Hi everybody, thanks for discussing this.David Polich wrote:7 alternating samples per drum? BFD has as many as 128 layers per instrument in many of their collections.
You get a choice of different fixed mic/reverb setups - BFD's is completely flexible and user-configurable.
David,
no offense meant, but it seems that you're confusing things - the BFD layers you're referring to are velocity layers, aren't they? The 7 alternating samples in MIXOSAURUS DAW Drums are alternating samples for EACH velocity layer. MIXOSAURUS DAW Drums use 20 velocity layers with 7 automatically alternating samples each (you might say that's 140 variations). The advantage of the alternating samples is that you can take the exact same MIDI groove, copy a bar several times, and it will always sound slightly different. No need to tweak MIDI velocities to sound human.
MIXOSAURUS uses 3 hit articulations and 7 levels of Hi Hat foot pressure for the "closed" Hi Hats alone (that's 21 articulations), plus 8 articulations of open and "foot" ones. The foot pressure is controlled by the Modulation MIDI CC - copy the same groove, then record the movement of your ModWheel to give it variations. No need to transpose the HiHat notes to get to other foot pressure levels.
It allows you to PLAY any roll, crescendo, cymbal swell, whatever by all single MIDI notes, and it will sound realistic when you do so.
It's full 24 bit, has no bit reduction or other compression in any of its audio and offers the aforementioned sample variations for each and every drum/cymbal/articulation/velocity layer throughout the entire library, not just for "the important" ones.
In the first days of July, the MIXOSAURUS DAW Drums manual will be available for download. This will give some more insight.
Best regards,
MIXOSAURUS