MixolydianPony wrote:Any tips on programming rock/metal drums? I find that it's very easy to have drums that sound too mechanical. How does one avoid this? Also, how do you write a fill or drum solo? Random 16th notes?
This is a pretty late reply, but I will post this in case anybody else wants to know how to program metal percussion.
I think the biggest thing that you might want to avoid the most when programming rock or metal drum tracks is making it sound like a dance percussion track. You know, the typical - [kick] [hihat] [kick+snare] [hihat] - loop.
There are many different genres of rock that you can employ with your drums, but because you mentioned "metal," my advice will apply to hard rock, or heavy metal. Or just metal in general.
First of all, you want the right drum kit for the job. And by that I mean HARD drums. Like, if the snare in your drum kit sounds pretty soft and gentle, get rid of it. Find a drum kit or a drum library that contains hard sounds; after all, that is what metal is.
And because you will be using an acoustic drum set for your rock/metal song, always remember to program the drums so that they could actually be played by a real drummer if he were to cover your song. In other words, never have more than 4 things being hit at the same instant. That's the rule. The purpose of this is to make the percussion track sound realistic - small details, I suppose.
Also make generous use of the kick drum.
For the drum solo, you could just randomly fill 16th notes, but I would also listen to other drum solos from other metal bands' songs to get a better idea of what a solo usually sounds like. The purpose of a solo, for any instrument, is that it isn't repeated anywhere else in the song and that it sounds awesome, for lack of a better adjective. With metal, it is also the performer's chance to show off their skills, so go crazy and program something awesome!