What instrument does that drum set belong to? It can be from Battery, Abbey Road Drums, or many others, but generally, any drum instrument can be triggered with MIDI, the Maschine Mikro has a MIDI Mode so it should work fine.

I'm trying to work simply. I just need the ability to use a Maschine Mini Mk3 (in midi mode) to play the Abbey Road 50s drums. And to be able to quickly move/assign a particular drum to one of the pads or another, depending on what feels most natural for me to play. What software plug does that? Kontakt or Maschine? Or both?


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Since the Maschine Mini Mk3 doesn't have the screens for selecting instruments that KK s61 has, it would seem to be easier to use KK s61 to select Abbey Road 50s (or any other) drum kit. And then to use MM to play it.

**Note that Abbey Road drums have a lot more than 16 sounds since it's goal is realism, so you might want to set up more than one Page. You can change Pages in the mikro by holding the Group button and pressing Pads 9-16

I'm assuming when you change the mapping inside the Abbey Road Instrument, it changes it both on Maschine and on the Keyboard. I'm also assuming that a change in mapping is actually a swap in mapping. So the drum sound you replace goes into the slot the new sound vacated? Or does it become a repeat?

It would seem, in the first image, that you can call up a particular drum by pressing it on the keyboard. And then switch that drum's midi mapping manually. I suppose you can't just play a note, hold it down, and press the pad on Maschine you would like it assigned to and have that cause the re-assignment. ;)

It looks like there are 80+ sounds to the Abbey Road drummer sets. Wow, that's a lot. I suppose there are several kicks, several snares, etc. And you kind of build the set you like from what you have. And each has individual samples for each velocity for each percussion instrument?

Yes, theres things like snare flams, rolls, muted hits, tons of stuff really... each with tons of layers and all recorded with multi mics, like a real drumset is. If you're not looking for realism then Battery makes more sense, for a more Beat style of production.

The simple way to use complex drum instruments like that on Maschine-SW is using keyboard mode but then you still have to map things inside the instrument so you can have each drum piece in the Pad you want... and you lose the ability to add fx/plugins to each drum piece since it will all output thru a single stereo channel. You can get around this by editing the kontakt instrument and creating multi audio outs, routing them thru MAS pads, and then routing those Pads to Luna audio tracks... and of course, also route MIDI.

That heavily depends on what drums you want to work with.. Generally speaking, no, just like @D-One said above me. However, you can drag and drop kits onto Maschine after which you can then play those using a Maschine group:

So I won't be using the internal effects of Maschine to send drums + effects to live speakers or into my interface/daw. Rather, I'd be laying down midi drum tracks in my daw using Maschine's drum pads and having that midi track accessing the Komplete 13 Abbey Road 50s samples (via the Kontakt or Maschine instruments/apps. And then adding effects afterward. I'd probably be using several midi tracks to track the drums. And then sending them into the same effects bus.)

I'm still a major noob with digital music, but I've been messing around with reaper. I have an M audio oxygen 61 midi keyboard I've been working with, but I can't seem to get the drum pads to work well. Most of the drum VSTs I'm using seem to have different inputs than what the drum pads on the keyboard are mapped to, so it makes it kind of useless. Is there a way to change these inputs in reaper? It's making it very difficult for me to work with any drum beats.

I kinda gave up until i was messing with Akai mini play favorite editor App trying to change the notes of my pads. I was trying to record the notes of high hats with the pads when it started triggering random stuff in my channel rack and i messed around with the software until i got it.

I own an Arturia MiniLab mkII, which is a 25 key and 8 drum pad (with two drum banks) MIDI controller. Using MIDI Control Center (a software used to view and modify the settings for the Arturia keyboard), I configured the drum pads to use MIDI Channel 2, and the keys to use MIDI channel 1.

I have two tracks selected in Cubase Elements 9.5 - A Halion Sonic Electric Piano, and a Groove Agent drum kit. Currently, when I play the drum pads, it plays both the drum sounds and electric piano sounds (in MIDI Control Center, the Arturia keyboard software, the first drum pad is set to C1, and it goes up from there). I know there must be a way to select a track to only use inputs from one MIDI channel - therefore, the Electric Piano track should only accept inputs from MIDI Channel 1 (the keys), and the Drum Track should only accept inputs from MIDI Channel 2 (the drum pads).

