Deathside Posted 30 September 2006 Posted 30 September 2006 Had a USB drum kit arrived at work for testing and evaluation Most fun friday I've had at work in a long time - I can't drum but I can play a basic beat If the pedals were more reliable I'd consider buying myself one
Deathside Posted 3 October 2006 Author Posted 3 October 2006 Had a USB drum kit arrived at work for testing and evaluation Most fun friday I've had at work in a long time - I can't drum but I can play a basic beat If the pedals were more reliable I'd consider buying myself one It was fun while it lasted - But now both pedals have stopped working
Tomassi Posted 3 October 2006 Posted 3 October 2006 my sister has a fantastic electronic drum kit. its got all the pads, snear drums and pedals etc the only difference it being electrical so you can get all different sounds and that its great, she got a bass guitar tune from playing the drums how mad eh. i had a go i was flipping useless
Deathside Posted 4 October 2006 Author Posted 4 October 2006 my sister has a fantastic electronic drum kit. its got all the pads, snear drums and pedals etc the only difference it being electrical so you can get all different sounds and that its great, she got a bass guitar tune from playing the drums how mad eh. i had a go i was flipping useless Any idea what make / model & pricepoint Tom?
Jon the Hat Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 Had a USB drum kit arrived at work for testing and evaluation Most fun friday I've had at work in a long time - I can't drum but I can play a basic beat If the pedals were more reliable I'd consider buying myself one Nah, you can't beat the real thing
Fosse_KC Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 Nah, you can't beat the real thing I second that, however have never tried an electronic kit so I guess I'm not in an ideal position to compare the two. Seen bands play with electronic kits and it just doesn't sound (or look) right - it's an acoustic kit for me any day of the week. Rock on!
Deathside Posted 4 October 2006 Author Posted 4 October 2006 Nah, you can't beat the real thing I second that, however have never tried an electronic kit so I guess I'm not in an ideal position to compare the two. Seen bands play with electronic kits and it just doesn't sound (or look) right - it's an acoustic kit for me any day of the week. Rock on! You miss the points I can't get away with an actual drum kit at my house for reasons of size and volume - The USB kit has a much smaller footprint than a real kit and the volume is controlled by the PC (Also it can be used with headphones) I can play a basic beat and need excessive practace to progress - However I am too self conscious to let people hear my bad playing - For reason explained above I can practace with a USB kit without being heard
Tomassi Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 Any idea what make / model & pricepoint Tom? Ill find out for you... i know it was in the four figure mark possibly £1250 (eek!) but it still only took half the room of a normal drum kit. I played the drums quite regularly as a 9-12 yr old but soon lost my skillz
Jon the Hat Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 Ill find out for you... i know it was in the four figure mark possibly £1250 (eek!) but it still only took half the room of a normal drum kit. I played the drums quite regularly as a 9-12 yr old but soon lost my skillz If you can play you can play, the rest is just practise...
Fosse_KC Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 You miss the points I can't get away with an actual drum kit at my house for reasons of size and volume - The USB kit has a much smaller footprint than a real kit and the volume is controlled by the PC (Also it can be used with headphones) I can play a basic beat and need excessive practace to progress - However I am too self conscious to let people hear my bad playing - For reason explained above I can practace with a USB kit without being heard That makes sense ... you didn't make these points in your original post and unfortunately I'm not a clairvoyant .... I've also got a Bill Sanders practice for the same reasons you stated above (USB kits didn't exist when I started playing!), but that now lives in the shed as I have been rehearsing with a band again recently. I guess if I was starting again then I would invest in a USB kit for home use. I assume you can also record what you play? Could be a great way to add drums to home made demo's ....
Libertine Posted 4 October 2006 Posted 4 October 2006 I second that, however have never tried an electronic kit so I guess I'm not in an ideal position to compare the two. Seen bands play with electronic kits and it just doesn't sound (or look) right - it's an acoustic kit for me any day of the week. Rock on! Agree totally. Vile things.
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