![]() You can find the thresholds by ear, or use something like Smack Attack to find the threshold.Again, you do want to disable audio on your send, and you do need to know the MIDI note # for the kit piece you’re triggering. Just stick it on, say, your kick drum track, and route as described above.My favorite is probably the ReaPlug/JS plugin called JS: Turn audio signal into velocity-sensitive drum trigger. There are numerous plugins in REAPER that can be used to convert the original audio (original kit pieces) to MIDI and send the MIDI data. See MIDI note map for the drum kit pieces MIDI notes assignments. So on, say, the original kick track, you’ll need to assign the MIDI note for kick (36 in AD2). That’s how you tell the plugin to trigger, say, the kick vs the snare (use the MIDI note # for the kick). ![]() It’s not necessary to configure the MIDI channel, but if using a VST with multiple kit pieces, it is necessary to assign which MIDI note will be triggered in the VST. Step #2 needs a bit of elaboration, more detail: Use pre-fader sends, without master send. Optional: Configure Addictive Drums to send audio data on separate tracks in reaper, for each piece of the drum kit. ![]() In each of the original drum tracks, insert a VST to convert audio data to MIDI data (see below).Ĭreate a send going from each of the original drum tracks to the track containing the sampled drums (remember to disable audio send! Should send only MIDI) ![]() Insert a VST, such as Addictive Drums, Easy Drummer, etc. The basic workflow is very straightforward:Ĭreate a track for the sampled drums. ![]()
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