Each of these lovely-looking and easy-to-use plug-ins have three modes, effectively giving you nine separate drum machines to play with. The clean original sounds of each drum machine are available, while the Warm and Hot modes give you saturated recordings and have been re-sampled from an audio cassette deck, giving each engine a slightly different feel.

It boasts 12 kits with the ability to include eight drum sounds per kit, with each sound being sourced from the 99Sounds Drum Samples library. Users can pan each drum sound, or the whole pattern, to their preference. There is also a low-pass filter and a high-pass filter, giving you options to tweak your sound within the plug-in.


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I got this here laptop and an extra set of speakers. I figure if I can use this thing to file taxes and play fallout then it prolly has the hidden strength to create simple drum beats as well. I'd just be playing the loops through a speaker to jam along to, and I figure there must be some simpler solution than a fruity loops sort of deal.

You can also support drumbit development by making a contribution. This allows me to spend less time worrying about putting food on the table and more time making this app better. No matter how much, I'm sure it will make a difference.

So, this is a great and diverse forum full of musicians who know a lot more about music software than I do, and many of whom come from a background of making music on Windows PC before they started on iOS. I have most of the good drum and synth drum machine apps on iOS, but since I'm endlessly curious about this sort of thing, I wondered if there was free software out there (or affordably priced software) for Windows that would allow me to experiment further without simply buying EVERY app I can get my hands on. My iPad is a little older and also very full. Also, programs like AudioShare (via DropBox) allow desktop projects to be swapped into iOS and vice versa actually quite easily.

An example of this would be something like Caustic or SunVox (which have paid iOS equivalents), but which are entirely free for Windows. But are there other drum/rhythm apps I could discover to find something new on PC? I barely know what a VST is, but I found a few freeware options that should allow me to play them. Standalone programs would be even better. Thanks much!

Rebirth (discontinued around 2005) was mentioned above, and I do have that, but the interface is very low res and feels like 1998. Haha. That's basically a straight 303/808/909 machine, too, which we all have plenty of.

Wejaam Designer, is my favourite free drum synth and sample player.

In standalone mode, you get six tracks that can be used to play synth or sample.

It can create patches for Wejaam the free IOS Groove box and in VST mode you can have as many instances as you like.

 !wejaam-designer/cvvt

Not iOS cheap but FLStudio Fruity Edition offers an awful lot of stuff for $99, including a drum synth and life time free updates. One of the few programs I still miss since moving to OSX a few years back.

Ignite is basically a glorified instrument app, but in many ways it looks and feels like a DAW. You can arrange parts and very easily drag them around like a sketchpad. I heard drum, bass, and keyboard samples that sounded terrific. Haven't tried my controller yet, but the app has piano rolls for everything - it's kind of like Caustic meets SampleTank. Very impressive program.

In this video, Simon explains how to locate and navigate through the new Tracks Window. Notice that this window is similar to tracks windows seen in most DAWs, and allows for lossless data manipulation in a familiar environment.

PowerTracks Pro Audio 2024 includes over 30 new features, like 256 available tracks, 32 VSTi/DXi synth instances, modern color scheme for some windows, new arrow buttons to change the current time, chord symbols to display in the Track window, 48 tracks to display in the Mixer, the ability to hide any extra masters or auxes in the Mixer, improved handling of VU levels in the Track window, better VU levels display when recording to mono tracks, and much more!

yeah I mean it's pretty cool - you need to ROM cards to make the most out of it though (ideally the one with 808 sounds I guess). the stock sounds that come with the machine are those boring "real" sounding samples. the R8's strength lies in it's humanisation options to add dynamics to your patterns. cool machine though and relatively cheap - the ROM cards can be pricey though!

I uploaded this Wavetable Drum Machine last year but it became a casualty of a server issue (I hope it didn't cause it, it is a bit heavy). Anyway it didn't work under windows so while I was updating old drum machines I sorted this one out.

8 x bank of 64 amplitude sliders, each bank runs in sync driven by a clock. The clock has 16 start/end settings plus a repeat cycles setting, there is also a Vradio block to set the return position.

The mixer block has 8 x level & pan settings with stereo to the dac~

The wave selector is for loading the individual wav files to the relevant drum line. The *.wav files must be stored in the 'waves' folder within the program folder and selected from there.

@soulflyer Both "extended" objects in the "extra" folder, so unlikely to have made the leap to vanilla unless you are running 32-bit Pd..

[pan~ ] was an equal power pan.... so you should be able to make one.

I have included the old [splitfilename-help] file and and the windows stuff from extended in hmm.zip

There is also an abstraction...... [edit] that represents as far as I went trying to split filenames and lists in vanilla.

David.

Hydrogen is free drum machine which has the main goal to provide professional yet simple and intuitive pattern-based drum programming. It can make some amazing beats and has a simple and easy-to-use interface.

You can put down some rhythm guitar, a "groove", and then loop it so it repeats indefinitely, and then improvise along with it. This will be more fun than playing to a metronome or a drum machine, and you might even end up with a song out of it.

Is the drum machine better or worse then a metronome in terms of every day practice?Definitely a drums are better to this; a metronome is just really a flat click there is no style to groove with; drums can provide this. Metronomes are really all about 'drilling' timing/speed into a musician. Using drums will let you develop timing in a more naturally musical way; and its more fun.

For ease of use and speed at which you can be up and running, I recommend Toontrack's EZdrummer, there are loop packs for just about every style and there is a player which allows you to build your drums independently of a DAW (Digital Audio Workstation such as Cue base/Pro tools).

If your focus is on improving your inner clock and your timing, I'd still recommend practicing with a metronome. The very short and boring clicking sound of a metronome has the great advantage that you can precisly tell whether you're on the click or not, at least if you're playing an instrument with a sharp attack, like guitar, bass, piano or drums: if you're right on the click, you won't hear the click of the metronome any more. If you can hear it, you're off.

That sort of practice regime really does smarten up your timing, and sense of where you are in a bar. Not really available with a drum pattern as that will usually be a full one due to sounding real-drummer-like.

Some guitar multi-effect pedals include some preset drum patterns. I have a Zoom G1 -- pretty cheap -- which has a bunch of patterns including ones in most time signatures including 5/4 and 7/8, and straight metronome patterns too.

This is a fairly cheap way to go, the drum sounds are pretty good, and you get an effects pedal! - but you won't be able to create your own rhythms, there are no fills or variations, and you can't program in song structures.

I mention these because they're cheap, and they make drum sounds. You could buy a second hand Casiotone for pocket money, with 100 preset rhythms. Sure, they may not sound amazing, but since all you're looking for is something with more interest to it than a metronome, it might well meet your needs.

I used to be an EZ drummer user before Addictive Drums, but I recognized it was only a toy after having tried the Addictive Drums trial for awhile: it's all already mixed, and if I want to arrange drums on a Live project I just have to drag and drop the midi tempo in Live.

Re: drum machines: if you have a smartphone there are numerous apps available with sub $10 price tags. Some include pretty fancy varieties of sounds and rhythms - DrumJam on iPhone is just one of many.

I've practiced with a metronone for long enough to develope that internal pulse. After hearing a very good lesson by Troy Stetina I've realized it's time to go to a drum machine because he talks about the importance of being able to listen to everything the drums are doing including the fills. I also now remember Malcolm Young saying in an interview that when he played it would be the drums he listened to, not himself.Stetina says it too. For myself, I need to learn to listen carefully to the drums. So I guess it's a balance because I'm not good enough to not listen closely to myself yet, but still want to learn to study what's going on with the drums.I feel like I'm raising a question for myself. 2351a5e196

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