The pads have a springiness to them, not unlike an Akai MPC, and are a broadly similar size. Light my fireĪs far as the hardware goes what you have is pleasant-looking metal-fronted unit populated with drum pads at the bottom.
There are also a number of areas of functionality that are not covered by the hardware controller, and we'll take a look at these later. Using the great-sounding '80's Studio Drums' kit we bashed and tweaked our way through real-time recording, step-time programming, kit, drum and pattern selection, as well as a healthy dose of individual drum parameter editing.Įverything fell into place quite easily without ever looking at the host computer screen, although when it came to engaging the metronome or arranging patterns in song mode (which didn't appear to work as detailed in the manual) things got a little trickier. Given that the point of hardware controllers is to free you from the perceived shackles of screen and mouse editing, we decided to dive headlong into some beat-making using just the unit that was sitting in front of us.