UJAM Virtual Drummer Legend - 5 Steps To Vintage Drum Sounds

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 14

  • @AudioTechTV
    @AudioTechTV  ปีที่แล้ว +1

    For more info & pricing on Virtual Drummer Legend click here www.audiotechtv.com/UJAM_VD_Legend

    • @DOPWELLMUSICPRODUCTIONS
      @DOPWELLMUSICPRODUCTIONS 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      only for mac?

    • @AudioTechTV
      @AudioTechTV  7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No. I don’t use a Mac so everything I show is available on Windows

  • @Uniblab8
    @Uniblab8 ปีที่แล้ว

    WOW you can just jump right in and get your drum grooves going almost immediately. I like the sounds this thing is giving.

  • @glennlove295
    @glennlove295 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you great explanation, I just purchased this today. I found it difficult but this video has helped me. I still think Logic Pro’s Session drummer sounds more realistic though.

  • @PabloJiMusicForPeace
    @PabloJiMusicForPeace 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I downloaded this thing but in order to open the installer it asks to grant "Full disk Access" and that sounds a bit too risky for me. Does yours do the same? Is it safe? Thanx for the help

    • @beat-down-squad
      @beat-down-squad 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes I just bought mine yesterday and I thought that was kind of crazy for it to even ask that question not to mention there’s nobody showing you how to really operate this. It’s only people showing you around the machine and their moto is supposedly to make things easier for us, and I don’t see that at all there’s not one person on here to explain record mode and that’s crazy to me that you have to drag into your door instead of hitting record and free styling smh. Why would they want full access to the whole disc and your emails it said as well. Smh so upset I brought this and 4 other products yesterday

    • @austonsmith536
      @austonsmith536 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@beat-down-squad This is meant to be used primarily as a VST3 for a DAW. Not a standalone midi. The user interface and all that... is simply to look and feel like a certain marketable midi.
      The way the software is set up is simply how the manufacturer creates all their instrumental plugins, the main difference is simply the sample library. The design is the UJAM design, which is based off of how most plugins are implemented into all the major DAWs. So you can easily set up and load it in Ableton Live or Pro Tools or FL Studio or Reaper. And all the control and usage is done inside the digital audio workstation, not actually on the plugin's user interface.
      The way to best use these modern plugins is not going through all the little buttons and knobs, what you want to do to best use plugins like this is simply clicking on the Preset search, you'll see arrows shaped like a play button and simply click through the various presets and find a preset that you enjoy... then leave the plugin like it is, don't touch anything else once you find the right preset. the drum hits are based off of your keyboard's octaves, for example, C1 is the piano note and the base of the drum set starting with the kick.... then if you go down the piano roll the next will be the snare and all these piano roll notes are assigned to specific buttons on your keyboard. C1 is the A button for the kick, the next button S is assigned the next keyboard note and the snare... and it goes down the line, every octave of the piano changes the computer keyboard keys and the digital drum hits. (this is how all modern midi drums are set up... based off the piano roll which is for the DAW, every instrument used in the daw is controlled with a piano roll and assigned to keyboard keystrokes off a computer).
      If you don't regularly download plugins to use in a DAW... you probably have no idea what any of this means HAHAHAHAHA... it is best to first learn how to use a DAW and create music with stock plugins first. Once you become comfortable with that.... THEN you go and find a plugin like UJAM Virtual Drummer to replace your drums within the DAW. This plugin is simply a sample library, when you buy it... you're paying for the drum samples... nothing else. How you use the samples is a different ball game. That's why they aren't holding your hand and telling you how to use the software.
      (the reason they ask for full access to your disk drive is due to security reasons, these plugins are easily hacked and given away for free online, and they're trying to use security protocol measures to prevent that.... however, its impossible to prevent piracy in 2024 and all plugin manufacturers are dying off.... if they can get a database of people's personal information, they can sell the cache for a lot of money, it's a last hail mary attempt before their company goes bankrupt, once you give these companies full access, you've given away your identity and are now on the black market... same exact thing happens on social media and cell phones. we the people are being sold like prostitutes and there's nothing we can do to stop it)

  • @NmBeats
    @NmBeats 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Is it just me or it sounds better than Addictive Drums?

  • @8CountAudio
    @8CountAudio ปีที่แล้ว +1

    For me the ultimate test of any '70s dry drum sample library is...can it do Fleetwood Mac's "Dreams?"

    • @eDrumsandVSTs
      @eDrumsandVSTs 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think so, it's got several snares and sets of toms that could fit the bill. you can have them clean, or with some "character." And they work great with edrums.

  • @DAUBSKI
    @DAUBSKI 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It sounds to old to me.

    • @CharlesLouisRosario
      @CharlesLouisRosario 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Huh? You mean like real drums?

    • @DAUBSKI
      @DAUBSKI 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah I'm used to glitchy sounds