CHAPTER 5: EXTERNAL TRIGGERING
External triggering has three main uses:
•Driving D4 sounds from electronic drum pads. Some electronic drum pads provide MIDI triggers when hit; these can feed directly into the D4’s MIDI input. Other pads generate analog triggers, which can interface with the trigger inputs.
•Using contact transducers (triggers) mounted on acoustic drums to trigger sounds from the D4. These transducers can be plugged directly into the D4 trigger input, which will convert the trigger's signal to MIDI information.
•Drum substitution. If the drum sounds on a tape are poorly recorded, and the sounds to be substituted are on different tracks (or sufficiently far apart in pitch that equalization can help separate the sounds), these drum sounds can trigger the
All of these applications present certain challenges. With electronic drum pads, “crosstalk” from one drum hit can leak into another drum pad and trigger it accidentally. Acoustic drum pickups are much more finicky than electronic pads. They are subject to extraneous noise pickup, varying gain, and system noise, all of which make reliable triggering difficult.
The D4 includes five editable parameters that let you electronically tailor the D4 trigger inputs to the characteristics of your drum transducers. It may take considerable experimentation to achieve reliable triggering…then again, it may not. At some point, you’ll hit on the right combination of transducer placement and D4 parameter values necessary for proper triggering.
The external trigger function contains six pages of parameters. When you first press the Ext Trig button, it calls up the first page. Pressing the Ext Trig button again calls the second page, a third time calls the third page, and so on. You can also use the cursor buttons to go from one page to another by “cursoring past” the parameters on the current screen. For more details, see sections 1.4B and 1.4C.
In the rest of this section, we’ll assume you know how to select the appropriate page.
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