![]() ![]() The SSD 5.5 Designer collection features 13 kits ranging from genre-specific DnB, metal and jazz to the room-filling Zeppy kit. The kits themselves offer a wide variety of sounds and styles to choose from. You can even add your own samples if the need arises, though velocity switching, round robin alts, and certain mapping features are not available for non-SSD samples. ![]() Sounds can be mapped across the entire MIDI note range in a variety of ways, including categorized menus, drag and drop, and MIDI learn. The kits in SSD5.5 are fully editable and can be reconfigured and reconstructed, or created from scratch from individual instruments as the mood strikes you. If you feel your next track needs a Steve Gadd-inspired “Late in the Evening” groove, you’re ready to roll. I never thought about how various toms would have their own unique rim click sound, but in retrospect of course they would. A generous amount of round-robin alternates keep everything sounding live and natural, so even single-stroke rolls don’t fall prey to the “machine gun effect.”Īlso included are a unique assortment of additional hits and articulations including chokes for individual cymbals, MIDI CC-controllable hi-hat decay (ideal for electronic kit players) and shell-specific rim clicks. ![]() ![]() Up to 24 velocity layers per instrument create a smooth and seamless velocity response. Snares and kicks are mic’d top and bottom/front and back respectively for added control when mixing. SSD5.5 starts with an impressive instrument list: 148 drum kit presets, 135 snares, 112 kick drums, 58 toms, and a variety of hi-hats, cymbals and percussion hits – over 400 instruments in total. ![]()
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