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#1
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I'm in a "rock" band and I have a 5 piece acoustic drum kit. I'd like
to be able to practice with my band late at night. My idea is to put drum mutes over the heads, like these: http://www.musiciansfriend.com/srs7/...base_id/113989 Then use some drum triggers, like these: http://www.musiciansfriend.com/srs7/...base_id/118059 The next step is where I'm confused... do I get a trigger-to-midi converter and then trigger samples via PC based software and mix that output back into headphones for all band members to hear? Or, is it better to buy a multi-input sound card, like this: http://www.musiciansfriend.com/srs7/.../base_id/58266 And use the direct audio output of the triggers to trigger samples using software like the following (or something similar). http://www.ferrarapercussion.com/ It seems that the multi-input sound card and the trigger-to-midi hardware is about the same price. My own thought is that I'd be getting a lot more for my money with the sound card. I definitely want to use PC based sample playback as I already have the software and samples. I'm not interested in owning a drum machine unless it can somehow provide the interface for going from the drum triggers to the PC based sample playing in a less expensive or more reliable way than the other methods I've outlined. Is anybody else trying to solve (or have you solved) the same issue? Thanks for any input and/or examples you can provide. markus |
#3
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Thanks for the reply.. I took a look at the Alesis and it might solve
my problem. I really wanted to try to use the PC based sample playback. I have one of those "tweaked out" PC DAW's and have really low latency using ASIO drivers. The sounds you can get out of Battery 2, for example, are so awesome I'm just drooling to use them. Just to reiterate, this really is for a live/practice setup. When doing recording I'll mic the drums up properly and if I need to fix them I'll use something like Drumagog in my DAW. I have made such an investment in my PC DAW already it seems like a crime to buy another piece of dedicated hardware like a drum machine. But maybe in the end it's still the cheapest way to go? You brought up latency and I think latency would be a problem if I were to use a trigger-to-midi converter and use the midi to playback samples from the PC. Midi and is relatively slow and I could see that causing too much latency for it to be effective in a live situation. But using the multi-input soundcard solution, I bet I could get latency as low as the Alesis.... Anybody out there actually doing this? I'd love to talk to somebody who is currently doing this kind "live triggering" for a band practice situation. I also was wondering if the triggers will work okay if I put mutes on the drum heads. Will I still get reliable results from the triggers? So many questions... Thanks again! Markus On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 22:24:16 -0700, "John L Rice" wrote: Hi Markus, I think that for real time playing with a band you'd be better off with a dedicated hardware trigger to midi and drum sound module like this : http://www.musiciansfriend.com/srs7/...se_pid/705523/ The problem you may encounter with converting the trigger pulses to digital with a PC sound card and then triggering soft synth/sampler drums sounds is latency ( where there is a noticeable delay between when you hit the drum and when you hear the sound ) If you were to use something like the Alesis DM5, you can still record it's midi output into you PC DAW software and then later use what ever sounds you like when mixing. Best of luck! |
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