What are people using for drum plugins these days?

DankStar

Her Little Mojo Minion
Just seeing what people are using for plugin style drums these days. I'd like to do a new tune some day and was considering either upgrading to EZD 2 or going with an expansion pack ($40 right now) but might go with another program all together. Slate was kinda fun but I didn't entirely like the last few songs I did using those sounds, plus I did several tunes with it so time for a change.
 
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Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

I use Logic Drummer and Steve Slate for samples.
Final drums are a session drummer.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

"Drums on Demand" make some pretty good Apple Loops... they do such a good job that I haven't felt the need for anything like Slate or EZ Drummer yet.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Thanks for the tip, will check that out.
Do they work w Logic Drummer? Or are they straight aiff loops?

Edit: just checked them out.

Some great loop kits there, thanks for the heads up!

Gonna pick up a couple sets tonight!
 
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Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Apple Logic Drummer (with or without additional MIDI grid editing)

I overuse Spectrasonics Stylus RMX. In recent weeks, I have been mangling percussive sounds through the Omnisphere 2 granular synthesis option.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

I'm a freeware maniac.

Sonoma DrumCore 3 Free (VST); has some good MIDI loops (link)
Bluenoise Drummix MyDrumset Beta (VST) (link)
Sennheiser DrumMic'a (Kontakt); changes mics, and also some great loops (original page in German, but DrumMic'a does load in English once you're registered... link)
SM MegaReaper Drum Kit (samples); deep round-robin and velocity layering. Very big file. (from the Reaper user forum... link)

various drum kit samples
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Just seeing what people are using for plugin style drums these days. I'd like to do a new tune some day and was considering either upgrading to EZD 2 or going with an expansion pack ($40 right now) but might go with another program all together. Slate was kinda fun but I didn't entirely like the last few songs I did using those sounds, plus I did several tunes with it so time for a change.

I'm using Superior Drummer these days. EZ Drummer 2 has some neat features that I'm hoping they add to Superior 3 whenever that comes out. I'd say weigh the new features of EZD2 vs the sound of the EZX packs that you're looking at.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

I'm using Superior Drummer these days. EZ Drummer 2 has some neat features that I'm hoping they add to Superior 3 whenever that comes out. I'd say weigh the new features of EZD2 vs the sound of the EZX packs that you're looking at.

Unfortunately, I can't upgrade with the packs I want since it requires a subsequent version and mine's too early. I could do an upgrade to 2 at a reduced price though. However, I see that you can't build a song in EZD2 with tempo changes (I could probably do songs in sections though, it may or may not be a pain). Not sure it'd be worth it or not now. I'll consider superior but it's a bit out of my cost comfort zone for a program that may not end up with a significantly better result.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

I really need to get with the "times".
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

I see that you can't build a song in EZD2 with tempo changes

Surely, it should be possible to organise tempo and time signature matters via your DAW's Project settings.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Surely, it should be possible to organise tempo and time signature matters via your DAW's Project settings.

It is - but one of the "selling points" of ezd2 is the ease at which you can build a song within ezd then export the whole song out as a midi file. I could just drag and drop as needed into the daw probably, but that's not really taking advantage of this supposed cool way to build a song.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Used to use Superior Drummer, but been using an mpc studio with mpc software for the past year and love it. Much easier for me to actually get into making the beat. The supplied samples aren't bad but I've been supplementing with random sample packs.
 
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Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Used to use Superior Drummer, but been using an mpc studio with mpc software for the past year and love it. Much easier for me to actually get into making the beat. The supplied samples aren't bad but I've been supplementing with random sample packs.

hows that work - you start with a stock beat then tap out some hits to tweak it, or just tap the whole thing out? does it snap to a grid or something? is the software basically a midi editor? superior sounds pretty realistic - does it compete with it sound-wise when it's all said and done?
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Used to use Superior Drummer, but been using an mpc studio with mpc software for the past year and love it. Much easier for me to actually get into making the beat. The supplied samples aren't bad but I've been supplementing with random sample packs.

I'd use that as MIDI out into the computer to control Superior. I use Superior with an E-Kit that I built.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

hows that work - you start with a stock beat then tap out some hits to tweak it, or just tap the whole thing out? does it snap to a grid or something? is the software basically a midi editor? superior sounds pretty realistic - does it compete with it sound-wise when it's all said and done?

I tap the whole thing out, usually in layers. It's totally possible to just copy/paste midi loops from Superior drummer and tweak from there, but what I like best about it is that it inspires me to make my own beats from scratch instead. The software is almost (ALMOST) a DAW in its own right, and since it can be opened as a plugin in your DAW it's like having two at once. But yes the core of it is a super solid midi editor, and yes it snaps to a grip. The quantize function is quite accurate, so to an extent it's actually possible to play nonsense and have it come out sounding halfway coherent. How realistic it sounds depends completely on the samples you use. The supplied ones are artificially "big" sounding, but I like that for a lot of stuff these days. If I wanted to I could use Superior Drummer sounds (more on that in a moment). Some of the functions, like note repeat, will give signature electronic and hip hop sounds like rolling hi-hats (switching between 8th, 16th, and 32nd notes while holding closed hi-hat pad), but the pads are velocity sensitive and can sound be played to sound very realistic. The swing feature also helps make it sound more human by moving your beat ever so slightly "behind." Can give something fairly static a nice groove. Another great feature is the ability to organize parts into "tracks," so you can strategically mute and un-mute pre-sequenced flourishes to add variation to a beat or change beats completely, or you can just have it switch to the next sequence, with its own set of muteable tracks. This also allows you to do things like change time signature or tempo.

Here is a good demonstration: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7FigKhvSkE

It's also a lot more than a drum machine... For example, you can take any sound/sample and automatically pitch shift it and assign it chromatically to the pads, or use a keyboard going into your midi in. Works amazing for stuff like horn jabs hehe

dominus said:
I'd use that as MIDI out into the computer to control Superior. I use Superior with an E-Kit that I built.
It's actually possible to open superior drummer right inside the software (or any other vst plugin for that matter), and it automatically assigns sounds to the pads as if it were a keyboard. So no need! :D I was actually burned out on those sounds, or I'd just do that every time I sat down to compose something.

Edit: So it's a (almost)DAW opened as plugin within a DAW which can also open plugins. It's like inception!
 
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Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

That mute feature sounds really cool

It is! It's useful for a lot of things. I really like using it to compose different riffs to the same basic groove, sample them, and then experiment with the order "on the fly" to figure out the structure.
 
Re: What are people using for drum plugins these days?

Superior Drummer it is a bit more complex then say Addictive Drums but sounds more REAL once you delve into using multi samples and program with different velocities on cymbals and rolls, that said I'm not a big fan of the stock Avatar kit but the Music City one is nice and the Custom and Vintage has some nice snare and cymbal sounds (although very dead in a 70s way).
 
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