by ignotus » Wed Mar 18, 2015 7:50 pm
If you go through the Vdrums forum, lots of people complain about having a hotspot too with their td20's, 30's and whatnot. A good few factors come in to play there but it's something that can affect even the most expensive kits. On the other hand, as far as I can see, that Super Natural and Behavior Modeling technology is something that applies to the sound processing itself, not the MIDI data, which is what pertains to Megadrum. In the video you posted, the guy is playing a td30 and it sounds incredible, but he's triggering a VST - so in this scenario all the Super Natural and Behavior Modeling technology is moot, it's not being used. If you listen to a td30 playing its own sounds, for all the behaviour this and modelling that, it doesn't come close to a VST; the machine gunning is awful and the sounds just don't cut it. Cymbal swells are something that it does do well but it can't really be dealt with by MIDI - in our case the VST would have to take care of that, which by the way, I think is well overdue. MD can already do positional sensing so I reckon shallow rimshots (Addictive Drums has them, I assume others do too) may be a possibility. In any case, given that Megadrum is purely a trigger-to-MIDI device, in order to measure it against a high end Roland module, we would need to look at how they both process signals coming from the same pad and using the same VST. I think that's the only area where say, a td30 might do marginally better than a MD, but I must add that I don't even know if that's the case for sure - it might even be worse for a given pad. As for the next giant leap, with the new ARM chips I suppose Dmitri would have to say whether he has something in mind there, but like airflamesred said, my MD does everything I want and more. Any improvements are more than welcome, but I think stuff like cymbal swells, more natural roll sounds etc, have to come from the VST's we use. Any modern PC has infinitely more processing power than a Roland module so I think that with a TMI it makes sense to take advantage of that because the PC has to be in the equation regardless - so we might as well use it.
If it ain't broken... fix it until it is.