Purists will note that EZdrummer lacks the deep editing (individual mic bleed control, multi-velocity articulation mapping) of Superior Drummer. But that’s the point. EZdrummer excels because of its constraints. You cannot get lost in 300 parameters. You can, however, write a song, lay down drums, and have a broadcast-ready track in under twenty minutes.
If you write music and you don’t own EZdrummer, you’re working too hard. Let the software do the drumming. You just write the song.
Upon launching EZdrummer, users are greeted with a sleek, mixer-style interface. The software relies on two key components: the Sound Library (recorded in professional studios with top-tier drummers and engineers) and the Groove Library (a vast collection of MIDI beats and fills). You don’t just get "a kick drum"—you get the sound of a specific 1970s Ludwig kick, played with a vintage beater, in a wood-paneled room.