Hi,
I have a question for you. I've been investigating drum machines. I just got an Andromeda A6 - love the analog sound. I am looking for a good drum machine of acoustic drums to go with it. I've been looking at 80's drum machines as well as new ones. All of my friends say that the older drum machines sound so 80's and that I should get something with a current sound. To be honest, I couldn't tell an 80's drum sound froma current drum sound so I'm wondering what the difference in sound is?
Cheers,
Sioux
Comments
My favourite all time drummachine is the Alesis SR16. It might b
My favourite all time drummachine is the Alesis SR16. It might be 80's but i love that sound. And with a bit of editing and some juicy plugins these sounds can really get very interesting. The sounds on the SR16 were made by Jay Graydon. So that kind of tells enough about the quality of these sounds :)
Thanks for that idea. I will look into that as soon as possible.
Thanks for that idea. I will look into that as soon as possible. I do have a drum machine already. And I love Alesis!!
My internet got creamed last night in a storm and I may not get it back all week. I'll be back here when I get my internet back.
Thanks everyone for your great ideas, thoughts, and suggestions!!
Sioux
[ August 18, 2003, 10:16 AM: Message edited by: sioux ]
If you have midi out, channel that into the computer, and try ht
If you have midi out, channel that into the computer, and try http://www.nskit.com
Really nice, unprocessed sounds for you to do whatever you like to. Totally free, too.
Only thing I don't dig is that the crashes sound a little thin.
Thanks everybody! Hey Falcon....I actually did download that
Thanks everybody!
Hey Falcon....I actually did download that kit, except one of the files gives me an error so I'll be checking that out. Thanks for the suggestion.
I think I'm going to start off with an Alesis SR16 or the d4 or d5. Later, I have another drum machine in mind - MPC 2000XL - about $2394.00 with extra memory and stuff. I'd also like to get the Electron MachineDrum. Before I'm done, I'll have an arsenal of drums!
Cheers,
Sioux
Originally posted by sioux: Jay Graydon...sorry, I don't know
Originally posted by sioux:
Jay Graydon...sorry, I don't know him or very many drummers for that matter.
He's a guitarist. A hot session cat in the 70's (solo on Steely Dan's "Peg"), and quite a notable producer songwriter.
[ August 22, 2003, 03:06 PM: Message edited by: Bryson ]
Best advice I can give is to listen to a lot of modern rock, the
Best advice I can give is to listen to a lot of modern rock, then listen to a lot of 80's rock... The difference is quite apparent after a bit, especially the snare.
A good exercise is to try to emulate those sounds with whatever you have on hand - get a bunch of samples, play with EQ, reverb, gating, etc and see if you can get them to sound closer to the stuff from popular records - That might teach you to learn what to look out for in drum sounds as well.