

- #Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit pro#
- #Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit Pc#
- #Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit plus#

#Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit Pc#
Of course, I do have bear’s Ripper tool setup on my PC so, I could record the drum tracks on the 1880 and just transfer them over for now, but eventually, I’d like to skip that step. The problem I’m running into with that-which isn’t really a huge problem-is that I only have 4 inputs on my Roland Quadcapture interface. In the meantime, I think I’ll be cutting some acoustic drum tracks too, just for those tunes where I want that truly live feel.
#Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit pro#
Once I pay off Sonar X2 Pro I may swing for Superior Drummer…we’ll see. EZdrummer is cool, and for now, I’m happy with it. So, for what you're looking for, the only answer is to cut the snare midi and put it in another track, but I'd venture to guess you'd lose so much more from the room and overheads than you'd gain purely for tuning reasons.Ĭareful guys…let’s keep it civil…this isn’t the Political Forums after all. In using these tools, I alter the tuning for a different sound, and usually, I layer (well, if I do that). One thing is certain: you don't won't to use EZ without both the room or overheads, IMO.Īs far as the interval of a kit piece to the root - I don't think I'd concern myself with that personally, but I'm not trying to say what is right for you. You can also render the snare to audio and tune it there.same thing as above applies. You can copy and/or cut the midi for the snare or any other kit piece and put it on it's own track and use a sample from wherever to replace and/or mix with EZ. You can't tune the drums from within EZ but, if you really want, you can apply different methods to replace/tune a piece of any kit however, you'll have the same problem/serendipitous find with any: whatever kit piece you replace won't be in the room or overhead mics. So, while a kit being tuned to itself is good, being tuned to a particular key to fit a particular song is even better IME.

For example, sometimes I like my kick to be a 3rd from the tonic, or I may prefer it to be the root….same with the snare…it can be the tonic, the 3rd the 4th, or the 5th…just depending on the song and it’s progression. That continuous resonation throughout the duration of a song is noticeable to me and many others as well. It’s true that drum sounds decay very quickly, but they still resonate at respective frequencies. you wouldn’t want to play any one of those instruments out of tune to the key you’re performing or recording in. Think about it like this: Each drum is an instrument unto itself, and just like a guitar, keyboard, bass, etc. To my ears it provides harmonic cohesion.
#Toontrack ezx2 connect to ekit plus#
Heck, if I could afford it I’d own a hundred plus cymbals for the same reason. I like having my snares, kick, and toms resonate at relative pitches to the song. Of course, it’s subjective, but I’ve been playing acoustic kits for years and learned to tune them along the way. I suppose for the same reason a lot of things matter to an individual, such as levels of compression, velocity settings, etc. If the kit is tuned to itself (which it is in ez drummer).then why does this matter? Ok.so here is the question.remember Ima knob.
