![]() You can also edit all the midi when it's copied over so you can completely change how it sounds in many ways.Īnd then you can either duplicate this 16 bar groove, or you can create another one however you think the song should go. Once you've got a good number bars laid down, you just drag the whole section up onto the first track that was created and the whole midi track will show up.Īlternatively, you can just drag each individual 'groove' or 'fill' onto the track to add in pieces to make it different. ![]() You could tweak this to fit the song by changing the bar length for the groove section if, let's say you didn't need a fill or something. ![]() Just click 'grooves' and drag a sample from the groove section and then one from the fill section. It's very fast to add a nice long section of drums. I started with some of the included drums to test it all out before I drive right in to start programming my own. Maybe someday I'll get a new smaller one but it's unlikely unless I find something good but cheap. Now if you had a midi keyboard you could set it up to play these drums manually but I sold my keyboard. Once that's done, you can fire up Reaper and create the first track.Ĭlick the FX button to open up the FX window and select instrument and MT Power Drum Kit.Ĭlick 'skip' on the next window (or donate to remove the window) and your drum kit should show up. To set it up all you need to do is copy the downloaded files to your VST folder for Reaper and you're ready to go.
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