After one of the most spectacular Kickstarter launches, Sensory Percussion has gone from the drawing board to some high-profile drum kits, pushing the boundaries of electronic percussion.
DIGITALDRUMMER HAS watched the development of Sensory Percussion from crowd funding to software updates and it’s been an impressive path. So the next logical step was to test it and see what the fuss is all about.
What’s in the box?
When you buy a Sensory Percussion trigger (yes, they’re sold individually), you get the ‘sensor’ which looks like an external drum trigger on steroids, a plastic positioner, a pack of tiny adhesive magnets and software download voucher.
You need to register the sensor to access the software which is quick and easy to download.
Besides the hardware and software included in the purchase, you’ll also need a phantom powered audio interface and microphone XLR cables. If you’re planning to run a full system of four sensors, you’ll need an interface with four powered inputs – not the most common configuration out there. There are plenty of four-input boxes, but most only have phantom power to two of them. And you can’t plug these into a drum module – they are actually microphone-type pick-ups and only work with the Sun house software.
Setting up
The set-up is very easy: use the positioner to stick a magnet to the drum head (the sensors work with both mylar and mesh heads), attach the sensor to the drum rim, tighten the thumb screw, plug in and connect to your interface and, thereby, to your computer.
The company has good online resources to explain the set-up procedure, but essentially you need to first set the threshold and then train the software. Much like the trigger-setting approach of the KAT instruments or the aD5 module, you select a ‘zone’ such as the drum centre or cross-stick and hit it repeatedly at different velocities until the software recognises the strokes. The more you train it, the more accurate the ‘triggering’.
This story is from the August 2017 edition of digitalDrummer.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 2017 edition of digitalDrummer.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The 'Original' Simmons Returns
Simmons is back again, with a new kit and a new direction.
Advanced Trigger Variants
ATV’s long-awaited pad, cymbal and hardware pack is now shipping, giving the fledgling e-drum company a complete offering. Allan Leibowitz tested the aDrums artist kit.
A Bit Of This, A Bit Of That, A Lot Of Fun
It’s been a while since we saw a new electronic offering from Yamaha, but its latest product takes drumming to a new place, as Allan Leibowitz found.
Where There's A Will
Living Colour drummer Will Calhoun has been widely recognised with accolades like the Buddy Rich Jazz Masters Award to top ratings from major drumming and music publications. This drummers’ drummer embraces electronics as he continues to broaden his musical horizons. He spoke to digitalDrummer editor Allan Leibowitz on a recent tour Down Under.
Feel The Beat
In search of a drummer-friendly metronome, Allan Leibowitz gets a feel for a new innovation.
My Monster Kit
Bobby James from Vancouver, BC, Canada has combined e-drums and DJ gear into his monster kit.
Simmons Pulls The Trigger
There are plenty of options for external triggers, and now there’s one more. digitalDrummer looks at the new Simmons ST1.
Head 2 Head - The Third Wave
digitalDrummer continues to put mesh heads under the microscope in our ongoing quest for the quietest, best-feeling playing surface. This month, we add four more tests to our growing catalogue.
To Midi Or Not
Is MIDI drumming still drumming, or is it removed from the art and skill of percussion? This is something Bill McCarthy has been pondering.
10 Things To Love About SD3
Last month’s release of Superior Drummer 3 may be a bit overdue, but was certainly worth the wait. Here are some of the features which make this VST offering a new benchmark.