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The Drumtraks features 13 percussion voices: bass drum, snare, snare rim, toms 1 and 2, crash and ride cymbal, open and closed hi-hat, handclaps, tambourine, cowbell, and cabasa. Each drum sound is saved on a read-only memory (ROM) microchip, and sounds may be changed by opening the front panel and exchanging the chips. Each sound has a trigger ...
The TR-707 has 15 digitally sampled sound and 10-voice polyphony.The alternate bass drum, snare, and hi-hat sounds cannot be triggered simultaneously. The instruments are labeled as Bass Drum, Snare Drum, Low Tom, Mid Tom, Hi Tom, Rimshot, Cowbell, Hand Clap, Tambourine, Hi-Hat (Closed or Open), Cymbal (Crash or Ride), as well as an additional function labeled accent, which serves to ...
The DR-110 offers 16 preset patterns, and 16 memory locations for the user-created patterns. Each pattern can be divided into 16 or 12 steps. The DR-110 also has two "song" memories, each of which allows chaining of up to 128 bars of patterns. A small battery retains memory content when the DR-110 was switched off.
Open hi-hat: X notehead in the hi-hat part with small o above. Closed hi-hat: X notehead in the hi-hat part with + above. Cross Stick: X notehead in the snare drum part. Rim Shot: diagonal slash through note head. Brush sweep: horizontal-line notehead, with a slur mark added to show that the brush is not lifted.
The MkII version had access to 91 16-bit drum sounds, allowing the user to control parameters of each sample such as decay length and filtering. It had 64 preset patterns and room for 64 user-created patterns. The DR-550 was limited by no ability to store its patterns externally, except by recording the data to a cassette tape.
A house pattern featuring a four-on-the-floor bass drum plus cymbal, claps, hi-hats and rimshots. Whereas the 808 is known for its "boomy" bass, the 909 sounds aggressive and "punchy". [10] [11] It has 11 percussion voices and offers sounds for bass drum, snare, toms, rimshot, clap, crash cymbal, ride cymbal and hi-hat (open and closed). [12]
Characteristic rock and hip hop hi-hat pattern play ⓘ Four-four pattern with open (o) and closed (+) hi-hat (see: percussion notation) play ⓘ Hi-hat "crescendo" from closed to open leading to the ride cymbal [10] Play ⓘ When struck closed or played with the pedal, the hi-hat gives a short, crisp, muted percussive sound, referred to as a ...
Closed hi-hat Open hi-hat Although there are 16 drum samples, the TR-505 only has an 8-voice polyphony, restricting some sounds from playing simultaneously: low conga or hi conga; timbale, low tom, mid tom, or hi tom; low cowbell or hi cowbell; hand clap or rim shot; crash cymbal or ride cymbal; closed hi-hat or open hi-hat.