It's hard to imagine today, but in 1990 the HR16 served as a drum kit for a local cover band. It was in no way used as a drum machine, as those people got total timing issues playing to a drum computer. (I still don't get why, but that's what it was.) Instead, there was an entire E-drum kit set up up of trigger pads. Since the band didn't skimp on hq audio equipment, HR16 worked comparably well as a "real" drum set back in those days.
It's hard to imagine today, but in 1990 the HR16 served as a drum kit for a local cover band. It was in no way used as a drum machine, as those people got total timing issues playing to a drum computer. (I still don't get why, but that's what it was.) Instead, there was an entire E-drum kit set up up of trigger pads. Since the band didn't skimp on hq audio equipment, HR16 worked comparably well as a "real" drum set back in those days.
Amazing machine that this time could somehow replace drummers. The real drums are quite good.
@NostalgicExplorer Yes, it resembled more or less state of the art around that time.
@@Gerald_Daniel indeed!