Sascha Franck
Rock Star
- Messages
- 6,029
I actually like the sound of some of Logic's drum kits a whole lot. What I recommend doing:
- Load a drummer coming closest to what you want/need. Don't use those not using "Drum Kit Designer" as an instrument (reason: the others are using partially uncommon note assignments whereas Drum Kit Designer basically sticks with GM, which is a good thing).
- Let the thing play some patterns and while you're at it, delete all inserts and sends.
- Klick left to the instrument insert showing "Drum Kit", so the library opens with the presets just for DKD (without any insert/send nonsense).
- Check out all the drumsets on the left (in the now opened library).
- All sets allow you to more or less extensively edit them. Standard kits look like this (with the snare selected):
... Producer Kits offer vastly more replacement parts and mix settings straight in the plugin UI:
With these alone you can massively finetune your kits already and IMO they can offer decent results for anything but the truly heavy realm (ok, jazz drumming usually doesn't work, either, but that's something pretty much nobody has covered).
Next step would be to just load DKD as a multi-out instrument, which really couldn't get any easier, you just go to the instrument slot and reload it, all previously changed settings will stay intact.
Then, in your mix window, you just keep clicking the "+" symbol and the individual outs will magically show up.
IMO with all these you can get *very* far.
Yeah, other, dedicated companies possibly have better sounding kit presets straight out of the box, but I actually like the rather blunt and straight ahead sounding DKD sets.
- Load a drummer coming closest to what you want/need. Don't use those not using "Drum Kit Designer" as an instrument (reason: the others are using partially uncommon note assignments whereas Drum Kit Designer basically sticks with GM, which is a good thing).
- Let the thing play some patterns and while you're at it, delete all inserts and sends.
- Klick left to the instrument insert showing "Drum Kit", so the library opens with the presets just for DKD (without any insert/send nonsense).
- Check out all the drumsets on the left (in the now opened library).
- All sets allow you to more or less extensively edit them. Standard kits look like this (with the snare selected):
... Producer Kits offer vastly more replacement parts and mix settings straight in the plugin UI:
With these alone you can massively finetune your kits already and IMO they can offer decent results for anything but the truly heavy realm (ok, jazz drumming usually doesn't work, either, but that's something pretty much nobody has covered).
Next step would be to just load DKD as a multi-out instrument, which really couldn't get any easier, you just go to the instrument slot and reload it, all previously changed settings will stay intact.
Then, in your mix window, you just keep clicking the "+" symbol and the individual outs will magically show up.
IMO with all these you can get *very* far.
Yeah, other, dedicated companies possibly have better sounding kit presets straight out of the box, but I actually like the rather blunt and straight ahead sounding DKD sets.
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