I agree with 006. What are "metal drums"? I have been using the rock kit in EZ Drummer and this thing smokes just about any kit any metal drummer I ever recorded had. The only thing I can think of that would be 'meta'l is using clear heads instead of coated and with bass drums having the drum dampened a lot. Other than that, a kit is a kit, its the drummer that makes it "metal".
I have been adding a sample to the kick anyway and the EZ Drummer snare smokes. You dont need a sample for that because its already consistent. This is with the Rock kit though, the metal kit stinks in my opinion. But the metal pre made beats rule.
Now here is my question. Are the cymbals in Superior 2.0 going to be as good as real cymbals? In EZ, I have noticed that the cymbal quality is good, but you dont get the kind of 3D presence you get from real cymbals. That to me is what gives it away as "canned" drums in the final examination. We're all used to sampled shells. Its the cymbals that seem to be the sticky part now.
Regarding using 2.0 in real life, can someone talk me through this? Lets say I record a drummer to a click, then I want to replace his sounds with 2.0. Whats the best way to do this?
Or would I record him with an E Kit? Obviously that would be easier. But I have a feeling that for playing very fast, there might be too much delay.
Third option, what about recording an e kit and using real cymbals? This to me seems best. Record with an E kit if possible and then mic up real cymbals. Any comments guys?
Thanks!
Colin