Genre goes from acoustic songs to hard rock (no metal). My initial use is mostly for demo, but I’d like to learn to program realistic drums and in perspective even use them for actual productions, so long I manage to make them of the quality I need. EZ Drummer seems more intuitive to use – for example, you can drag the loop on a MIDI track and plays just like in the interface, while for AD when I drag it, it sounds quite different than in the interface (seems to be using a different kit?) or it wasn’t immediate to me to understand which specific midi note was expected for which kit – info I need to program the pads.ĮZ Drummer is marginally less expensive, but not so much to be really a factor.
![addictive drums midi packs addictive drums midi packs](https://assets.xlnaudio.com/products/adco0002/cover-200px.jpg)
They seem to be pretty awesome pieces of software, but quite costly (and occupy lots of space), so I plan to buy only one of them.
Addictive drums midi packs full#
The EZDrummer 2 demo was full but worked for 10 days so could play around a little more.īoth sound good and have more control than I probably need. The AD 2 demo is limited to very few kit pieces so hard to evaluate fully. Probably the most asked question in the history of midi drums, but I’ve been playing a bit with the demos and would like to hear any user opinons.