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you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to ouchdrummer.
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[QUOTE="ouchdrummer:849472"]yeah... maybe you're not familiar with the function of how triggers actually work, but you still hit the bass drum every time a sound is made. Matter of fact, it's MUCH easier to hear mistakes in someone's playing when they use triggers. Mainly because the primary function of them is to make what someone is playing on the bass drum more discernible to the listeners through all of the noise of a live setting. 95% of recordings in the deathmetal/grind/tech genre feature triggered sounds for the bass drum. Not because the drummer couldn't play without them, but due to the natural resonance of a bass drum, you can't hear fast patterns distinctly without them. When you play an acoustic bass drum at higher speeds, or play fast tripplets within a steady moderate tempo, the bass drum will still have the attack of the initial hit, but that is terribly mudied by all of the tone that resonated from the bass drum. Resulting in a muddy, indistinguishable sound that is poorly suited for metal. I was a bass drum purist in my early drumming years, believing that to trigger was to cheat. I was under the impression that you could hit the bass drum once and get extra hits out of it.... I assure you that is not the case. There isn't even a setting for that on my trigger module. And lastly, and most importantly, i can play anything on my iron cobras that i can play on my axis pedal. The only difference is that i can hear the patterns distinctly, even in a live setting with the triggers. another person that doesn't understand triggers..... sigh...[/QUOTE]
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