SkullDrummer
Active Member
electronic drum sets will soon be better than acoustic drumsets, what do you think they will do to e drums to make them better than acoustics?
You can but the rest of the band is dead too....when electricity is gone, I can still make noise with my acoustic drums. Electricity is not a permanent source of energy
i should rephrase and say what improvements do you think they will add to e drums to try and make them better?electronic drum sets will soon be better than acoustic drumsets, what do you think they will do to e drums to make them better than acoustics?
The main weak points are lack of detail and some poor sounds.
At the moment drum software sounds better than the average e-drum brain.
In the end, you'll never get as much detail and variation in a sample or e-drum as you can coax from an acoustic drum or cymbal.
Unless some new technology is invented.
That's one side of the coin. With digital camera you have a huge amount of convenience and possibilities not available before. Even with an iphone one can shoot and immediately see dozens of good pics. With film it's almost a dollar per frame these days. Similarly, one can get an increasingly passable simulation of many thousand-dollar kits sampled in top studios, and download a dozen of them for the price of a steak. Even if it'll never be like the "real thing", it may offer benefits that people care more about, and that might tip the scale one day.I agree that electronic drums are a different instrument than acoustic drums. Acoustic drums will never become obsolete. However, the new Roland TD-will become
obsoleteout-dated in about three years. Same with the next one, and the one after that.
I had three film camera systems: 35mm, medium format (6x7cm) and large format (4x5 & 8x10). I used them for about 20 years. Only once did I send in a camera for repair. In 2003 I bought my first digital camera body for $8000 (no lens). Yes, the price affected my sphincter. The camera became outdated by 2006 by another $8000 camera body. They also used different communication cables and every new model had a different cable plug (USB 2.0, Firewire 800, Lightning cable, etc.) so I had to get another computer if I wanted to work tethered (very common for my line of work).
Electronic devices always become outdated. How many cell phones have we all been through? And where are those old phones now?
Can e-drums emulate a drummer using brushes? (asking for a friend)
My point was: electronic devises are expendable. They are designed to be expendable.That's one side of the coin. With digital camera you have a huge amount of convenience and possibilities not available before. Even with an iphone one can shoot and immediately see dozens of good pics. With film it's almost a dollar per frame these days. Similarly, one can get an increasingly passable simulation of many thousand-dollar kits sampled in top studios, and download a dozen of them for the price of a steak. Even if it'll never be like the "real thing", it may offer benefits that people care more about, and that might tip the scale one day.
Can I play one hand with a stick and one with a brush?
The improvements they will add and the improvements they should add are not one in the same. Rather than companies trying to make e-kits look like acoustic drums, I think they should focus more on designing a simple to use module that accepts drum software of your choice, whether it be EZ Drummer, Superior Drummer, or some other VST. To me, the advantage of an e-kit is its compactness and access to a variety of different sounds that can be played quietly under headphones. I have no interest in an e-kit that's packed into full-size drum shells. Who are we trying to fool? Does it really matter that they look different? At this time, I feel that e-cymbals are still the weakest link, even on high-end e-kits, in terms of replicating the response of an acoustic kit. You just can't get the variety of sounds and subtle differences with today's electronic cymbals compared to acoustic cymbals. The responsiveness of electronic hi-hats still weak on most e-kits I've played. The ability to replicate the sound and responsiveness of brushes, rods, mallets, etc. is also needed as e-kit technology moves forward.i should rephrase and say what improvements do you think they will add to e drums to try and make them better?