Re:Any one useing Drum Triggers when recording ?
2011/03/15 18:40:36
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You're quite welcome Norrie. Yeah if you have the Roland brain, you're in great shape already. You'd just set the triggers up the same way you do pads and then experiment with the thresholds and other stuff inside the Roland brain for each drummer's hits. These will always be different, so you'll have to set this up each time for each drummer. I had a guy that I recorded a few months ago that hit the drums like a 10 year old. So I had to set the thresholds much higher for him or I wasn't getting the right triggering. Then I'll get one of those metal basher guys to come in, and I have to drop the thresholds considerably to compensate for the excessive force. You just have to play around with everything until you get what you're looking for, but it shouldn't take you much time to dial in at all...I promise.
The other thing to keep in mind, if you are recording this stuff, use the Roland to track the midi stuff and use the sounds in it. The reason being, you will not have to reduce your latency to record your drum modules and the Roland tracks way better than any drum module. You just want to get all the midi stuff tracked correctly, then edit it and bring in your real drum module after. If I'm unclear about this, allow me to explain.
I've noticed that if I record with say Superior drummer or BFD or Slate etc, (even though the midi is coming from the Roland brain) that some of the hits are strange. I can get my latency down to 64 samples without a problem...so I'm ok there. However, I have had the best luck tracking with the sounds of the Roland and then editing the midi with the Roland enabled so that what I'm working with, is completely consistent and spot on. There's always a little bit of drift or something weird when I track with one of my modules. But once I edit everything up with the Roland, and then switch to one of my modules, everything is perfect. So just keep that in mind when you are doing this. Most times, you shouldn't have to track with any midi sounds going at all for the drummer. YOU want to hear them to make sure they are printing and are in sync etc, but he shouldn't hear anything but the sound of the real drums in my opinion. This just stops any possible confusion. Add your drum module last after editing...it honestly works much better that way...at least for me. Keep me posted on things, and best of luck. :)
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