Voda La Void
highlandermak
So I have a personal studio in my basement that has a 4 by 6 vocal booth. It is great for recording most instruments except an acoustic drum set. I would like to expand the "personal studio" to record bands. I thought about getting an electric drum kit and let drummers record via midi. However I feel as though it might be a deal breaker not being able to record acoustic drums. Has anyone faced this road block and figured a work around? Thanks
Speaking as a drummer, that's a deal breaker. Electronic drum kits are great if the drummer is basically a lifeless metronome. The only use for the electronic drum kit in that case is to record the notes instead of dragging and dropping and building the drum track.
But some genres of music actually want the drummer to play his drums and contribute. You miss all the nuances of snare hits and cymbal work when you don't capture an acoustic performance. Electronic drums put you behind the beat a little too, depending on their latency, and can really screw up a drummer's sense of time and feel. It's a micro thing, but it changes how you play. Sure you can fix all that with quantizing, and get that lifeless machine feel.
I played electronic drums for years and it ruined my feel for acoustic drums and much of my original skill set. The way the pads bounce, that little micro-detectable delay, the sterile sound of piezoelectric triggering of MIDI notes...just lead to such a boring and unexciting drum track.
But I can't speak for all drummers and I am seeing more and more bands set up with electronic drums. There's a market out there, I guess.
My take here is that it depends on the drummer.
Most drummers coming from an acoustic kit will struggle with the limited dynamic range that MIDI has. Piano players used to real Pianos have the same issue. Most notes end up with a velocity of 127 which means that they all sound the same. In simple terms the dynamics end up sounding like they are over compressed and all of that careful velocity mapping gets lost.
You can fix some of this by setting the kit up well but its not always that easy and like most musicians drummers play harder when performing that when they are setting up.
The feel issue can be fixed. Higher priced kits will have mesh heads rather than the rubberised ones. Well setup and maintained these can be made to respond as the drummer would expect. Certainly not perfect but worth the effort. Modifying a kit without mesh heads is relativity easy the main challenge being achieving the right level of tension.
There is no doubt that using electronic drums requires a change in approach for the drummer. Cymbals, including hi-hats, really do behave very differently when you are relying on triggered samples. Its not all bad though and the ability to access a large range of sounds from a small kit can be a real benefit.
My son has played an all electronic kit for years and is very comfortable with it and the drummer who I play with now is using a hybrid approach with real Cymbals and Snare but electronic Toms and Bass Drum.
The questions I would probably be asking if I was you are:
What do my competition offer?
If a local band wants to record today, what are their options?
How many drummers in local bands already have electronic kits they use for practicing?
If there are no local studios that can record drums then a good MIDI kit might help you get business and you could offer a free hour for the drummer to get used to the kit and a sampling service where you create samples of the drummers kit.