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you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to ArrowHeadNLI.
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[QUOTE="ArrowHeadNLI:723933"][QUOTE="Seth/Drummer:723791"]I personally do not like triggers, due to the sound and how they sound on all bands alike with most recordings. I have always liked the pounding sound of the acoustic of a drum and not processed. It all depends on how you play. If you have triggers, it just sounds so processed and you can only hit the kicks one way and get one sound. [/QUOTE] Just another example of people who are against triggers simply because they are fucking CLUELESS as to what triggers are, and what they do. Saying that a triggered kick will only sound one way, and will be too processed is absolutely incorrect. If you love the sound of your booming acoustic kick, what do you do at a show where the soundman mixes the crap out of it and kills your sound? You can sample your OWN DRUM. You can sample anything you want, it doesn't need to be processed or artificial sounding. Most triggers and samplers are also VELOCITY SENSITIVE, which means that you'll get different reactions depending how hard you hit. You can also set many collections to give you multiple samples at a single threshold, so that you can have slight variance even on same-velocity hits. A good set of samples can sound BETTER and MORE realistic than an acoustic kit. Howso? A good natural sample set (like the ever popular and overused DFH superior) can ensure you get the mix YOU want, and leave the soundman with little say in the matter. [youtube=nNA9hGCcJWA] Everything there, including cymbals, is a triggered sample. [/QUOTE]
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