

It is certainly a step up (again my opinion, and I've been using Toontrack drums since DKFH, so I may be biased) from most of the other drum tools. If you want to throw together something for a quick demo or want some kind of drum track for jamming over with no. If what you want is a really solid, really flexible set of drum sounds for rock/pop/metal, etc then SD2 will serve you very well.

If the new content is of interest then I'd probably save my pennies. The library that is included sounds gorgeous, and adds a whole new palette of sounds.īut the real winners are the Decades expansion, which is becoming my first choice on a lot of things, and the orchestral library, which covers a lot of instruments really well. I was set on EZDrummer but now Toontrack is. Buy Toontrack EZ Drummer 2 at the BEST PRICE with iMuso Reviews / Specifications Virtual Drum Production Studio Intricately produced drum software. There are some nice new workflow features, but nothing I could not have lived without, I think? I'm angling to get either EZDrummer 2 or Superior Drummer 2 in the next few days - I've been recording with a Roland TD-11 and would like to take that next step in sound quality by triggering one of these programs instead of using the module's sounds. I did upgrade, and there is no audible difference for SD2 expansions. If you have no need for any of the SD3 only expansions then SD2 could be a good investment. My thoughts only - but SD2 ia a very capable drum tool, and the expansion packs range from really good to outstanding. The Superior Drummer 3 software and the full core sound library are delivered as downloads, available directly from the Toontrack Product Manager upon registration.
