@@user-ph8sh9kt9v I think whats good about a pad controller is its portable and more easy to create beats fast so its better for producers/composers to cook up and drums are good fore live and realistic recordings
I probably could if they didn't all interpret my drumkit VSTs all like, bass drum on pad 8 and most of the rest of the pads in that bank are, like, pedal hi hat and splash cymbals, etc
lol maschine is the most frustrating thing i've ever had to work with. I'm convinced you need to take a whole college course to understand this shi- IM DONE
Ima take a shot in the dark and guess its a native instrument kit. By the controller plus native is pretty much industry standard. Not saying you can’t get gret sounds with out them but the stock sounds dont need much tweaking.
Right now, the answer is unfortunately yes. For realistic finger drumming, you need a high quality drum emulator software, and none of the standalone pad controllers currently available offer built-in drum softwares. I made a video explaining the difference between drum software & one-shot samples: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_Zes7Mfwut8.html
@@DragonFingerDrumsThanks so much. I have an Alesis sr 18-looking to upgrade. If it isn't standalone, it's a deal breaker for me. May look into a multipad setup. Sounds great by the way
Not sure what you mean, there are no kick drum hits in the beginning, it starts with a snare roll, then down the toms and into the kick/snare/hi-hat groove.