. Since I'm just getting started I'd be looking on the cheap, probably at $1500 max. I stumbled upon some in the $600 range but they looked kinda flimsy. I want something that can take a bit of a beating.
So, if anyone out there has any experience and can recommend brands, models, etc. or even just some good sites which review them, that'd be cool. Any online stores that sell electronic kits would be cool too.
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#86746 - 11/04/2002 12:24
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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addict
Registered: 18/02/2002
Posts: 658
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Well, i have no clue where you live so i don't know if there is a Sam Ash around you, but they have good stuff and people who know what they're talking about. http://www.samash.com, they have 6 electronic drum sets listed on their website ranging in price from 1000 - 5000. Check it out.
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#86747 - 11/04/2002 12:31
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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The ultimate electronic kit I've seen is the Roland V-drum system.
I don't know if you've ever seen the Roland virtual guitar system, but it's been around for several years and it worked like this:
A hexaphonic pickup with a 6-conductor cable grabs the vibration of each one of the six strings individually. Once upon a time, these would have triggered a MIDI synthesizer, but there was processing delay associated with that, as well as tracking error.
So instead, they now take the raw signal of the string's vibrations and do realtime DSP and computer processing on the sound so that they can do all sorts of interesting things to the sound. Not just synthesizer sounds (although that is possible), but more importantly, they can MODEL the sound so that your guitar can emulate the sound of any other guitar. For example, turn your 6-string into an authentic-sounding 12-string or Nashville-tuned guitar. Or make your electric sound like an acoustic. Or make your Fender sound like a Gibson. It also has models for different types of pickups, bodies, amplifiers and speakers. For instance, you can dial up a hollow body Gretch playing through the bridge pickup into a Marshall stack with Celestion speakers. You can also program alternate tunings, so that you can do nonstandard tunings and open chords (Joni Mitchell used this extensively on a recent tour as I recall). Since all of this is happening in real-time on the real string signal, all of the tracking issues associated with synth-guitar are gone. Everything you do to the string (including scraping the pick along the string) is reproduced faithfully. You can play as fast and as sloppy as you like, and it will all come through (something you can't do with MIDI).
The Roland V-drum system is the logical extension of that concept, just applied to drums. You have these almost-normal looking drum heads which have these little pickups attached to them. They intercept the signal and model it into any kind of drum kit you like. You can mix and match authentic African drums with techno-synth drums, etc. But what makes it great is that it responds like a real drum-head would respond. For instance, you can still use brushes to scrape across the drum head, and it still sounds natural. You can't do brushes with synth drums. Your snare rolls will be perfectly accurate, instead of being glitchy MIDI-interpretations of snare rolls. But at the same time, it'll do pure synth-sample stuff, too, so you can trigger sound effects and even little melodies with drum hits.
I have a friend with one of these kits, and it's pretty darn amazing. Very very fun to mess with, and I'm not even a drummer. There's actually a bunch of sequencing stuff built into the drum system, so he can do this total one-man-band routine with just the kit. Blows me away when he does it, just wild.
Oh, and in case you're worried that these almost-natural drum heads will make too much noise when you are practicing, don't worry. It's very quiet when you're playing, it's not like playing real full-volume drums. If you use headphones, it's quite appropriate for practicing when you live in an apartment or if you don't want to disturb other members of your house. You could, for example, practice with one of these in the next room while your spouse watches television, and you would not disturb her.
Look into it.
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#86750 - 11/04/2002 12:43
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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The video only scratches the surface of what I've seen these things do. The important thing is that they can sound exactly like perfectly natural and real drums when you want them to, but then you can add all the synth stuff if you want, too.
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#86752 - 11/04/2002 12:46
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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#86754 - 11/04/2002 13:01
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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Also remember that those systems are modular. You could start with the rubber pads and later graduate to the natural heads.
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#86756 - 11/04/2002 13:12
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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I absolutely love the cymbal choke and rim shot sensors on the natural head drums. That is such a cool touch.
Yes, the cymbal chokes are very important for learning how to play properly, it's interesting watching my friend use them. He played real kits for many years, and then "downgraded" to the V-drum system when he moved into a smaller house in a more crowded neighborhood and needed a more compact, quiet system. It was things like being able to choke the cymbals and use brushes that made electronic drums feasible for him, otherwise I don't think he would have considered it in the first place.
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#86759 - 11/04/2002 13:31
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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And in case you didn't catch it on that page, an interactive demo:
http://www.rolandus.com/PRODUCTS/demos/hpd15/demo.html
I like the "Sitar" one because one of the pads is a toggle trigger, so you can do a continuous background chord with it... [edit: must have been a glitch in the demo software, can't do it any more.]
That's something you can do with the V-drum sound module, is create little melodies or chords with the pads. For instance, you can program a pad to play a different note in a melody each time you hit it. So you just hit the same pad ten times to play a ten-note melody, for example. Can be backing chords, too, so you can keep a chord progression going while still doing the rhythm. Quite interesting when you see someone talented doing it.
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#86760 - 11/04/2002 13:44
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 06/10/1999
Posts: 2591
Loc: Seattle, WA, U.S.A.
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You can also program alternate tunings, so that you can do nonstandard tunings and open chords (Joni Mitchell used this extensively on a recent tour as I recall
Dang, now all of Joni's shows will be, like, 32 minutes long!
I can play all of about 6 chords and haven't had a guitar in years, but that git sounds interesting enough for me to have to check it out. I could waste at least a few hundred hours mucking around with that!
_________________________
Jim
'Tis the exceptional fellow who lies awake at night thinking of his successes.
