Everything Jormyn said, I second buying the Systematic Guide, and please for the love of god and all that is holy just save up and buy EZ Drummer 2 with the Metal Machine expansion.
As for compression and whatnot, I've never mixed live drums tbh but I understand what's involved, and my impression is that programmed drums remove much of the "technical" aspect (i.e. getting things phase-coherent, fixing room nodes/problems, leveling, etc.) but still afford you a lot of room for everything else like compression, limiting, and saturation. I still use your average maybe 25 ms attack, 100 ms release, 3:1 ratio compressor for the snare, with similar settings for the kick. I still clip the snare. I still clip the stereo drum bus and high pass everything. You're performing the same steps, but maybe with some slight modifications based on the source's volume and dynamic range. But it's essentially the same.
Right, my question was if using compression on programmed drums was warranted given the hits are much more even and less dynamic. My mixes tend to sound overcompressed so I'm trying to get to the bottom of things. Musically, the use of these recordings are pre-production and for myself to learn and get better at production and mixing techniques. This is not meant for the public to hear or be fooled into thinking it's a live drummer. It's to get the ideas down and to have something to show industry people if need be, until we record this batch of tunes with our drummer. I wouldn't be recording/mixing anything we put out anyway...at least not any time soon. The more realistic sounding, the clearer the picture is painted of the vision of the song. It's not like it sounds like our drummer has 4 arms. Performance wise, it's programmed pretty realistically. Just not necessarily dynamically. With that said, the use of samples over live drummers is getting to the point that a lot of the feel is taken out of drums these days in pro recordings and I've fooled plenty of people already.
About EZ Drummer 2, I've been thinking about buying it, however I am not sure it's that great of an idea, considering that I already have Superior Drummer 2. It's just that EZ Drummer seems to be more user friendly, and more "casual" than SD2. I definitely do not use most of what SD2 has to offer... and I find it tedious to use.
Would EZ Drummer 2 be worth it in my situation?
Thanks.
my question was if using compression on programmed drums was warranted given the hits are much more even and less dynamic.