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you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to arktouros.
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[QUOTE="arktouros:1189001"][QUOTE="arilliusbm:1188994"]I think having an acoustic kit and practicing on one for a while, then switching over to electronic is difficult. The sensitivity take a while to getting used to. I also don't think the drums have the same "bounce" so to say, so it's hard to get used to that as well.[/QUOTE] It is difficult and the sensitivity is a big issue. Using my example, starting out on a real crappy kit playing punk and metal without anyone to guide me for 12+ years, I never understood volume and sensitivity at all. Unlearning the caveman technique was the hardest plateau I faced. I think if I started out playing on a bad plastic e-kit, I would have understood the difference and would have been better prepared to play a real kit in the future. Especially with cheaper e-kits, where stick velocity doesn't really matter, learning the technique of "barely hitting the drum at all to stay quiet" goes a long way to getting true drumstick control and skill. The Roland V-drums (yamaha makes similar ones I think, there's a lot out there) go a LOOONG way to reproducing the feel of a kit and are great to learn on for one thing.[/QUOTE]
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