Personally.if I were setting up a more complete "music room" and certainly if I were setting up an actual home studio capable of recording.what I've heard at least heavily implies that a $5,000 or so vDrum kit is probably worth investing in, especially compared to a $5,000 normal kit and the thousands worth of mics and pres and even more on a good-sounding live room it would take to record it. ![]() ![]() But, apparently, it's to the point that even really picky drummers can use the same techniques they use on a real one and get the sounds they want. It's expensive.just the hi-hat costs over a grand. I haven't heard the rimshot complaint in a while, but I guess it would really depend on the sample pack you use.Īnd, apparently, Roland recently came out with a hi-hat controller that actually works like a hi-hat and is waaaaay closer. The only serious complaints I heard even in mid-2000s had to do with hi-hats and rimshots. I'm not a drummer, and I don't do that for anything that I do, but.Įven years and years ago, some of the drummers I knew IRL really liked vDrums (or similar) largely for the same reasons that we like modelers - more control over the sounds themselves, easy editing/config, changing sounds after the fact (assuming you capture dry and "re-amp"), quiet practice, etc.
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