I haven't seen anybody using electronic cymbals with this set up yet or low volume electronic cymbals I really want to see how it Does with cymbals aswell
You can buy the sticker pick-ups in ten packs online, they are pretty cheap. Pro tip: put a tiny drop of super glue on the sticky side of the pickup, and clean the surface of your head first before applying. If you are a hard hitter they can fly off while playing if you don’t let it properly cure/stick to the head
Are there additional sound packs or kit configurations available? Or is it all about transforming the existing presets and/or sampling external drum samples? If I want to import external drum samples (for example from an existing sound library), what do I need to be aware of? (sample format, other factors...????)
It seems like Evans only sells the package with one sensor short?" are there no deals with 4 sensors? a normal drum kit has at least a bass drum. a snare drum, a hanging tom and a floor tom... are there no kits of 4 sensors on the market now for the Christmas holidays on sale? are you using 4 sensors in this video? It's a little hard to tell... thanks for a wonderful demo!
The main downside to this sort of thing is if you want to practice on the sampled sounds, you still have to hear the acoustic sounds in the room, in front of you.
@@laikasnow3521 I've never played a low volume or mesh head. Just standard drum heads. How do you like the EAD10? Do you think this Evans might be a better choice for this sort of thing?
It's very cool, but I still haven't heard anyone play anything interesting with one. People are going to buy them thinking that it will make they're drumming more interesting, and it won't. If you're not already an interesting, creative drummer, this won't get you there. If you are, you're probably not going to buy one because you know it's unnecessary.
Reverb is hardly the only culprit, but it ought to take the lead in abolishing the new de rigueur click-bait practice of using video titles that make some grand, laudatory statement about a product (to induce people to buy it), and then slyly disclaiming that statement with a question mark. Apart from being deliberately misleading (that's its whole point, after all), it insults the intelligence of viewers.
This particular title, it must be noted, at least attempts to hedge the deception by nesting the grandiose claim inside a grammatically complete sentence (begins with "is"); the usual practice, though, is to simply sneak in a question mark after a descriptive (meant to look like a declarative).
I'm really looking forward to hearing what folks do with this system. Folks are gonna get crazy creative with something this powerful.
9:33 this is a good Dn'B sound! Kudos to Evans to offer a groundbreaking multizone system with a trigger form factor.
She's starting to sound like Nom in her speaking style. I think the product seems really cool and I'd love to try it.
Jessica is an amazing drummer!❤
The actual sound of that snare is nice.
I haven't seen anybody using electronic cymbals with this set up yet or low volume electronic cymbals I really want to see how it Does with cymbals aswell
Hope it has extra metal dots for whenever you change heads. Or are they reusable?
The initial setup includes 12 Pickup Elements and you'll be able to purchase more down the line!
Sure, if you have extra metal dot money 😂
You can buy the sticker pick-ups in ten packs online, they are pretty cheap. Pro tip: put a tiny drop of super glue on the sticky side of the pickup, and clean the surface of your head first before applying. If you are a hard hitter they can fly off while playing if you don’t let it properly cure/stick to the head
Imaging this working on a Tablet 🥰
If the sensors are legit as good on mesh as mylar, that’d be an insane way to record quietly.
To cool!
It looks like the bead (or half of it) of the right drumstick goes flying off at around 11:44, but it's hard to tell.
The best part is the use of a Speed Demon on that kit.
Can it send midi messages to a midi pedal?
Are there additional sound packs or kit configurations available? Or is it all about transforming the existing presets and/or sampling external drum samples? If I want to import external drum samples (for example from an existing sound library), what do I need to be aware of? (sample format, other factors...????)
It seems like Evans only sells the package with one sensor short?"
are there no deals with 4 sensors?
a normal drum kit has at least a bass drum. a snare drum, a hanging tom and a floor tom...
are there no kits of 4 sensors on the market now for the Christmas holidays on sale?
are you using 4 sensors in this video?
It's a little hard to tell...
thanks for a wonderful demo!
The tracking sounds kind of inconsistent based on the demos. Or perhaps the samples do not cover enough velocity/expression levels.
always with the jamaican steel drum sound ahaha
This is so sick but i aint got the pees fo that jesus
The main downside to this sort of thing is if you want to practice on the sampled sounds, you still have to hear the acoustic sounds in the room, in front of you.
Not if you use low volume heads
I think she said there is an option with mash heads
low volume heads are definitely the answer. evans makes the best ones, I already do a similar thing with the EAD10 by Yamaha
@@laikasnow3521 I've never played a low volume or mesh head. Just standard drum heads. How do you like the EAD10? Do you think this Evans might be a better choice for this sort of thing?
It's very cool, but I still haven't heard anyone play anything interesting with one. People are going to buy them thinking that it will make they're drumming more interesting, and it won't. If you're not already an interesting, creative drummer, this won't get you there. If you are, you're probably not going to buy one because you know it's unnecessary.
I see mics, so it looks like one needs Mic's, if you want to blend the acoustic sounds in
Reverb is hardly the only culprit, but it ought to take the lead in abolishing the new de rigueur click-bait practice of using video titles that make some grand, laudatory statement about a product (to induce people to buy it), and then slyly disclaiming that statement with a question mark. Apart from being deliberately misleading (that's its whole point, after all), it insults the intelligence of viewers.
This particular title, it must be noted, at least attempts to hedge the deception by nesting the grandiose claim inside a grammatically complete sentence (begins with "is"); the usual practice, though, is to simply sneak in a question mark after a descriptive (meant to look like a declarative).
Fat Luis, calm down.
If you can’t be bothered to read a YT video title then unfortunately that’s a you problem
The best way to destroy your instrument, dents, and scraches everwhere!