I had easy drummer for at least 8 years beforeExpensive yes. I haven’t as I am determined to get the most out of the ones I have, but what drove me the most is the hansa kit Which I’ll probably get once I’ve dug all the way through this one. All the tools in it makes sense in the workflow can be super fast very inspiring… Expensive yes, but I think it’s really the only one to have, unfortunately you wanna buy other Superior drums eventually. I think superior drummer is one of the best ones out there head and shoulders above. The logic remote is great and the the remix fx and on and on! Yeah, so much in logic, its a great deal! Anyway, enjoy!Wow! Thanks! I copied your response to my desktop! It's all very useful, you can have the Drummer region trigger a synth bass on every kick hit for instance.
Hope that helps.Thank you for the detailed response! It's really very clever and a lot of fun to use to get from point A to point B very quickly. and then just click on the "+" to the right of your first Drummer region and Drummer will create another region for that part of the arrangement (so it'll work out some chorus and verse variations etc.). One cool thing you can, for instance, with Drummer in Logic, is that you can choose a sorta default beat/region for your track and then make an "Arrangement" track for chorus/verse/bridge etc.
The learning curve on Drummer isn't steep but you have to approach it from the angle of it not being MIDI blocks that you build into a track. The two of them together is a ton of fun and flexibility. So, to answer your original question more directly SD3 is amazing, so is Logic Drummer. It's amazingly flexible and if you don't have a drummer to hand you can make some fantastic parts. You can also tune drums, change parts of a kit around etc. There are standard kits and then there are "Producer" kits which break out into multiple tracks for things like room mics and leak etc. The Logic Drummer kits are very nicely recorded and very easy to use. And the nice thing is you can make Drummer play nicely with SD3. Essentially (and I'm simplifying here) SD3 is that latter part. In addition to that it has a bunch of drum kit samples. It's actually making some AI decisions to make it work in a very realistic way. It's not playing back MIDI 'blocks' per se (although you can convert a Drummer track to MIDI and you can also get Drummer to trigger MIDI). You can actually design a "realistic" sounding drum track. The Drummer in Logic is, for want of a better description, a drummer. Keep in mind any EZX expansions in EZ Drummer also work in SD3. Maybe consider Toontracks EZ Drummer line which again.has more features than what is built into a DAW. I should add that if you are relatively new, SD3 might be too much. But to exploit other features will take more time depending on your drum programming experience. Its easy to load a SDX or EZX, and start playing with midi grooves. In my opinion SD3 is the best drum program available by far. I'll guarantee there are numerous features and functions found in SD3 that are not found in drummer track.
This is like asking if Logic is an upgrade to Reaktor.������
SD3 is a specialized drum application, plus framework for their EZX line. I have never used Logic, but Logic is a DAW.
Question, I am new to logic pro x 5.1 would superior drums be an upgrade over theĭrummer track etc already in Logic pro x?