Thanks for this. I recently discovered their amp sims (I bought the BDH right away!) and was really impressed with the free version of their Krimh drums. I'm about to get either the paid version of Krimh or Trivium (or more than likely both!).
To be honest, KRIMH Free offers A LOT. The full pack is cool, flexible, but you can get pretty far with the free pack already. If you purchase any product off their site, I'd highly appreciate if you could use my affiliate link. 🙂
Nice comparison. As an owner I find the difference between these two interesting. To my ear, Krimh Drums is clearly tailored towards black metal mixes. The snare just doesn't really work for certain types of metal but fits perfectly with songs that veer into extreme tempos. The kit is sampled beautifully, and like I said if you want to make... say... symphonic black metal with a professional modern sheen, Krimh Drums serves that very specific purpose probably better than any other drum vst out there. For more thrashy stuff, or even more mid-tempo rock stuff, Trivium Drums is absolutely going to be the one to go for. If you do Djent, Trivium Drums can get you there too. It's much more of that big, punchy sound we've come to know from modern music, but the kit sounds a lot more natural than, say, Superior Drummer or something like that. These are all just tools to get a job done, and knowing which tool to pick will save you from a lot of headaches. Both these are discounted for the Black November sale on Bogren Digital's website. Trivium is 45 and Krimh is 60. Both are worth it in my opinion, and you can even get by with Krimh Drums Free if you are strapped.
Man I wish I knew how to program drums dude. I use Addictive Drums 2 just because it comes with a whole crap load of pre made beats and songs so I use those for all my demo's etc. I tried a few times and just couldn't figure it out esp since I have never played drums before. I ended up buying an edrum kit to start to learn how to play, but using these VST drums within my DAW will be amazing once I figure out how to play drums, whenever that comes in a year or two to actually be able to play good enough to use my own beats for songs. Keep up the great video's buddy!!!
Thank you for the kind words! I guess, your comment showcases perfectly that I should make a video explaining how I program drums, then! It's super easy. Just remember that a real drummer only has two hands and two feet, so don't overwhelm the music with off the charts drum fills etc. But I really think that I should make a video... ;-) might take some time, but stay tuned!
@@PippPriss Hey man if you ever do I know I think I would appreciate it big time! It is def a skill unto it's own and I am sure many guys like myself whom play guitar but want to write our own stuff would appreciate it! Thanks man and again keep up the great work!
@@PippPriss On a seperate note, I wonder how many people write riffs according to drums? I always throw on random drum beats from the grooves and then jam out until something cool comes out? Since as I said I don't program drums I just jam out until something hits and I imagine many people do the same. Anyways, sorry to be chatty haha have a Pantera tribute I am going to tonight so have day drinks and watching youtube subs! Cheers broski!
Would be interesting to know which MIDI capable e-drum set/module they used to re-record that one song of theirs, or what midi triggers they used on a real drum set.
Great walkthrough pipp, i've tried a few drum vsts,but i always come back to the Bogren stuff, just fits so well and still sounds not to fake. Am i blind? I cant find a link to the drum map pipp.....thank you!
Great video! You definitely have me interested in this drum library
Glad to hear that! If you go for it, then please use my affiliate link 🙂
Great and thorough video! Thanks! 👏🤟
Glad it helps! Thanks for watching!
Thanks for this. I recently discovered their amp sims (I bought the BDH right away!) and was really impressed with the free version of their Krimh drums. I'm about to get either the paid version of Krimh or Trivium (or more than likely both!).
To be honest, KRIMH Free offers A LOT. The full pack is cool, flexible, but you can get pretty far with the free pack already.
If you purchase any product off their site, I'd highly appreciate if you could use my affiliate link. 🙂
Nice comparison.
As an owner I find the difference between these two interesting. To my ear, Krimh Drums is clearly tailored towards black metal mixes. The snare just doesn't really work for certain types of metal but fits perfectly with songs that veer into extreme tempos. The kit is sampled beautifully, and like I said if you want to make... say... symphonic black metal with a professional modern sheen, Krimh Drums serves that very specific purpose probably better than any other drum vst out there.
For more thrashy stuff, or even more mid-tempo rock stuff, Trivium Drums is absolutely going to be the one to go for. If you do Djent, Trivium Drums can get you there too. It's much more of that big, punchy sound we've come to know from modern music, but the kit sounds a lot more natural than, say, Superior Drummer or something like that.
These are all just tools to get a job done, and knowing which tool to pick will save you from a lot of headaches.
Both these are discounted for the Black November sale on Bogren Digital's website. Trivium is 45 and Krimh is 60. Both are worth it in my opinion, and you can even get by with Krimh Drums Free if you are strapped.
Both plugins are absolutely awesome, for different things. I own both and I am glad I got both, variety being the spice of life etc. :-)
Great Video! If you compare this to the Toontrack Lib "Drums of Destruction" and Trivium-preset there you know what DoD was meant to sound.
Man I wish I knew how to program drums dude. I use Addictive Drums 2 just because it comes with a whole crap load of pre made beats and songs so I use those for all my demo's etc. I tried a few times and just couldn't figure it out esp since I have never played drums before. I ended up buying an edrum kit to start to learn how to play, but using these VST drums within my DAW will be amazing once I figure out how to play drums, whenever that comes in a year or two to actually be able to play good enough to use my own beats for songs. Keep up the great video's buddy!!!
Thank you for the kind words! I guess, your comment showcases perfectly that I should make a video explaining how I program drums, then!
It's super easy. Just remember that a real drummer only has two hands and two feet, so don't overwhelm the music with off the charts drum fills etc.
But I really think that I should make a video... ;-) might take some time, but stay tuned!
@@PippPriss Hey man if you ever do I know I think I would appreciate it big time! It is def a skill unto it's own and I am sure many guys like myself whom play guitar but want to write our own stuff would appreciate it! Thanks man and again keep up the great work!
@@PippPriss On a seperate note, I wonder how many people write riffs according to drums? I always throw on random drum beats from the grooves and then jam out until something cool comes out? Since as I said I don't program drums I just jam out until something hits and I imagine many people do the same. Anyways, sorry to be chatty haha have a Pantera tribute I am going to tonight so have day drinks and watching youtube subs! Cheers broski!
Would be interesting to know which MIDI capable e-drum set/module they used to re-record that one song of theirs, or what midi triggers they used on a real drum set.
Great walkthrough pipp, i've tried a few drum vsts,but i always come back to the Bogren stuff, just fits so well and still sounds not to fake.
Am i blind? I cant find a link to the drum map pipp.....thank you!
Thanks for pointing that out, I totally forgot. Added it to GDrive and added the link in the description! 🙂
@@PippPriss thank you