

- FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 UPDATE
- FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 PRO
- FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 LICENSE
- FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 PROFESSIONAL
Then to get a more "pristine" sound I select the Superior Drummer instrument to actually play/record them. MY approach - I am singer/songwriter coming into recording/mixing on the UAD platform recently so I indulged and I use EZDrummer 2 tap 2 find and songbuilder feature to come up with pattern and sound and then I take that midi file and drop into my DAW. Of course the level of engineering and mics and hardware and studio and kit that goes into the tracks make you think twice and more of a question of fit into your mix. Using UAD Plugins - yes like you suggest - its an instrument in your track with your midi file in channel and you can add UAD plugins like any other recording. Although Superior I understand has extensive midi mapping/x-drum if you want to go that way.

FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 PRO
I do have a midi keyboard and I play the kit with keys and a nice visual of the kit just again to use "Tap 2 Find" to get the pro version of drum pattern. Midi - you mention your a midi novice and so am I - use no midi as the kits and midi loops are pre-recorded and you just add them to DAW like you had recorded drum tracks in studio. Like UAD plugins - find them very addictive and I have an embarrassing amount of expansion and midi and preset packs just like I have an embarrassing amount of UAD plugins given I am only a home ITB singer/songwriter. Jazz) loops and for Superior Drummer - kind of like UAD - you can have known producers presets (yes you pay for them) Metal) drum libraries and midi files and just midi files for themed (e.g. But you can can buy expansion kits that have different sounding/themed (e.g. You can see all drum kits in Superior Drummer but you can only see EZDrummer kits in EZDrummer.Ĭore Program Vs Expansion Vs Midi Loops vs Presets - each EZDrummer2 and Superior come with their own kits and midi files. You can see all midi files from both EZDrummer or Superior while in either program. You can mix and match kits against the loops/midi files.
FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 PROFESSIONAL
vintage kit, New York Studio Kit, mallets etc) and then the midi files which are the patterns recorded by a professional drummer. Stand alone and DAW version when inserted as instrument in DAWĬan drag the desired midi loop right into your DAW track or complete song from Song Creator in EZ Drummer 2Įxplanatory Note - Kit vs Midi - sorry if already know but two concepts are the sound libraries for the kits themselves (e.g. As a point of reference - you have to Superior Drummer and any of the expansion packs shipped to you - on 4 or so discs - about 25GB vs 4GB on EZdrummer2 as point of reference.ĮZ Drummer 2 - more for songwriter - its a more recent release (and many are waiting for Superior Drummer 3 to match some of the new functionality of EZDrummer2) - most notable two new features - Tap 2 Find - just tap a beat and it suggests relevant loops with a relevance score and Songwriter where you can drop a desired loop and it will populate a match verse, chorus, intro etcīoth EZDrummer 2 and Superior Drummer include: Superior Drummer - more for sound engineer/producer higher quality sound libraries and more ability to manipulate individual drum kit channels. Can answer any pointed questions but high level pro's and con's would be: Click to expand.Yeah I am on both of them.
FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 LICENSE
If you want to sell the license at Roli / FXpansion they want 50 EUR from you. Now it is gathering dust and was a bad buy. I wanted to make a sound bank with it and failed 7 times. The programmer made it all so cumbersome that you can't use the Cypher 2.
FXPANSION BFD3 VS SUPERIOR DRUMMER 3 UPDATE
On the subject of workflow I bought the Cypher 2 the update was cheap, but everyone says screwing the preset is almost impossible. Support: Alex Volmer, Ryan Sellers, Lawrence KingįXpansion USA: Terry Hardin, Leslie Crook, Brian McGovern Web development: Andreas Schnetzler, Sam Sharp, Rob Philp

Project management: Rory Dow, Angus Hewlett, Henry Lindsay-Smith, Rhiannon McLaren QA: Drew Vernon, Mike Bugh, Tom Meaney, Jamaine Obeng, Sam Gillies, Lawrence King Tom resonance algorithm research: Alice Clifford Additional programming: Angus Hewlett, Paul Chana, Henry Lindsay-Smith, Andrew Simper
