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Review of Toontrack’s EZDrummer Plugin

Here a great review of Toontrack’s EZDrummer by Joe Gilder from Home Studio Corner.

In this same category, I also like Addictive Drums by xlnaudio.


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8 Responses to “Review of Toontrack’s EZDrummer Plugin”

  1. John says:

    Al – I am running a iMac with Pro Tools LE and a Digi003. I have BFD2 but I can barely use it as it is such a resource hog that it makes Pro Tools pretty much unusable. How are EZDrummer and Addictive drums as far as sucking the life force out of your DAW? I don’t even like to mess with the thing because it’s so frustrating and I end up using Xpand and hating how it sounds.

    • Big Al says:

      Hello John,

      I hear you on the BFD thing. I assume you’ve tried running the slimmer instances of it?

      EZDrummer and Addictive are both easier on the CPU. I’m running an older singe 1.8 PowerPC G5.

      I just instantiated EZDrummer. After all the samples have loaded, my CPU is sitting at 30%-40%,
      45%-70% with a groove playing. Same sort of spread with Addictive Drums.

      Give one of them a try, it might be just the ticket.

      • John says:

        Al – Thanks! I downloaded the demo of Addictive and looked on the activity monitor to compare the two. BFD2 uses a lot less memory but between 80 and 90% CPU. Addictive uses a lot of RAM but ticks down around 20 – 40% CPU. So it looks like the issue is CPU utilization with BFD, which I really don’t know how to fix. I’ve got everything in BFD set as small as possible. Tried running out of RAM but when I do this, I lose the connection to my 003 while it’s loading because it takes so long.

        I’ve got 4GB of RAM on order (using 2GB currently) and I plan to pick up a copy of Addictive drums.

        I’m on a 2.8GHz iMac Duo core, running Snow Leopard, and the latest PT LE. I bought this system because my PC couldn’t keep up when I was tracking my last CD a few years ago. The iMac setup has never performed the way I had hoped it would. I’ve tried all the tweaks, optimizations, etc. that I can find and it’s still not as powerful as it should be, IMO. I don’t know if it’s just the nature of the beast or what.

        • Big Al says:

          The lack of performance from your iMac is not what I typically hear from other users.

          Keep in mind the CPU figures I gave you were from my old single 1.8 PowerPC G5. It’s intensive but I can still run BFD.

          I think something is up with your setup. What are you using for your PT buffer setting when you try to use your virtual instruments?

          • John says:

            HW Buffer 1024 (only one that would work)
            Host Processors – 1
            CPU Usage Limit – 99%
            DAE Playback Buffer – Level 2 1500ms, cache size large
            Plug in streaming buffer – Level 2

          • Big Al says:

            If you’re running a Core 2 duo, try selecting 2 Host Processors, pull your CPU Limit down to 90% and set the Cache Size to Normal. See what happens and report back.

          • John says:

            Well, it didn’t die. Can’t really tell if it works any better, though. How low can I realistically expect to run the HW buffer?

          • Big Al says:

            As low as possible while tracking and as high as possible while mixing, when latency is not an issue and you need maximum CPU.

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