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#86762 - 11/04/2002 14:59
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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journeyman
Registered: 17/05/2000
Posts: 92
Loc: 's-Hertogenbosch; the Netherla...
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Saw the Roland kit at several shows and it's indeed pretty amazing...
What really gets me is how the stuff is demonstrated: Typically you would see a large group (up to 20, 30) of people with headphones around what looks like a complete drum kit, someone playing it in full swing, arms and legs flapping and waving furiously...
Bizarre thing is of course that without headphones you don't hear anything (the little noise that is made is lost in the hubbub of the show itself. Weid but fun spectacle!
Cas.
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#86763 - 11/04/2002 16:06
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: Cas_O]
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addict
Registered: 24/08/1999
Posts: 564
Loc: TX
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I really am a drummer and have been playing for more years than I care to think about, but if you want a cheap 'IN' to learning for figuring out, go and get a basic practice kit. They usually focus on making the playing feel right and have nothing like the correct sound, so if you wanted to jump from practice to real it should feel the same.
Most of the inexpensive (and some expensive) electronic kits I have played put all the emphasis on gee wiz sounds but feel crappy to play.
It depends what you want.
If its gee wiz sounds and messing about, go for the cheapest that makes the sounds you like.
But if you want to learn to play, get a no sound practice kit.
Please remember that this came from a guy who will never ever replace his lovely black Premier XPK for the world
Good luck.
_________________________
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the chewtoy for the dog of Life
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#86767 - 11/04/2002 16:21
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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Well tapping on my desk would be unnecessary (or less necessary) if I had me-self one of them fancy 'lectronic drummin' kits.
You haven't hung around many real drummers in your life, have you? All the drummers I know simply cannot stop tapping and banging rhythms on things.
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#86768 - 11/04/2002 16:22
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: ashmoore]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31636
Loc: Seattle, WA
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Most of the inexpensive (and some expensive) electronic kits I have played put all the emphasis on gee wiz sounds but feel crappy to play.
Exactly why I think those V-drum natural pads are so cool. Now, I'm no drummer, but when I mess with them, it seems to me that they feel like real drum heads.
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#86769 - 11/04/2002 19:14
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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enthusiast
Registered: 22/03/2002
Posts: 251
Loc: Ramsey, NJ
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When I was in a band, one guy who used to hang with us brought in a set that was like the V-Club set (It was Roland, but an older model). I'm no drummer, but damn those things were fun to play! I used to go down to the studio all the time to play them.
_________________________
VW R32
Empeg 50gig
'Stormy 3 has snuck in a dodgeball' - Stormy 1
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#86770 - 11/04/2002 20:21
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 27/06/1999
Posts: 7058
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
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Funny you should ask. In my lifetime I have had four good friends who are drummers, one in a rather successful band that release an album on Atlantic records. Of course they all love tapping on things and all the other stereotypical drummer jokes. Knowing so many drummers throughout my life is what got me started with this. However, this is the first time in my life that it was actually feasible (financially) to invest a couple G's on a set of drums.
My point is, not being a "real drummer", if *I* had a drum kit, *I* would get a lot of that tapping out of my system and not be doing it at inopportune times, such as during staff meetings (true story behind that one.)
Yes, getting more into it will make me more likely to have rhythms banging around in my head, but at least with a drum set at home, I might be inclined to wait to have a real vehicle to get those impulses out, rather than having people stare at me while my manager is trying to talk about how far behind schedule our next release is.
Make sense?
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#86771 - 11/04/2002 20:30
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
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"All the drummers I know simply cannot stop tapping and banging rhythms on things."
Now see I've found that its always the guitar players banging on things and drummers playing air guitar. . .
_________________________
-Jeff Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.
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#86772 - 12/04/2002 11:41
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: JeffS]
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addict
Registered: 24/08/1999
Posts: 564
Loc: TX
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I know what you mean, folk are always telling me quit banging on the table, chairs tin cans, anything.
The thing I find most satisfying about a real kit is the skill involved in getting things like rimshots without smashing sticks, real hihat timing, true power sensitivity and of course the main thing, the satisfaction of beating seven colors of s**t out of something and making a great noise.
These electronic dealies that give you full power from a little tap are just not as satisfying!
The noise each part of the drum head makes or the variation in tone from different parts of a cymbal make it all worthwhile for me.
Of course, having neighbours several hundred feet away does help
Still a dedicated acoustic kit dude.
_________________________
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the chewtoy for the dog of Life
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#86774 - 18/05/2002 16:18
Re: Electronic Drum Kits
[Re: tfabris]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 27/06/1999
Posts: 7058
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
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Just a follow-up on my foray into the electronic drum market... I finally did it. I broke down and bought the Roland V-Club set. Got a GREAT deal from www.kraftmusic.com... List price is $1500, Sam Ash has it "on sale" for $1295, but Kraft Music had it for $1099. Another site had it for $1069 but it was back-ordered, but Kraft Music matched their $1069 price, along with free ground shipping. Not too bad if you ask me!
Since my original budget figure was $1500, I splurged a little and added in the CY-12H hi-hat. I consider the hi-hat the second most important part of a kit (the snare being the most important) and I couldn't quite justify spending $350+ for a mesh snare pad from Roland. Plus those seem to appear on E-Bay a lot more often than the V-Cymbals do because they've been around longer.
So everything should show up sometime next week. I'll hit the local music store tomorrow to buy a throne and some sticks to make the package complete. I'm really glad I was able to get into a kit and stay within my price range.
Anyway, thanks for all the info guys.
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