The drummer-friendly and stylish design of the Yamaha DD-65 marks a transition to a more professional and versatile digital-drumming instrument. AUX IN jack lets you connect an MP3 player and play along with your favorite music or load MIDI songs from the Internet into the internal Flash ROM memory and play along. New stereo-sampled voices, a wide variety of percussion sounds from all over the world, a bass boost system and digital stereo processing give the DD-65 an irresistible, thundering beat. The panel includes intuitive features that are easy to operate. For example, select the Hand Percussion mode and the kit automatically switches to percussion voices like congas and bongos. With its powerful features, this is no toy. Anyone can enjoy it.
The Yamaha DD65 is the perfect compact all-in-one combination for the prospective drummer. In its trendy design the DD-65 offers eight touch sensitive drum pads and two foot pedals that allows expressive playing. To play to your favourite music you can connect a MP3- or CD-Player to the AUX-IN-connector.
Further DD-65 has got an internal flash ROM memory that offers the possibility to save your own performances and to store MIDI-songs. Via USB-MIDI-Interface (Yamaha UX-16; optional) you can load song data into the instrument.
With its 254 voices and 25 phrases DD-65 offers a wide range of percussion-sound from the whole world.
Features
* 8 Touch-sensitive drum pads allow expressive playing
* AUX in jack for connecting and playing along with an MP3 player
* Tempo control using Tap Start
* Hand percussion mode with Latin drums allows playing with hands
* 254 GM compatible Voices assignable to any pad
* Two assignable foot pedals included for kick, hi-hat or any other Voice
* 100 built-in songs for learning and playing along with
* 50 Programmed Drum Kits + custom kits
* 32-note polyphony
* Reverb and Master EQ
* Large 3-Digit LED Shows Selection
* Record your own songs (up to 5 in memory at one time)
* MIDI In/Out for computer connectivity
* Headphone jack
* Stereo speakers with bass port provide great sound quality
A complete kit with everyting a drummer needs to play a gig when combines with a DD-65.
Not an electronic kit,
not and Acoustic kit but
a "Portable Drum Kit"
Fast and easy tear-down and set-up and takes up less space than the keyboard player!
All Yamaha hardware
• Includes SS-652 Snare stand, HH65, DP65, FP-6110 and DS-550
• Fast set up and tear down
• Kit takes up less room than the keyboard player
• Suitable for beginners to professionals Step-up Features (next model up)
• Perfect for casuals and one-nighters
• Requires the DD-65 drum unit
The first decision- what pad feel do I want? rubber or mesh?
Rubber
Pads feel like a practice pad, usually cost less and have a smaller design. Not
all are created equally- the best are foam rubber over a harder rubber for more
give and have a more natural bounce quality and generally last longer. Mesh
heads are more realistic- they feel more like a real drumhead including the
rebound and have more give. They generally offer better positional sensing and
can be tuned like acoustic drums for the feel and rebound desired. As opposed
to rubber heads, mesh heads will eventually wear out and need to be replaced.
Number of 'zones' on a pad
Rubber Pads feel
like a practice pad, usually cost less and have a smaller design. Single zone-
some simpler kits will have one zone per pad which means only one
sound/recording will be triggered which usually will sound softer at lower
strikes and have a harder sound when struck harder. They can sound more one
dimensional. The kick pad only needs a single zone as it strike in on place
only. Dual zone- two physically different areas on a pad like ride edge and
bell, head and rim, choking cymbals,.. Triple zone- allows for rim, middle and
bell of a ride cymbal or tom center, rim and a latin percussion sound,…
Pad Size
Rubber
Pads feel like a practice pad, usually cost less and have a smaller design.
More of an issue for acoustic drummers due to smaller head size who have to
adjust their playing style to work with the usually smaller electronic pads
versus drumheads
Velocity sensing
Simplest is
volume of pad increases with harder strikes. With better modules or some drum
sounds or samples (recordings) in lesser modules, the actual sound or timber
changes as the pad is struck harder for better realism using ‘multisamples'. It
could be a simple crossfade from a soft hit to hard one or could have more
samples in between to offer more subtle changes as the pad is struck
progressively harder.
Positional sensing
With better kits
the sound will change as you move the drumstick over different parts of a pad
or cymbal for better realism- typically the snare and ride. With the snare hit
in the middle of the pad it will be a thick full sound and grow brighter and
thinner as you move towards the edge.
Drumrack
How well
built and sturdy is it? Will it hold up well? Will the pads not slip around?
What do I look for in the drum module?
Quality
and variety of sounds- listen to the demo's, listen to a cymbal decay- does it
fade too fast? drums strong and clear? Number of trigger inputs- room to add
more cymbals and pads? will they be single or dual zone possibly using more
trigger inputs. Editing capability- to tweak each drum sound and effects which
can include tuning, pan position, decay, EQ, amount of fx level, .. all the way
up to the material the drum is made of, tension level,… CD input- so one can
play along with their favorite songs Teaching- to dheck one's timing, training
exercises, etc. Internal songs to play along with- the drums can usually be
muted or not to play along with Ease of Use/Display- is it intuitive? Is the
display understandable or too difficult? Number of outputs- 2 is usually enough
except in a studio or live sound setup where the engineer would like to have
the kick, snare, separated to process separately for more control of the
elements Recording- using a midi sequencer- how many tracks or instruments can
play simultaneously? How many Songs and notes will it hold in memory? Number of
effects- does it have all the effects you might want and how many
simultaneously?
Glossary
What is a Trigger?
connects the pad to the drum module via an audio cable to send midi control voltage messages
What is a Module?
houses the actual sounds, editing and brain of an eelectronic drum set. The pads connect to it via cables.
What are Velocity Curves and Velocity Sensitivity?
Curves- usually several to choose from to determine a curve for soft to loud. It can be linear or proportionately louder as struck
or be more nuanced allowing a wider range at high velocities and a narrower range of sound at soft velocities,…
Sensitivity- adjusts for how hard or soft the user strike the pads with sticks
What is MIDI?
an interface to connect a keyboard to the computer like USB port for printers. It sends note and other data
from the keyboard to the computer or vice versa. Basically says play this note at this time at this volume level- it is not an
actual audio recording. It also makes it possible for one keyboard to play another keyboard.
What are Effects?
to modify and enhance the
sounds in the drum module.
e.g., reverb will put the drum set in a small room or up to a large concert hall
What is polyphony?
the number of
simultaneous notes that can be played, though if it’s a stereo sample/recording
each note can use 2 notes at once. Its important for anyone who plays a lot of
notes at the same time and holds down the sustain pedal. The earliest notes
played will cut out when the limit is exceeded. This can happen with pianos
with 32-note polyphony especially.
What is a Sequencer?
the number of
a recorder with 1 to 16 tracks usually so that multiple instruments can be played back for fully
orchestrated songs and can have elaborate editing capability. These can be downloaded to the computer with a midi interface.
Don't see the answer to your question?
Call us toll-free at 1 877 778 7845 and speak to our electronic drum experts
Warranty Information:
Tech Support 714.522.9011 (Pro audio- 1 year parts and labor / Power amps & speakers- 3 years parts and labor / PSR keyboards- 1 year parts and 90 days on labor Pro keyboards- 1 year parts and 1 year labor Edrums- 1 year parts and 90 days on labor / Guitars / Acoustic- lifetime limited / Guitars/Electric- 1 year parts and 1 year labor) Yamaha Website PLEASE NOTE: We cannot ship Yamaha products outside the U.S. and its territories.
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