Short answer: an electronic drum set will never have the same nuance as an acoustic kit, especially for cymbals. The tech just isn’t there (yet) in my experience.

Companies are making impressive progress in capturing the intricacies of playing acoustic drums, with Sunhouse Sensory Percussion, GEWA Digital Drums and Roland V Drums being a few big players in my head on that front. However, those solutions are prohibitively expensive – closing in on used car prices – require complicated setup, or both. And I’m still yet to hear digital cymbals that I’ve been impressed by.

Despite all that, I still think electronic drums are incredible and I play them very often. Think of them as different tools for different tasks. I wouldn’t use my Octapad for a jazz combo, and I wouldn’t use my acoustic bop kit for playing techno (:thinking: although…). Both options have their strengths, and trying to force one into a situation where the other is more appropriate will always have drawbacks.

For your situation, I think the big first question to answer is what are you trying to accomplish? Learning the intricacies of a complex acoustic instrument? Recording MIDI drum parts for electronic music? Getting high-quality acoustic drum sounds at home? The answer to this will help decide where to go next.

If you want to learn touch, nuance, texture, dynamics – you should find some solution around acoustic drums and cymbals, which could include mesh heads/low-volume cymbals. If you want to have easy MIDI recording with polished modern drum sounds, electronic drums would be a good solution.

I have all the options you’ve mentioned: full acoustic kit(s), a full electronic kit, and a small club kit outfitted with mesh heads and triggers. Each one is the right choice in the right situation, but it depends what I’m going for. Happy to go into more detail if you’re curious of pros/cons or more of my experience, but I think the first question is still “What are you trying to accomplish with your drumming?”

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