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PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
- Juan Expósito
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PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
Last edited by Juan Expósito on Thu Jun 14, 2012 6:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Morgenthaler
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Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
click-clickety-click click-clickety-click click-click [sound of sticks on rubber pads] 
I love Ersko. I hate electronic drums.

I love Ersko. I hate electronic drums.
Last edited by Morgenthaler on Thu Jun 14, 2012 7:29 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
WONDERFUL!!!!!
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
He can play anything and it will sound good.
That said (and I imagine I'm in the minority here), I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument. And I'm ok with that -- as long as the acoustics still are here.
That said (and I imagine I'm in the minority here), I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument. And I'm ok with that -- as long as the acoustics still are here.
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
Ugh... that's not good.
No way. Never will.
Here's a few reasons why:
1. Zero tactile feel. Drums are about power, energy and vibrations. You can never replicate what it feels like to play on an acoustic set. Which is a MASSIVE amount of what drumming is. The change in textures, the feel of laying into the snare, the chest thumping from the kick drum... that's such an integral part of drumming, without it. You have a shell of what was.
Not to mention, rim shot a esnare a few times, you have a very expensive pile of rubber and wires.
2. The visual impact. Ekits on stage look like butt. Don't care what, who or how well it's played. It just flat out looks stupid. You have these huge samples coming from what basically looks like a toy. Nobody is buying that.
3. Buzz rolls on floor toms. Or name any other stupidity based ekit joke of a performance. Digital strips away the technique that is foundational to what is required to play a great instrument well.
4. Feel. Digital sampling will never be able to replicate the inherent differences of humans.
Churches, Apartment's, etc.. they are a great solution to REPLICATING the actual instrument. But they will always be exactly that, a digital reproduction of a physical instrument.
You know, they've been playing with digital versions of guitars for longer then drums. Never catches on. And as far as a particular instrument, have you played with a WaveDrum? The digital realm has some serious coolness, but none of it will come from replicating the acoustic instrument.
We get to stomp the crap outta a MASSIVE sub woofer - called a bass drum. That FEELS awesome! You just can not replicate physical power with digital anything.
EG: See the rise of Tube Amps over expanding digital modeling. Tube still reigns supreme. You just can't cheat physics.
Nothing beats smacking a drum.
MRhet wrote:I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument.
No way. Never will.
Here's a few reasons why:
1. Zero tactile feel. Drums are about power, energy and vibrations. You can never replicate what it feels like to play on an acoustic set. Which is a MASSIVE amount of what drumming is. The change in textures, the feel of laying into the snare, the chest thumping from the kick drum... that's such an integral part of drumming, without it. You have a shell of what was.
Not to mention, rim shot a esnare a few times, you have a very expensive pile of rubber and wires.
2. The visual impact. Ekits on stage look like butt. Don't care what, who or how well it's played. It just flat out looks stupid. You have these huge samples coming from what basically looks like a toy. Nobody is buying that.
3. Buzz rolls on floor toms. Or name any other stupidity based ekit joke of a performance. Digital strips away the technique that is foundational to what is required to play a great instrument well.
4. Feel. Digital sampling will never be able to replicate the inherent differences of humans.
Churches, Apartment's, etc.. they are a great solution to REPLICATING the actual instrument. But they will always be exactly that, a digital reproduction of a physical instrument.
You know, they've been playing with digital versions of guitars for longer then drums. Never catches on. And as far as a particular instrument, have you played with a WaveDrum? The digital realm has some serious coolness, but none of it will come from replicating the acoustic instrument.
We get to stomp the crap outta a MASSIVE sub woofer - called a bass drum. That FEELS awesome! You just can not replicate physical power with digital anything.
EG: See the rise of Tube Amps over expanding digital modeling. Tube still reigns supreme. You just can't cheat physics.
Nothing beats smacking a drum.
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
Josiah wrote:Ugh... that's not good.MRhet wrote:I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument.
No way. Never will.
Here's a few reasons why:
1. Zero tactile feel. Drums are about power, energy and vibrations. You can never replicate what it feels like to play on an acoustic set.
2. The visual impact. Ekits on stage look like butt. .
3. Buzz rolls on floor toms.
4. Feel. Digital sampling will never be able to replicate the inherent differences of humans.
Churches, Apartment's, etc.. they are a great solution to REPLICATING the actual instrument. But they will always be exactly that, a digital reproduction of a physical instrument.
Josiah you seem to assume that what was brought up in the previous post was that he thought electronic drums/e-kits would replace the drumset- I doubt that's going to be a case. I mean, why on earth would you try to do a buzz roll on an electronic pad, when that's something that really hasn't been sampled well yet or employed as well on an electronic kit?
