The only problem is that Drummer is native to Logic and GarageBand. EZD, Slate and SD are more like BEING the drummer on the session and creating the part yourself. To me Drummer is more like having a session drummer who will take your basic guidance and create a drum part that fits your project. ![]() Soft/loud, simple/busy, swung or straight, on the beat or ahead/behind, and which parts of the kit to play. ![]() Whereas EZD allows/requires you to choose a specific part or fill, Drummer allows/requires you do indicate in a general way what you want for a certain part. The interface and usability of that app are so much more efficient than any other drum VST I've used. When Logic introduced the Drummer feature, I finally found what I was looking for. I would end up making a lot of notes with paper and pen just to try to remember what was what, and I never ended up with a drum track that sounded realistic. ![]() so it gets tedious rolling through all of them. There might be twenty different fills you can audition, named Fill 1, Fill 2, Fill 3 etc. ![]() The various loops are arranged in nested menus and the names aren't super-descriptive. You have to find a loop for the verses, then the choruses, then a bridge, intro and outro, then fills, etc. When I was using EZD2 as my primary drum generator I got frustrated a lot because it seemed to take a long time to get to a finished track.
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