![]() You can group your channels whichever way feels the best to you.įor example, you can set all the kick microphones to channel 1, snare mics to channel 2, hats on channel 3, cymbals on channel 4, and toms on channel 5. ![]() Once you click that number, you can route it to a different channel. At the bottom of the mixer, just above the microphone names, you’ll notice that all of the channels are routed to channel one. To do that, you should go to the Mixer section. This is fine if we want to process the entire kit, but we can’t isolate individual pieces. You’ll notice that the whole kit goes to a single stereo out. For this, we need to route every kit piece to a separate channel. Routing Each Kit Piece To A Separate Channel In Studio OneĪn essential part of using EZdrummer is applying our own plugins to sculpt our perfect drum sound. Cranking snare a bit higher than that might result in a performance that’s not fitting the song. I’d recommend not going too crazy with any drum piece for less heavy genres. Otherwise, I like to crank those as well. I try to be subtle with hi-hats and cymbals if there is a closed hi-hat part. Kicks I usually keep at around 110, 120 for some essential accents. In a typical rock (and especially metal) setting, I always crank the snare hits all the way to 127. Speaking of velocities, they do change the drum sound drastically.
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