People have been using pads with a brain on the kit for years- is this not a new concept for you? I think the technology is still going to improve going forward, in a way that's not meant to replicate the acoustic side of things, but rather compliment them a bit better.
Got Blushda?
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
No -- never say never, as they say. You end up eating those words one day.
I certainly don't disagree with your preference, of course, but the world and history is full of "this will never happen" and people laugh at them (and the people who said it) today.
So much changes daily.
I certainly don't disagree with your preference, of course, but the world and history is full of "this will never happen" and people laugh at them (and the people who said it) today.
So much changes daily.
Josiah wrote:Ugh... that's not good.MRhet wrote:I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument.
No way. Never will.
Here's a few reasons why:
1. Zero tactile feel. Drums are about power, energy and vibrations. You can never replicate what it feels like to play on an acoustic set. Which is a MASSIVE amount of what drumming is. The change in textures, the feel of laying into the snare, the chest thumping from the kick drum... that's such an integral part of drumming, without it. You have a shell of what was.
Not to mention, rim shot a esnare a few times, you have a very expensive pile of rubber and wires.
2. The visual impact. Ekits on stage look like butt. Don't care what, who or how well it's played. It just flat out looks stupid. You have these huge samples coming from what basically looks like a toy. Nobody is buying that.
3. Buzz rolls on floor toms. Or name any other stupidity based ekit joke of a performance. Digital strips away the technique that is foundational to what is required to play a great instrument well.
4. Feel. Digital sampling will never be able to replicate the inherent differences of humans.
Churches, Apartment's, etc.. they are a great solution to REPLICATING the actual instrument. But they will always be exactly that, a digital reproduction of a physical instrument.
You know, they've been playing with digital versions of guitars for longer then drums. Never catches on. And as far as a particular instrument, have you played with a WaveDrum? The digital realm has some serious coolness, but none of it will come from replicating the acoustic instrument.
We get to stomp the crap outta a MASSIVE sub woofer - called a bass drum. That FEELS awesome! You just can not replicate physical power with digital anything.
EG: See the rise of Tube Amps over expanding digital modeling. Tube still reigns supreme. You just can't cheat physics.
Nothing beats smacking a drum.
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
electronic kits have improved a lot through the years. peter did sound like peter on that kit. would have been better if you just heard the kit and not the tapping of the pads blended in. don't like electronic kits myself. the feel is just horrible. and the cymbal pads. yuck.
Re: PETER ERSKINE - Playing Electronic drums
Josiah wrote:Ugh... that's not good.MRhet wrote:I think in the next ten years, the electronic drum will be established as its own instrument.
No way. Never will.
Here's a few reasons why:
1. Zero tactile feel. Drums are about power, energy and vibrations. You can never replicate what it feels like to play on an acoustic set. Which is a MASSIVE amount of what drumming is. The change in textures, the feel of laying into the snare, the chest thumping from the kick drum... that's such an integral part of drumming, without it. You have a shell of what was.
Not to mention, rim shot a esnare a few times, you have a very expensive pile of rubber and wires.
2. The visual impact. Ekits on stage look like butt. Don't care what, who or how well it's played. It just flat out looks stupid. You have these huge samples coming from what basically looks like a toy. Nobody is buying that.
3. Buzz rolls on floor toms. Or name any other stupidity based ekit joke of a performance. Digital strips away the technique that is foundational to what is required to play a great instrument well.
4. Feel. Digital sampling will never be able to replicate the inherent differences of humans.
Churches, Apartment's, etc.. they are a great solution to REPLICATING the actual instrument. But they will always be exactly that, a digital reproduction of a physical instrument.
You know, they've been playing with digital versions of guitars for longer then drums. Never catches on. And as far as a particular instrument, have you played with a WaveDrum? The digital realm has some serious coolness, but none of it will come from replicating the acoustic instrument.
We get to stomp the crap outta a MASSIVE sub woofer - called a bass drum. That FEELS awesome! You just can not replicate physical power with digital anything.
EG: See the rise of Tube Amps over expanding digital modeling. Tube still reigns supreme. You just can't cheat physics.
Nothing beats smacking a drum.
i enjoy reading your posts because you're obviously very provocative but can backup your thoughts in a very logical way. Yes, I thought the drums sounded bad
when it was only him playing (mind you I couldn't watch the entire video). They blended well once the other stuff came in but still, I would NEVER want
a sound like that in a record.
I have faith in technology and I'm sure we will be seeing a lot of cool and useful stuff in the next years or so but I honestly don't want them to replace the real thing...
Here's a short clip of Nir Z on a td20 with superior 2.0. I like his playing and it sounds good, although you can definitely hear the artifacts, nonetheless quite impressive
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giFEKDweJss
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