metropolis_4
Rock Star
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- 3,930
You have no idea what kind of place this is, but thanks for your opinion. I suppose you are one of those here that would have turned down a gig because the venue was going to make you play at a lower volume (even a good paying gig ..... which these days is hard to find for a full band)?
The band I was mixing gigs every weekend and sometimes during the week. They are in high demand and get paid well for the venues they play. All the snark in this thread is laughable. Comments from the peanut gallery from a bunch of non-gigging musicians.
This is absolutely the issue. I spent my first decade of gigging trying to figure out why all the venues were saying we were too loud. No matter what I did to the PA, it was still too loud. It was the drummer (and to a lesser extent guitar amps). Once I got rid of the drummer (who was a friend of mine and still is) and got a drummer that used vDrums, our stage volume problems went away and we sounded great out front AND the "too loud" complaints went completely away.
It drives people away. That is a pretty good indicator of how "good" it sounds.
I can't even count the times I have seen a band with high stage volume gig a venue where the first 2 rows of tables closest to the stage are empty all night because people can't stand to be that close.
Despite the Orvillian haram and their non-stop non-sensical rants, there have been a few people that have expressed good reasons why eDrums make a great improvement to most bands for live performance FOH sound.
The price of a good eDrum kit has also come down, and they no longer look (and feel) like a fisher price toy. For anyone reading this thread and thinking about eDrums, they are pretty amazing these days.
To continue this thread’s tradition of trading anecdote for anecdote, and opinion for opinion:
No, they all still feel like fisher price toys. I don’t know a single drummer who doesn’t hate the way they feel. Even the ones who use them frequently. That doesn’t mean they’re not useful, but let’s be honest.
My favorite drummer to work with is so in-demand people usually book him 4-6 months in advance and his schedule is always packed. Everyone wants him. I’ve played gigs with him that are crazy things like playing Queen in a small living room with un-mic’d vocals and no PA and he made everything balance perfectly. And he almost exclusively uses acoustic drums.
So don’t try to tell me the only people defending acoustic drums don’t gig and don’t know what they’re talking about, and don’t try to tell me acoustic drums can’t sound amazing in small live settings. I’ve experienced it first hand enough to know better.