I need help mapping my drum pads on Logic Pro X. I am using the latest version of Logic Pro X and an MPK Mini Mk2 MIDI controller. I have been searching for days now looking for some kind of tutorial talking me through the process of how to assign different notes to each individual pad. For example on a drum machine being able to choose a snare drum sound, then assign it to a pad on my controller. The closest I have got is saving a preset from the MPK Mini editor that can change the note assigned to each pad so that it would correspond to a drum machine I have created in Logic Pro X however I have no idea how to upload it/apply it. I hope I have explained the problem clearly enough but let me know if you need anything clarifying.

No I am using logic pro x. Plug it in and it will play the different midi instruments I select, however I don't know how to assign a different sound to each pad/key. At the moment its just whatever keys/pads are assigned to a pad but how do i customise it?

I have to say logic, although complex has been a fun challenge to learn but since I bought this MPK Mini Mk2 it has been tedious and infuriating. All I am trying to do is turn my midi controller into something customised. So I have 8 pads - choose 8 sounds, one for each pad. Then 25 keys, same again just assign the sound I want to them. I have searched for 2 days online to no avail, I mean am I missing something? If I open the Atlanta drum machine for example can I change the note it plays so it is the same note as the drum pad?

Thank you for touching on this, I've been working on getting my drums mapped all day. I'm using an Akai MPK Mini via Logic Pro X on my Macbook Pro. I downloaded RemapNio and am not sure how to install it / use it. Can anybody point me in a direction to find a step by step for this process?

Second, can you give more detail about setting the sounds to Program 1, where to access Program 1 and how this saves or can be accessed when using Logic. Though I changed all the notes mapped to the pads and pressed Send to Program 1, Logic still registers the pads as hitting the original notes, not the ones you recommend I try change them to (-1 octave E,F,F# etc instead of C1, D1 etc).

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@LFSĀ 

I suggested long ago on Steinberg forum to offer a library of drum sounds (list of drums from all kits) and ability to assign sounds to pads from the library so we could pick n choose sounds and build our own kits (similar to FLSM)

@MobileMusic said:

@LFSĀ 

I suggested long ago on Steinberg forum to offer a library of drum sounds (list of drums from all kits) and ability to assign sounds to pads from the library so we could pick n choose sounds and build our own kits (similar to FLSM)

If you want something more versatile than a rubber or mesh pad, there are also some great electronic drum practice pads out there. These come with a lot of built-in features to help you improve your speed, accuracy, and technique.

The metronome has a quiet mode where it intermittently mutes, a great test for your sense of timing. For building speed, the metronome can be set to slowly speed up over time. These features are amazing for improving your drumming skills.

As a huge bonus, you can attach a bass drum pad and cymbal pad, to turn this into a miniature electronic drum kit. The added pads make this perfect for small gigs, or for an ultra realistic minimal electronic drum practice pad setup.

The drum pad options above are great for practicing with your hands, but what about your feet? Never skip leg day. To practice your bass drum technique, there are some great bass drum pad options available.

If you want to work on your movement around the kit as well as your stick and foot technique, a full practice pad drum kit is the answer. These practice kits take regular drum practice pads to the next level. A great full practice kit is the DW Go Anywhere Drum Pad Set. This practice drum pad kit is very versatile, very adjustable, and has great build quality.

For something more advanced than simple rubber or mesh pads, there are a huge range of electronic options. These can be used both for practicing, and to add some great variety to compliment your acoustic drum sound. Many electronic drum pads can be expanded, to create a full electronic drum kit that requires minimal space. Another great feature is the ability to connect these electronic drum pads to a computer. Using software like EZDrummer, BFD, or Battery, you can have an unlimited range of sounds, ranging from ultra-realistic drum kits to twisted electronic samples. As well as being played live, the more advanced electronic drum pads can also be used like drum sequencers to program drum beats. ff782bc1db

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