I played an electronic kit back in the late 80's, early 90's. In fact, now I think of it, I played basically the same kit for almost ten years!
Simmons SDS2000 - best avoided! |
Rick had lost an arm in a car accident and used the making of Hysteria to recover and basically, learn how to play again. In order to do what he had done before, and all the things he wanted to on Hysteria, technology had to play a big part. Already a Leppard fan, I fell in love with Hysteria the moment I heard it. When I saw them at Castle Donington just before the album came out, and a while later on the Hysteria tour I wanted to sound like that. Rick was using Simmons pads (that was basically all there was!) and a collection of electronics, so naturally I just had to follow suit.
I went for the Simmons SDS2000 kit which was their flagship in '89. I added a second bass drum and rather than the Simmons rack I went for a Dixon one which seemed more customizable. Within a year or so I realized (along with everybody else) that for all their early innovation - Simmons were going nowhere. I replaced the dreadful SDS2000 brain with an Alesis D4 in about 1990. The cymbal sounds were still pretty bad, so I used regular Sabians. By today's standards the D4 is pretty primative. But back then, it gave you hundreds of digital samples and a bunch of trigger inputs for almost no money.
The main issue I had was carting along my own PA to amplify the thing. If you thought you would carry less gear with an electronic kit - you're wrong!
After another year or so I managed to get a Simmons Hexahead for the snare pad, and a few Minihexes for special effects before Simmons finally went out of production in '94.
Hexahead - still didn't feel like a drum! |
Minihex. Cute, but almost uselessly small! |
The only reason I know this isn't me? This chap is wearing a tie! |
In the late 90's I moved back to acoustic drum kits. Electronic kits have come a very long way since then. I'm thinking of getting one again for practicing and maybe function gigs as well, but I don't see the day when I will go back to using one full-time.
Watch this space for my views on the current state of electronic drums!
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