ATV’s long-awaited pad, cymbal and hardware pack is now shipping, giving the fledgling e-drum company a complete offering. Allan Leibowitz tested the aDrums artist kit.
FOLLOWING ON FROM its debut aD5 drum module, ATV first showed its aDrums kit at NAMM in January 2017 and began global shipping late last year.
What’s in the box
The kit is currently available in a basic configuration and an ‘expanded’ model with an extra tom and cymbal. I reviewed the standard seven-piece kit.
The kit ships in three boxes, meticulously packed to ensure the pieces arrive in pristine condition – down to double-bagging of the drums.
The kit is built around an 18”x12” kick and includes a 13”x5.5” dual-zone snare, a 10”x6.5” rack tom, a 13”x12” floor tom, a 14” three-zone hi-hat and controller, a 16” threezone crash cymbal and an 18" three-zone ride cymbal.
The chrome hardware is sturdy, elegant and relatively lightweight, reminiscent of the german-designed DrumCraft range. The kit comes with a snare stand and two cymbal stands, one of which has an attachment for the rack tom. There’s no hi-hat stand or kick beater – but those tend to be very personal choices anyway.
The drums
The first thing you notice is the size of the shells: this is an acoustic-size kit with real birch shells and finished in piano black lacquer. The downside of that dark, glossy finish is that it shows every fingerprint, so if you’re OCD, you might need gloves – at least during set-up. The drums look and feel substantial, robust and built to last.
The 18” kick, with mesh heads on both sides, has just enough presence without the bulk of a ‘full size’ 20” or 22” bass drum. I did have to shorten the beater on my kick pedal to ensure that it struck the centre of the head, but that was no hardship.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2018-Ausgabe von digitalDrummer.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2018-Ausgabe von digitalDrummer.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Where There's A Will
Living Colour drummer Will Calhoun has been widely recognised with accolades like the Buddy Rich Jazz Masters Award to top ratings from major drumming and music publications. This drummers’ drummer embraces electronics as he continues to broaden his musical horizons. He spoke to digitalDrummer editor Allan Leibowitz on a recent tour Down Under.
Feel The Beat
In search of a drummer-friendly metronome, Allan Leibowitz gets a feel for a new innovation.
My Monster Kit
Bobby James from Vancouver, BC, Canada has combined e-drums and DJ gear into his monster kit.
Simmons Pulls The Trigger
There are plenty of options for external triggers, and now there’s one more. digitalDrummer looks at the new Simmons ST1.
Head 2 Head - The Third Wave
digitalDrummer continues to put mesh heads under the microscope in our ongoing quest for the quietest, best-feeling playing surface. This month, we add four more tests to our growing catalogue.
To Midi Or Not
Is MIDI drumming still drumming, or is it removed from the art and skill of percussion? This is something Bill McCarthy has been pondering.
10 Things To Love About SD3
Last month’s release of Superior Drummer 3 may be a bit overdue, but was certainly worth the wait. Here are some of the features which make this VST offering a new benchmark.
A Bad Case Of Loving E-drums
digitalDrummer’s first edition back in 2010 detailed a case of GAS (Gear Acquisition Syndrome). That was nothing compared to Anthony Nalli’s affliction.
The 'Original' Simmons Returns
Simmons is back again, with a new kit and a new direction.
Advanced Trigger Variants
ATV’s long-awaited pad, cymbal and hardware pack is now shipping, giving the fledgling e-drum company a complete offering. Allan Leibowitz tested the aDrums artist kit.